Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Joe Henderson: Power to the People
Joe Henderson: Power to the People
ByJoe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Kenny Dorham
trumpet1924 - 1972

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
By the time Henderson's Mode for Joe was released in 1966, Blue Note was nearing the end of its days with Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff at the helm. The very next year, Liberty Records would purchase the label and things would never be the same. Whether or not Henderson saw the writing on the wall is simple conjecture at this point, but in 1967 he jumped ship to producer Orrin Keepnews' new label, Milestone Records, cutting The Kicker.
Both The Kicker and its successor, Tetragon seemed to offer fodder reminiscent of Henderson's last two Blue Notes. It wouldn't be until 1969's Power to the People that we started to see a change in Henderson's approach to music. Oddly enough, it's not an album that has been widely reissued in the ensuing decades, and its underground status is set to receive a wider appreciation thanks to a new vinyl edition curated by Craft Recordings and the Jazz Dispensary.
Housed in a shiny, tip-on gatefold jacket, Craft's Power to the People has been remastered by Kevin Gray and pressed at RTI. The review copy used here for evaluation was free of defects and holographic in its delivery of a wide soundstage and an immersive sound. Featuring

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
"Afro-Centric" adds trumpeter

Mike Lawrence
trumpet1945 - 1983

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
Hancock's fluttering electric piano ushers in side two's opening gambit. The title track is a model of what this period in jazz was all about. One could easily hear this number as being part of a CTI record. Built on a funky groove, the chord changes are still meaty enough to offer inspiration for the soloist. Henderson first put to wax "Lazy Afternoon" when he appeared on drummer Pete LaRoca's Basra. His own version eschews the ballad tempo for a more swinging outlook. The closing "Foresight and Afterthought" is the most adventurous of the lot, yet it is still grounded in the swing ethic and that is the asset that makes this whole album so satisfying. ">
Track Listing
Black Narcissus; Afro-Centric; Opus One-Point-Five; Isotope; Power to the People; Lazy Afternoon; Foresight and Afterthought (an impromptu suite).
Personnel
Joe Henderson
saxophoneMike Lawrence
trumpetHerbie Hancock
pianoRon Carter
bassJack DeJohnette
drumsAlbum information
Title: Power to the People | Year Released: 2008 | Record Label: Milestone
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
