Home » Jazz Articles » Liner Notes » Hal Galper Quintet: Live at the Berlin Philharmonic 1977
Hal Galper Quintet: Live at the Berlin Philharmonic 1977
By
Hal Galper
piano1938 - 2025

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015
He has since stopped touring, and with the release of the 2018 quartet outing, Cubist (Origin, 2017), had come to the realization that he had accomplished virtually everything he had set out to do in music.
"I realized at that point, I had achieved every goal I had set for myself, it was a shock. I was really happy with the way Cubist came out. I got to the point after that album that now I was to the point

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
While sifting through his archives in 2019, Galper heard a remarkably solid board recording of a 2016 trio gig he played at the Yardbird Suite club in Edmonton, Alberta. He found the playing remarkably cohesive, not realizing it was indeed, himself. The result was The Zone (Origin, 2019), a recording which may very well represent the best of Galper's trio efforts.
"I didn't recognize it, because none of us played anything that we had played before. It was all totally in the zone," he says.
Galper began to work with

John Bishop
drumsb.1959

Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945
Jazz was experiencing an identity crisis of sorts in the 1970's. With the proliferation of progressive rock, jazz was becoming less popular, and its artists became more open to experimentation with electric instruments. Galper entered the fray leading a band on electric piano that included both Brecker Brothers. The lineup produced two studio sessionsThe Guerilla Band (Mainstream, 1971), and Wildbird (Mainstream, 1972).
Galper would then take over the piano chair in the

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975

George Duke
piano1946 - 2013

Dave Holland
bassb.1946

Bill Goodwin
drumsb.1942

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020
The formation of the quintet heard on this recording served as a reunion of sorts for Galper and the Brecker brothers, while adding bassist

Wayne Dockery
bassb.1941

Bob Moses
drumsb.1948
"That has been my focus, to maximize my growth every minute I'm playing. I'm going to push the envelope. I'm not going to sit back," he points out.
Still, Galper heard something in the Berlin recording recently that he felt better represented the quintet's sound during that period, in a no holds barred sort of way.
"We had one live performance recorded, which was Speak With a Single Voice. But that was tightly controlled -nobody has really heard the band like it was recorded here. Free-wheeling, faulty, chance taking, devil-may-care, spaced out, manic. I'm a warts and all kind of guy, I'd rather live with my mistakes, because the spirit of the music is always just in the first take. I'm not doing it to be perfect, I'm doing it for fun. It's the process, not the end result I care about. This shows the band extended," says Galper.
This recording captures a moment in time when Galper formed the perfect band to play the way he envisioned, to push the envelope as far as the band possibly could. The recording will add yet another remarkable achievement in the career of the visionary pianist, and introduce his music to new generations of jazz fans. The record should as well engage the immense following that Michael Brecker has acquired in the saxophone world, between this performance, and his tragic death in 2007. The solo work here by both he, and brother Randy on trumpet and flugelhorn, is superb, supported ardently by Galper and his partners in the rhythm section.
Throughout this performance, the band seems to have shifted into overdrive, with Galper's powerful style, both comping and soloing, acting as the nitro that ignites this eclectic gathering of musicians. Beginning with the opening salvo of Galper's "Now Here This," the intuitive communication between the congregants is clearly evident. Drummer Moses plays in and out of the groove laid down by bassist Dockery, bearing the marks of time spent in the boundary pushing ensembles of Rashaan Roland Kirk,

Gary Burton
vibraphoneb.1943

Larry Coryell
guitar1943 - 2017
Galper's piano intro on "I'll Never Stop Loving You" has reminiscent marks of

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023
While other pianists of his generation have attained iconic status both in name and accomplishment, Galper's name seems to often slip under the radar of legend. Time has a way of balancing things out, of turning legend into history. Galper's contributions as a leader of boundary pushing bands, and as a sideman for masters of the form, are well established. His innovations in time, and the subsequent rubato revolution with his trio, serve as a major contribution to the music itself. With Live at the Berlin Philharmonic 1977, we are given a snapshot in time of one the the most innovative acoustic jazz bands of the 1970's, playing at their absolute best in front of an enthusiastic audience. Through the lens of time, its power and beauty comes to life with new perspective.
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Paul Rauch.
Live at the Berlin Philharmonic, 1977 can be purchased here.
Contact Paul Rauch at All About Jazz.
I am a writer, producer and coordinator in the jazz community, living in Seattle.
Track Listing
Now Hear This; Speak with a Single Voice; I’ll Never Stop Loving You; Triple Play; This Is the Thing; Hey Fool.
Personnel
Hal Galper
pianoMichael Brecker
saxophone, tenorRandy Brecker
trumpetWayne Dockery
bassBob Moses
drumsAlbum information
Title: Live at the Berlin Philharmonic, 1977 | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: Origin Records
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