Tag: It’s All Good
Critical Jazz agrees that with Ed Cherry “It’s All Good”…
My regulars know I am a sucker for an organ trio, an even bigger sucker for a guitarist that can swing without venturing off that self indulgent cliff…Meet Ed Cherry and his first release on Posi-Tone which is appropriately titled “It’s All Good” featuring Byron Landham on drums ( Joey DeFrancesco ) and B3 dynamo Pat Bianchi who has played with everyone from Chuck Loeb to his own stellar recordings.
Cherry is a name that sporadically popped up on numerous releases I’ve had the pleasure to check out and I say that because Ed Cherry is one of my musical easy buttons. Whatever, whenever, and where ever it’s all ways gonna be smoking and swing is king whenever Cherry is around. What makes this release as close to perfect as you can get is that Cherry is obviously doubling as a musical sponge. Cherry started off at the world famous Berklee College of Music but soon after wound up playing with such luminaries as Dizzy Gillespie and Jimmy Smith and you hear this in his sound. The swing of Dizzy, the keen sense of melody from Jimmy Smith and the deceptively subtle cool John Patton are all key elements that are part of the Cherry sound. The music is organic, a natural pulse and an all most hypnotic ebb and flow allow Cherry to do a riff on Duke Ellington’s “In A Sentimental Mood” and a killer version of the classic Kenny Burrell “Chitlins Con Carne.” Toss in Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage” and one of the two Cherry originals “Mogadishu” and you have a release with tons of flavor and the perfect recipe for success.
The trio is not an organ trio in the traditional sense since this is of course Cherry’s project but the trio is rounded off with Pat Bianchi who for this critic is Joey DeFrancesco First Blood Part Two. Speaking of Joey D. we have Byron Landham on drums who has logged some serious time gigging and recording with Joey D. and is one of the most under rated drummers around. A lyrical drummer that is locked and loaded with finese is the perfect compliment to Bianchi harmonic roots of what a trio such as this would and should sound like from the late 1960’s.
It’s All Good is just that…All Good! Cherry and his single note lines are clean and well thought out. Every note matters and nothing is wasted. The zen jazz vibe of less is more makes for one of the better trio releases for the year. While this is not Ed Cherry’s debut as a leader it may well be his finest recorded work to date. An all star trio with a groove you can use.
Simply put, if you don’t feel the swing or completely dig this release then you may be waiting on your autopsy report to come back.
Dan Bilawsky confirms “It’s All Good” with Ed Cherry…
Guitarist Ed Cherry is best known for his lengthy, decade-plus tenure with trumpet titan Dizzy Gillespie, but his work with another heavyweight of a different ilk—organist Big John Patton—is a more obvious influence on It’s All Good. Cherry played the important role of Patton’s guitar-playing foil during some of the legend’s ’90s comeback sessions and he acquired a deep understanding of the organ group dynamic through osmosis during this period.
Patton’s ’90s work dealt with some outlying ideals—courtesy of musicians like saxophone maverick John Zorn—blended with a more straightforward approach, but Cherry doesn’t flirt with far-reaching thoughts like his former employer. Instead, he puts his Grant Green-influenced guitar to good use on a program of relatively laid back material that emphasizes soul and groove in centrist fashion.
Cherry’s slick-cum-sizzling finger work is ever-impressive throughout this program of smartly reworked covers and originals. He brings a sly sound to “You Don’t Know What Love Is,” delivers a Brazilian-tinged take on “Blue In Green,” gives Thelonious Monk’s “Epistrophy” a smoking, streamlined reading and turns Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage” into a mid-tempo swinger. Elsewhere, Cherry hits a Wes Montgomery-like stride (“Something For Charlie”) and revels in the warm beauty of Duke Ellington (“In A Sentimental Mood”).
