Before he walks out the door on his way to a gig,
77-year-old trumpeter Eddie Henderson always gets two words of advice from his
wife: be cool. The legendary trumpeter has taken that mantra to heart, and on
Be Cool, his new release on Smoke Sessions Records, he shows just how hot cool
can get.
Of course, if you're going to be cool it helps to surround
yourself with the coolest of the cool, and Henderson has done just that: his
smokin' quintet also features saxophonist Donald Harrison, pianist Kenny
Barron, bassist Essiet Essiet, and drummer Mike Clark. Together, the band
conjures smoldering funk, lush ballads, broad-shouldered swing, and bristling
bop -- in all, a prismatic display of the many facets of cool.
"For me, 'be cool' means compose yourself and don't act
jagged, musically or personally," Henderson offers. "One connotation
is to not play so erratically, to push the envelope to the edge but not go
over. It's like going fishing: if you're not prepared when you throw your line
out there, you might catch Jaws instead of a minnow. Personally, it's about
playing with people who love each other and share a good chemistry."
That's undoubtedly the case with the group Henderson has
convened for his second Smoke Sessions outing as a leader. His relationship with
Barron stretches back more than three decades, to the early days following his
return to New York in the mid-'80s after a decade spent practicing medicine in
San Francisco. He's been working regularly with Clark in recent years,
especially in the Wolff & Clark Expedition, the drummers co-led band with
pianist Michael Wolff. But they also share roots in the fusion bands of Herbie
Hancock -- Henderson with Mwandishi and Clark immediately after with
Headhunters. Essiet, meanwhile, has been a constant in Henderson's recent
bands, while he's shared stages with Harrison under the auspices of the
super-group The Cookers.
With compositions by Barron, Clark and Harrison, not to
mention Henderson's wife and daughter, Be Cool recalls the title of the
trumpeter's previous album, Collective Portrait. "I like my albums to have
a wider scope than to just be a self-portrait of my musical taste," he
explains. "This really is a collective portrait with a much wider spectrum
of music. That's the nature of the game: you always want to grow each time you
play, rather than just sit back and play what you feel comfortable with."
Henderson asks the same of his sidemen; hence, Barron's
uncharacteristically funky "Smoke Screen," which opens the album on a
lively note. "Usually you don't hear Kenny playing funky like that,"
Henderson says. "He's a consummate pianist and a consummate trio player,
but he really rose to the occasion on this Horace Silver-type tune."
Penned by Henderson's wife Natsuko, "Be Cool"
follows, its anthemic melody echoing her titular words of warning. A true
family affair, the album also includes a contribution from Henderson's
daughter, Cava Menzies -- the mysterious "Nightride," its intriguing
contours enticing searching solos from the trumpeter as well as Harrison and
Barron.
The familiar standard "After You've Gone" is
usually played up-tempo, but Henderson transforms it into a poignant ballad,
reimagining the classic melody as a funereal memoriam for lost loved ones.
"Every time I play that tune people in the audience have tears running
from their eyes," Henderson says. "Maybe they're remembering people
they've lost. Sometimes it reminds me of my mother who passed and it's hard for
me to finish playing the melody."
Clark's "Loft Funk" restores the buoyant mood with
its gritty, deep-in-the-pocket groove. In the Wolff & Clark Expedition the
song is typically taken at a breakneck pace, so Henderson opted to slow it down
and evoke the taut pace of contemporary hip-hop. Henderson brings a similar
feel, albeit with a more slippery melody, to his contribution, "The Sand
Castle Head Hunter," highlighted by a captivating Essiet solo, exquisitely
paired by Clark's coloristic accompaniment.
The burnished warmth of the leader's muted trumpet is a
perfect match for Miles Davis' classic "Fran-Dance," which evokes
memories of the iconic trumpeter's visits to San Francisco. "I grew up
with Miles as a staple of my musical diet," Henderson says. "When he
was playing at the Blackhawk he would stay at my parents' house, so seeing him
play when I was a teenager is indelibly printed in my brain. I've always wanted
to record that tune."
Another piece by a trumpet great follows: Woody Shaw's
"The Moontrane." Henderson and Shaw were close friends, meeting
shortly after Shaw recorded this piece with organist Larry Young. "I had a
little group in medical school," Henderson recalls, "and we used to
play that tune. I wanted to record it to pay homage to my friend, the late,
great Woody Shaw." The trio of compositions by jazz giants concludes with
John Coltrane's immortal "Naima," its achingly beautiful melody here
accompanied by a more urgent, steelier tempo.
Henderson looks back on his days in Mwandishi with Hancock's
"Toys," while "Easy Living" is another old favorite,
especially in versions by Lee Morgan and Clifford Brown. The album takes a more
exotic detour to close, with the entrancing Eastern European romance of Polish
drummer Tomek Grochot's "Dla Juzi."
From now on, Eddie Henderson has a ready response whenever
his wife chimes in with her regular reminder. With scintillating interpersonal
chemistry, tasteful but captivating soloing, and a stellar melodic sense, one
spin of this album is enough to prove that Henderson has taken the words Be
Cool deeply to heart.
"Be Cool" was produced by Paul Stache and Damon
Smith and recorded live in New York at Sear Sound's Studio C on a
Sear-Avalon custom console at 96KHz/24bit and mixed to ½" analog
tape using a Studer mastering deck. Available in audiophile HD format.
Eddie Henderson · Be Cool
Smoke Sessions Records · Release Date: May 4, 2018
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