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Brad Goode: That's Right!
By
Chuck Mangione
flugelhorn1940 - 2025

Brad Goode
trumpetb.1963

Maynard Ferguson
trumpet1928 - 2006
Joined by the great

Ernie Watts
saxophone, tenorb.1945

Adrean Farrugia
keyboards
Kelly Sill
bass, acoustic
Adam Nussbaum
drumsb.1955
What holds him back is a lack of top-flight songs. Goode included compositions by every player on this outing, but outside the opening track, it is covers (the

Harold Arlen
composer / conductor1905 - 1986

Billy Eckstine
vocals1914 - 1993
On "Blues in the Night," Goode shows off his skill with a mute, achieving a classic swing feelsounding like nothing so much as an after-hours jam session circa 1945 for the opening chorus. His subsequent improvisation is firmly in a modern, post-bop mode structurally, while maintaining the tonality of a big band player. Watts' following solo maintains this interesting dichotomy of classic jazz sound coupled to a very modern deconstruction of the theme. The two horn players then team up to revisit the theme in chorus before trading fours, and then breaking it down even further, sharing the lead atop each other. The fade-out is a bit of a disappointing end to a fabulous performance, though.
"I Want to Talk About You" finds the mute back in Goode's horn, but with more of a

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Of the originals, only Farrugia's "Half Moon" is likely to stick in your head. After Farrugia's chordal opening, Goode breaks it open with a bright, upper-register fanfare so fat, so rich in tone that it sounds like a flugelhorn. Watts then expands on the theme incrementally, never straying too far from Farrugia's luscious melody, before Goode and Farrugia rejoin for a lovely series of solos and choruses.
"Perplexity," which Neil Tesser's liner notes indicate is Goode's personal favorite track on the release, starts off promising with an interesting opening motif. But Goode's main theme isn't strong enough to hold the song together through the band's numerous interpolations and re-imaginings. Another Goode original, "Who Parked the Car?," has a more ambitious and more memorable melodyalthough after a bright opening, Farrugia basically abandons that theme during an extended solo.
Sill's "A Sense of Fairness" opens with Goode and Watts taking shared lead in harmony, before Sill expounds on the theme with a lengthy bass solo backed by Farrugia on piano. Again, the challenge for the listener is that there is no hook on which to hang our attention. Nussbaum's "We Three" feels similarly cramped by lack of an immediate theme. Even Watts' "Letter From Home," which debuted on his 2016 release "Wheel of Time," is what in the rock world would be described as a "filler" track.
Maybe the most interesting track here is the closing "Jug Ain't Gone," written by the late

Von Freeman
saxophone, tenor1922 - 2012

Gene Ammons
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1974
Track Listing
Half Moon; Regret; Perplexity; Blues in the Night; A Sense of Fairness; Letter from Home; We Three; Who Parked the Car?; I Want to Talk About You; Jug Ain't Gone.
Personnel
Brad Goode
trumpetBrad Goode: trumpet; Ernie Watts: tenor saxophone; Adrean Farrugia: piano; Kelly Sill: bass; Adam Nussbaum: drums.
Album information
Title: That's Right! | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: Origin Records
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