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Rich Halley 3: The Literature
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Rich Halley
saxophone, tenor
Dave Storrs
drumsIn terms of style, Halley intersperses wild-eyed, fire breathing rants with muscular and accessible free bopping grooves. He eschews the chording instruments, piano and guitar, and plays, usually, in the trio or quartet modesax/bass/drums, and adds another horn or two when the mood is rightcornetist

Bobby Bradford
trumpetb.1934

Vinny Golia
woodwindsb.1946
Now for the disc at hand. The Literature finds Halley back in the trio modea familiar place for him. What is unfamiliar is the set list. Halley's previous albums, nineteen of them, consist of all original tuneswith one exception that points in the direction of The Literature: a gruff but tender rendition of Harold Arlen's "Over The Rainbow" on the previously-mentioned Objects (Louie Records, 2002).
With The Literature, the music Halley found influential in his formative years steps up on the stagetwo compositions by pianist

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Mongo Santamaria
percussion1917 - 2003

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993
The eclecticism of his song choices aside, combined with the odd compositional juxtapositions, does nothing to drain even a drop of the intensity and the full-throttle Halley-esque muscularity, cohesion and focus of vision of the set. Monk's "Misterioso" and The Carter Family's "Motherless Children"that features an ebullient, loping rhythm dished out by drummer Carson Halley and bassist
Clyde Reed
bassThese trio renditions of classic American tunes speak to purity of expression. Uncluttered, bold and powerfulscorching into wild-eyed free jazz territory at times, and completely molded into Rich Halley's musical mindsetcloses out with Ornette Coleman's "Law Years." One reviewer, when assessing Halley's 2002 Louie Records debut, Coyotes in the City, commented (paraphrasing here): "First impressions say that Halley sounds like Ornette Coleman, with an attitude, on tenor sax." Coleman was certainly an influence, as was Sonny Rollins. And wouldn't it have been fine if Coleman had played more non-originals? There was Gershwin's "Embraceable You" on This Is Our Music (Atlantic Records, 1961) and "What A Friend We Have In Jesus" on Sound Museum: Hidden Man (Harmolodic/Verve, 1996), and little if anything else. But that's all right. The Rich Halley, a formerly non-originals playing kind of guy, offers up a splendid album of classics on The Literature. ">
Track Listing
Little Willie Leaps; Misterioso; Chano Pozo; Broad Way Blues; High Powered Mama; Mood Indigo; Brilliant Corners; Motherless Child; Pussy Cat Dues; Kingdom Of Not; Someday You'll Call My Name; Law Years.
Personnel
Rich Halley
saxophone, tenorRich Halley: tenor saxophone, clapping; Clyde Reed: bass; Carson Halley: drums, clapping.
Album information
Title: The Literature | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: Pine Eagle Records
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