Home » Jazz Articles » My Blue Note Obsession » Sonny Clark: Sonny Clark: Cool Struttin’ – 1958
Sonny Clark: Sonny Clark: Cool Struttin’ – 1958
By

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
And yet Cool Struttin'led by pianist

Sonny Clark
piano1931 - 1963
This is not cool in the

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Art Farmer
flugelhorn1928 - 1999

Jackie McLean
saxophone, alto1932 - 2006

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969

Philly Joe Jones
drums1923 - 1985
Are you in the mood to chill? Start right off with the title cut, a nine-minute relaxed blues with outstanding solos all around. This is Clark at his very bestemotional and laid back without being showy. Great solos follow from Farmer and McLean.
Track 2, "Blue Minor," another Clark original, keeps up the mood. It's a Latin-ish toe-tapper featuring a wonderful, noir-like McLean. Again, not aggressive hard bop, as you expect on Blue Note, but a showcase nonetheless.
By far the strangest number is "Lover," a Rodgers-and-Hart tune that starts as a standard bebop number, then abruptly changes to waltz time, then back to fast 4/4 bop. Interesting, creative, but weird.
Clark is one of those pianists you hear a lot if you listen to Blue Note albums from the '50s and '60sfirst as a favorite sideman, then as a leader with an incredible 14 records from 1957 to 1962. Many of them are very good, and Cool Struttin' is arguably the best. Yet Clark never became a big name like fellow Blue Note pianists

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
Still, he's worth getting.
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Availability: Plentiful
Cost: A mere $2 used
Tags
Sonny Clark
My Blue Note Obsession
Marc Davis
Miles Davis
Stan Getz
Art Farmer
Jackie McLean
Paul Chambers
Philly Joe Jones
Horace Silver
Herbie Hancock
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