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Horace Silver Quintet: Live New York Revisited
ByThree of the five tunes (the seven-track album contains two versions apiece of "Que Pasa" and "African Queen") are from Silver's exalted Song For My Father (Blue Note, 1964) and are performed by the band which played them on that album: Silver, tenor saxophonist

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Carmell Jones
trumpet1936 - 1996
Teddy Smith
bassb.1932

Roger Humphries
drumsb.1944
The same can be said for "Se?or Blues" from 6 Pieces Of Silver (Blue Note, 1957), the title track from Tokyo Blues (Blue Note, 1962), and "African Queen" from The Cape Verdean Blues (Blue Note, 1965). The two versions of "African Queen," datewise the last tracks to have been recorded (at the Half Note on separate nights in February 1966), have

Woody Shaw
trumpet1944 - 1989

Larry Ridley
bassb.1937
Reviewers are not usually given to quoting the words of other writers, much less giving attribution to them when they do, but on occasion someone else makes an observation which is worth repeating verbatim. Brian Morton's sleeve note for Live New York Revisited is spot-on in its analysis of Silver's importance within the development of jazz. Here is Morton's general thesis: "Long before his death in 2014, Silver's reputation had become occluded, or tarnished with the notion that he was a relatively slight figure, more of an entertainer than an innovator." He goes on to discuss the various ways in which Silver was an innovatory figure, including this: "His habit of quoting other songs in his solos, often dismissed as a shallow, crowd-pleasing trick, is a forerunner of sampling culture and hip-hop. It's also an acknowledgement of [how] profoundly knowledgeable Silver was about the canon and its evolution. Here's a line of mine, he might say, and here's where it came from, but also here and here. His only mistake in this regard was to smile while he was playing.... a challenge to the really rather recent notion that jazz should be deadly serious and played with a pained rictus."
Joyous faces rather than pained rictuses should be the universal response to this album. ">
Track Listing
Song For My Father; African Queen; The Natives Are Restless Tonight; Que Pasa; African Queen; Tokyo Blues; Se?or Blues.
Personnel
Horace Silver
pianoCarmell Jones
trumpetWoody Shaw
trumpetJoe Henderson
saxophoneTeddy Smith
bassLarry Ridley
bassRoger Humphries
drumsAdditional Instrumentation
Carmell Jones: trumpet (1, 3, 4, 6, 7); Woody Shaw: trumpet (2, 5); Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone; Horace Silver: piano; Teddy Smith: double bass (1, 3, 4, 6, 7); Larry Ridley: double bass (2, 5); Roger Humphries: drums.
Album information
Title: Live New York Revisited | Year Released: 2022 | Record Label: Ezz-thetics
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