His comrades—organist Pat Bianchi and drummer Byron Landham—both prove to be well-suited for this session, as they’re willing to lead or follow and able to go wherever the moment takes them. Bianchi is capable of extreme subtlety, as demonstrated with his gentle backing on “In A Sentimental Mood,” but his skills don’t stop there. He can cook with the best of them (“Something For Charlie”) and he has a penchant for cut-to-the-core melodic delivery that’s exhibited during a pair of Wayne Shorter tunes (“Deluge” and “Edda”). Landham, who earned his organ group stripes with Joey DeFrancesco and several other high profile players, is the consummate groove maker here, delivering waltz time wonders (“Edda”), Brazilian beats (“Blue In Green”), über-slow funk (“Chitlins Con Carne”) and right-down-the-middle swing with equal skill. His solo trading, on display in several places, is crisp, classy and highly entertaining.
Cherry and company don’t distinguish themselves by doing anything bold or new on It’s All Good, but they make this a memorable outing through the sheer force of musicality and taste; the title doesn’t lie on this one.
Ed Cherry is on the October Hot List….
Ed Cherry
It’s All Good
Posi-Tone
PR8102
On this all-standards program, guitarist Ed Cherry leads a crack trio (including the great organist Pat Bianchi and drummer Byron Landham) through a nice variety of tunes both familiar (“You Don’t Know What Love Is,” “In a Sentimental Mood”) and less so (Duke Pearson’s “Christo Redentor,” Wayne Shorter’s “Deluge”). What you immediately notice about this album is how gentle and subdued the mood is–especially for an organ trio record. Normally this format leads to lots of funky shouting, but these guys are working in a much more restrained style and the result is truly lovely. It’s not to say that they don’t groove deep and swing hard–they do both. But they do so in a way that I can only characterize as “grown-up.” Very, very nice.
Lucid Culture on Ed Cherry “It’s All Good”…
Sweet Soulful B3 Grooves from Ed Cherry and Pat Bianchi
It’s unusual that a month goes by without a B3 album on this page at some point. For some people, funky organ grooves can be overkill; others (guess who) can’t get enough of them. Veteran guitarist Ed Cherry knows a little something about them, considering his association with the guy who might have been the greatest of all Hammond groovemeisters, Jimmy Smith. Cherry’s new album It’s All Good – recently out on Posi-Tone – might sound like a boast, but he backs it up, imaginatively and energetically reinventing a bunch of popular and familiar tunes and in the processs rediscovering their inner soul and blues roots. His accomplice on the B3 is Pat Bianchi, who has blinding speed and an aptitude for pyrotechnics; Cherry gives him a long leash, with predictably adrenalizing results. Drummer Byron Landham’s assignment is simply to keep things tight, which he does effortlessly. Needless to say, Wayne Shorter’s Edda and Herbie Hancock’s Maiden Voyage probably aren’t the first tunes that come to mind as potential material for organ trio, but this crew pulls them off.
The former is done as a jazz waltz, Cherry alternating between hammer-on chordal variations, southern soul mingling with bent-note runs and some bracingly spinning chromatics. The latter is a more traditional B3 swing tune with lots of suave Wes Montgomery-isms. They go fishing for the inner blues in You Don’t Know What Love Is, give In a Sentimental Mood a rather unsentimental nonchalance, then pick up the pace with Kenny Burrell’s Chitlins Con Carne, Landham digging in harder, Cherry building a sunbaked tension as Bianchi spirals and swells.
The most expansive track here, Duke Pearson’s Christo Redentor picks it up even further, Bianchi adding a chromatically-fueled burn, Cherry finally cutting loose with a rapidfire series of flurries out of the second chorus. Another Shorter tune, Deluge, alternates betwen laid-back urbanity and freewheeling soul-blues, while Bill Evans’ Blue in Green gets reinvented as a samba, with one of Bianchi’s wickedest solos.
There are also a couple of Cherry originals here. Mogadishu is jaunty and conversational; the brisk shuffle Something for Charlie (a Charles Earland homage, maybe?) gives the guitarist a platform for his most energetic work here. There’s also a version of Epistrophy that quickly trades in carnivalesque menace for a greasy groove. There’s plenty of terse, thoughtfully animated tunefulness here for fans of both purist guitar jazz and the mighty B3.
