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Mal Waldron - Reminicent Suite


Label:

BBE Music

Genre:

Jazz

Product No.:
ABBE 682
UPC: 197188635978
Availability:
In Stock
Category:

200 Gram Vinyl Record



200 Gram LP
$39.98

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Available for the first time outside of Japan!

200-gram gatefold LP with obi strip

New jacket photos, notes and an essay interview with Terumasa Hino

Reminicent Suite by American pianist Mal Waldron and Japanese trumpeter Terumasa Hino was originally released in 1973 on the famed Victor label and was one of several Japan-only albums recorded and released by Waldron over a thirty-year period, most of which have never been available outside Japan. Reminicent Suite comprises two extended tracks, both taking up a side each. The title track on Side A is composed by Waldron, and is a dark, brooding heavy groove typical of his early 70s sound. "Black Forest" on side B is written by Hino and is a vivid and energetic piece, layered and textured with dense percussion and Hino's signature trumpet tone.

Mal Waldron started out in the early 1950s working extensively on the Prestige label with notable figures such as Gene Ammons, Jackie McLean and Charles Mingus. Most famously, he worked with Billie Holiday before leaving the States in the mid-60s and relocating to Europe where he established himself as a major figure working across many countries including France, Italy, and Germany, where he made his home in Munich. In 1969, Waldron recorded the first releases for two major European jazz labels, ECM and Enja, before visiting Japan on tour for the first time in 1970. Waldron instantly fell in love with Japan and, over the next three decades, extensively toured and recorded there for numerous labels.

Terumasa Hino is one of the towering figures of post-war modern jazz in Japan. Coming to prominence via the Hideto Shiraki and Sadao Watanabe bands in the mid-60s, Hino soon emerged as one of the prime movers in new jazz generation that changed the direction of jazz in Japan. He explored a more open, freer, and improvised sound, mixing psychedelic and rock elements with freeform and post-bop jazz. Hino recorded for many of the leading jazz labels of the era including Columbia, Three Blind Mice, and East Wind and would go on to relocate to the U.S. in the mid-70s, immersing himself with the leading fusion players of the New York scene including Larry Corryell, Mtume, Al Foster, Dave Liebman and many more. In the early '80s, Hino's jazz funk tracks were dancefloor smashes on the U.K. jazz dance scene.

Joining Waldron and Hino on Reminicient Suite is a band made up of the very best Japanese jazzman of their day: Takeo Uematsu on sax, Terumasa's brother, Motohiko Hino, on drums, and the legendary bass master, Isao Suzuki. Together, they deliver one of the very best albums of the era, a richly articulated and dynamic session that exemplifies the very best that the Japanese jazz scene was doing in the early 1970s.

Reminicent Suite is pressed on 200-gram vinyl presented in a gatefold jacket plus obi strip, with new photos by Tadayuki Naito; translated original jacket notes; and a 7,500-word essay including interview with Terumasa Hino from Tony Higgins, co-curator of the J Jazz Masterclass Series. This is the first time this album has been available outside of Japan.

 



Side A
Reminicent Suite: Dig It Deep Down Baby ~ Echoes ~ Once More With Feeling

Side B
Black Forest

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