Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Mal Waldron - Steve Lacy: The Mighty Warriors
Mal Waldron - Steve Lacy: The Mighty Warriors
ByZev Feldman
producer
Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Art Tatum
piano1909 - 1956

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988

Steve Lacy
saxophone, soprano1934 - 2004
Both Waldron and Lacy expatriated from the United States. Waldron made the move to Europe in the mid-1960s. Lacy moved to Paris in 1970. The pair worked together and recorded together often. Waldron has the distinction of participatingas the leaderon the first ECM Records release, Free At Last (1970).
Waldron and Lacy are often considered free-jazz guys. There may be some truth in this, but both were melodists of the first order; their musictogether and apartwas approachable and adventurous. Waldron, like Monk and

Andrew Hill
piano1931 - 2007

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
The Mighty Warriors is Waldron and Lacy in a quartet setting, joined by drummer

Andrew Cyrille
drumsb.1939
Disc 2 of The Mighty Warriors moves closer to free jazz, with two extended cuts, "Variation of III" and "Medley: Snake Out/Variations on a Theme by Cecil Tayor," both clocking in at the twenty-five-minute mark. The latter opens like a full-frontal assault, fierce and percussive. The former sounds like a traveler lost in a foreign land. It opens with Workman's lonely arco bass that leads into a marvelous otherworldly musical hesitation that stops and starts.
Waldron and Lacy did not boast the highest of profiles. Their moves to Europe, away from the bigger record labels, and the New York City clubs, were probably partially responsible for this. Their talent and innovative approach to making music was of the highest order and can be experienced on The Mighty Warriors. ">
Track Listing
CD 1:
What It Is; Epistrophy; Longing; Monk's Dream.
CD 2:
Variation of III; On a Theme by Cecil Taylor.
Personnel
Album information
Title: The Mighty Warriors | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: Elemental Music
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
