Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Andrew Hill: Point Of Departure
Andrew Hill: Point Of Departure
ByIn 1964, the term avant-garde could have been applied to any number of different musical angles in jazz. The free experiments of

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
This album includes some of the fiercest, high density writing of the era, with each track featuring tight, byzantine written statements and full-throated blending of timbres. The music includes dissonant harmonies, often employing multiple melodic ideas, and often played very fast. It would be easy to imagine the musicians scratching their heads on the first run through, struggling with music that reached for new levels of complexity. Nevertheless, and despite the very complicated, wrought compositions, the band plays rather loosely. They're all there, but a perfect precision performance does not appear to have been Hill's core demand. Instead, people come in and out slightly ahead or behind the beats, and even when they're harmonizing, cacophonous filigrees abound.
On top of all thatand that's already a lotPoint of Departure features extraordinary improvising.

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Kenny Dorham
trumpet1924 - 1972
As with all of Music Matters' reissues, Point of Departure comes as two 45 RPM LPs. A decent turntable is a necessity. But the vinyl itself is pressed with tremendous quality control, so with good equipment these records reveal details that no CD will ever approach. It also helps that the original session, engineered by

Rudy Van Gelder
various1924 - 2016
Point of Departure is a cornerstone jazz recording that every serious jazz listener should hear. The Music Matters pressing simply adds elevated sound quality to what was already a musical masterpiece. ">
Track Listing
Refuge; New Monastery; Spectrum; Flight 19; Dedication;
Personnel
Andrew Hill
pianoAndrew Hill: piano; Kenny Dorham: trumpet; Eric Dolphy: alto sax, flute, bass clarinet; Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone; Richard Davis: bass; Tony Williams: drums.
Album information
Title: Point Of Departure | Year Released: 1965 | Record Label: Blue Note
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
