Anthony Wilson Trio - Jack Of Hearts - 45rpm 180g 2LP

Product no.: GRV1046.

Anthony Wilson Trio - Jack Of Hearts - 45rpm 180g 2LP
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"This is one of those special records that has been flawlessly recorded and mastered, but isn’t boring audiophile music. This is a record that you want to share with your friends and your favorite adult beverage with the lights down low. The record was recorded in the legendary Oceanway Studio in Holly wood to 2 track analog and thanks to the care taken in the SACD mastering, Jack of Hearts will put these three guys right in your listening room. For those of you not possessing an SACD player, the CD layer sounds great too, so don’t let that stop you from purchasing this disc. Let’s hope Groove Note releases this on LP for the analog lovers in the crowd!" – Jeff Dorgay, Tone Audio
 
Jack of Hearts isn't the first Anthony Wilson album to feature an organist extensively; for example, he worked with the Los Angeles-based organist Joe Bagg on his 2005 release Savivity. But the guitarist has worked with acoustic pianists more often than organists (at least as of 2009), and Jack of Hearts is unusual in that it finds Wilson not using a pianist at all. On this early 2009 session, Wilson forms an intimate trio with Larry Goldings on organ and Jeff Hamilton or Jim Keltner on drums. In the '90s and 2000s, Goldings was one of the leading proponents of a post-Jimmy Smith aesthetic on the Hammond B-3. Goldings has been greatly influenced by the late Larry Young, who started out as a Smith disciple but evolved into an innovative, distinctive post-bop/modal player and went down in history as "The John Coltrane of the Organ." Of course, Goldings is not a clone of Young; he is most certainly his own person, but he shares Young's love of post-bop.
 
So it isn't surprising that Goldings does a lot to shape the post-bop perspective that dominates Jack of Hearts. His presence is a major plus on material that was composed by Goldings and/or Wilson, and it is a major plus on memorable arrangements of Coleman Hawkins' "Hawkeyes" and two of Duke Ellington's lesser-known pieces ("Zweet Zursday" and "Carnegie Blues"). The fact that neither of those Ellington tunes is a standard speaks well of Wilson, who is smart enough to realize that one of the joys of the vast Ellington songbook is hearing all of the worthwhile Ellington compositions that didn't become standards. Jack of Hearts is a consistently engaging addition to Wilson's catalog.
 
Musicians: 
 
Anthony Wilson, guitar
Larry Goldings, Hammond B-3 organ, celeste
Jeff Hamilton, drums 
Jim Keltner, drums 
 
1.    Mezcal
2.    Jack Of Hearts
3.    Hawkeyes
4.    Carnegie Blues
5.    Theme from "Chinatown"
6.    Vida Perdida Acabou
7.    Orange Crate Art
8.    Harajuku
9.    Zweet Zursday
10.    Homecoming
 
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