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Hank Mobley: Soul Station
By
Hank Mobley
saxophone, tenor1930 - 1986
Among his many albums, a few from 1960 and 1961 are often cited among Mobley's finestWorkout, Roll Call, both from 1961, and the subject of this review, Soul Station. A quartet with

Wynton Kelly
piano1931 - 1971

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969
One element that stands out on this record is the rhythm. There's a consistent, insistent, smooth-rolling quality to every track. Even the hardest driving number, "This I Dig Of You," has a certain flow to it, except the passage where Blakey takes his most aggressive solo with a hi-hat beat that's as rock solid as the speed of a Technics 1200, enveloped in the Master's all-hell-has-broken-loose polyrhythms.
The opening number, "Remember," swings on a simple melody played through once on the horn before Mobley takes off into his improvisationstaying close at first, then gradually broadening his extemporization with some modestly angular runs before abruptly handing it off to Kelly. Kelly's work here is solid if understated, also staying close to the melody, but played with unerring verve. There's nothing especially innovative or even all that dramatic about the track except it's so perfectly crafted that it's utterly compelling. "Remember" is not a tune that hits you over the head with flashy composition or performance intensity, ala "Blue Trane"that just wasn't Mobley's waybut it is an exceptionally well-crafted piece of music. The same could be said for every track on this record.
Soul Station is now sixty years old and has been reissued in one format or other almost continuously for that entire time. What's new and interesting about this particular reissue is the vinyl it's pressed on. Music Matters' SRX formula is expensive to produce but yields some significant benefits. Among several wax copies of this album in the house, this one is easily the quietest, most detailed, and most coherent. Paul Chambers' bass is deeper and tighter, Mobley's horn is liquid smooth and pushed to the forefront of the soundstage, and the pianosometimes a trouble spot on

Rudy Van Gelder
various1924 - 2016
Track Listing
Remember; This I Dig Of You; Dig Dis; Split Feelin's; Soul Station; If I Should Lose You.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Soul Station | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Blue Note Records
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