Bruce Lindsay writes up Ed Cherry “It’s All Good”…
Guitarist Ed Cherry has been playing professionally since the early ’70s, as a sideman to musicians such as Tim Hardin, Jimmy McGriff, Henry Threadgill andJimmy Smith. Most famously, he spent over fifteen years in Dizzy Gillespie’s band, remaining with the group until the trumpeter’s death in 1993. Perhaps because of his busy career as a sideman his discography as a leader is small, with just three albums before It’s All Good, the most recent being The Spirit Speaks (Justin Time Records, 2001). Eleven years on from his previous CD, It’s All Good is a very welcome reminder of his talents.
It’s All Good is a straight-ahead guitar trio album, with Pat Bianchi on organ and Byron Landham on drums. Cherry doesn’t mess around with the format, just uses it to put together some beautifully-crafted tunes. He has a pure, warm, guitar sound and plays with a refreshing economy and spaciousness. Landham—who’s worked with Joey DeFrancesco,Lee Ritenour and Shirley Scott—is a fine choice as drummer, his lightly swinging playing adding movement as well as holding down the rhythm. Bianchi can be a demonstrative soloist, punching out flurries of notes on “Christo Redentor” or Cherry’s own “Something For Charlie,” but he’s most impressive when his rich chordal playing gives depth and texture to the group’s sound.
The trio’s style is cool and subtle, with an unhurried swing and the ability to develop some killer grooves. It’s right at the heart of Don Raye and Gene De Paul’s “You Don’t Know What Love Is” and Duke Ellington’s “In A Sentimental Mood.” It’s also central to the trio’s version of Kenny Burrell’s “Chitlins Con Carne,” which gets a relaxed, even louche, arrangement with great loose limbed percussion from Landham and a laid-back, country vibe from Cherry. Wayne Shorter’s “Edda” and Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage” are faster, but still sound hip—Landham lifts the pace effortlessly and Cherry and Bianchi happily follow his lead.
The guitar, organ, drums combo has a long and proud history in jazz. Whatever the reasons for its longevity, the lineup works and in the right hands it delivers some great sounds. It’s All Good carries on the tradition on fine style.
The Jazz Breakfast on Ed Cherry “It’s All Good”…
Guitarist Ed Cherry played in Dizzy Gillespie’s last band, and since then has also worked with Hamiett Bluiett, Henry Threadgill, Oliver Lake and Steve Coleman among others.
Those names might suggest an avant-garde approach, but for his first disc on Posi-Tone Cherry chooses to play it mainstream in an organ trio format with the guitar on top.
Pat Bianchi is on organ and Byron Landham on drums, and the programme includes a couple of tasty Cherry originals in among such evergreens as You Don’t Know What Love Is, In A Sentimental Mood, Maiden Voyage, Blue In Green and Epistrophy.
But Cherry and crew make them sound fresh and warm, and the whole album has the easy-going groove of a Grant Green or Wes Montgomery session.
Not ground-breaking, but sometimes ground-breaking is tiring and feels like hard work. Neither of those feelings here.
The Jazz Word on Ed Cherry “It’s All Good”…
Veteran guitarist Ed Cherry, a longtime sideman with Dizzy Gillespie, swings with streetwise finesse on It’s All Good for Posi-Tone Records. The subtleness of Cherry, along with Pat Bianchi on organ and drummer Byron Landham create a club-like vibe caught in the studio. The trio captures the lyrical essence of 1960s Wayne Shorter with two of the saxophonists compositions, “Deluge” and “Edda.” Cherry takes his time working through the Kenny Burrell classic “Chitlins Con Carne,” but with bluesy, story-telling phrases, it’s well worth the wait. A swinging groove on Herbie Hancock’s “Maiden Voyage” gives the overdone gem a welcome boost. All in all, a no-nonsense organ record with a seasoned master at the helm.