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Speak No Evil

 
Album Review: Speak No Evil

  • Artist: Wayne Shorter
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: December 24, 1964
  • Total Time: 48:26
  • Type: Instrumental
  • Genre: Jazz

Review

On his third date for Blue Note within a year, Wayne Shorter changed the bands that played on both Night Dreamer and Juju and came up with not only another winner, but also managed to give critics and jazz fans a different look at him as a saxophonist. Because of his previous associations with McCoy Tyner, Elvin Jones, and Reggie Workman on those recordings, Shorter had been unfairly branded with the "just-another-Coltrane-disciple" tag, despite his highly original and unusual compositions. Here, with only Jones remaining and his bandmates from the Miles Davis Quintet, Herbie Hancock and Ron Carter on board (with Freddie Hubbard filling out the horn section), Shorter at last came into his own and caused a major reappraisal of his earlier work. The odd harmonic frameworks used to erect "Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum," with its balladic structure augmented with a bluesy regimen of hard bop and open-toned modalism, create the illusion of a much larger band managing all that timbral space. Likewise on the title track, with its post-bop-oriented melodic line strewn across a wide chromatic palette of minors and Hancock's piano pushing through a contrapuntal set of semi-quavers, the avant-garde meets the hard bop of the '50s head on and everybody wins. The loping lyric of the horns and Hancock's vamping in the middle section during Shorter's solo reveals a broad sense of humor in the saxophonist's linguistics and a deep, more regimented sense of time and thematic coloration. The set ends with the beautiful "Wild Flower," a lilting ballad with angular accents by Hancock who takes the lyric and inverts it, finding a chromatic counterpoint that segues into the front line instead of playing in opposition. The swing is gentle but pronounced and full of Shorter's singular lyricism as a saxophonist as well as a composer. [The CD reissue adds a fine alternate take of "Dance Cadaverous."] ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Witch Hunt Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (8:07)
Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (5:50)
Dance Cadaverous Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (6:41)
Speak No Evil Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (8:21)
Infant Eyes Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (6:50)
Wild Flower Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (6:02)
Dance Cadaverous [Alternate Take][#][*] Wayne Shorter Wayne Shorter (6:35)

Credits

Reid Miles (Photography), Ron Carter (Bass), Reid Miles (Design), Wayne Shorter (Sax (Tenor)), Freddie Hubbard (Trumpet), Ron McMaster (Digital Transfers), Herbie Hancock (Piano), Alfred Lion (Producer), Elvin Jones (Drums), Don Heckman (Liner Notes), Francis Wolff (Photography), Rudy Van Gelder (Engineer)
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Artist: Speak No Evil
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Speak No Evil

Group Members:

Charles Waymire, Lisardo "Lee" Rios, Danny Gill, Curtis Skelton, Greg Weiss

Similar Artists:

See Speak No Evil Lyrics
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Welcome To The Downside", "Speak No Evil

Biography

The Los Angeles metal quintet Speak No Evil (Curtis Skelton on vocals, Danny Gill and Lisardo "Lee" Rios on guitar, Greg Weiss on bass, and Charlie Waymire on drums) first came together in the mid-'90s, shortly after the two guitarists relocated from Miami to the West Coast. The quartet issued a self-titled debut for Universal in 1999, and followed it up with Welcome to the Downside two years later. Their music is comparable to such metallic heavyweights as Soundgarden and Pantera, but their lyrics reflect such politically minded outfits as Rage Against the Machine (especially evident on such songs as "Lunatic" and "Downside," off their sophomore release). ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Speak No Evil
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Speak No Evil
Studio album by Wayne Shorter
Released 1965
Recorded December 24, 1964
Genre Hard bop
Length 42:11
Label Blue Note
Producer Alfred Lion
Professional reviews
Wayne Shorter chronology
JuJu
(1964)
Speak No Evil
(1965)
The Soothsayer
(1965)

Speak No Evil is an album by Wayne Shorter, recorded on 24 December 1964 and released on Blue Note in 1965. It is considered by many critics to be Shorter's finest album, and one of the classics of the hard bop (or post-bop) genre.

Contents

Players

Having employed a version of John Coltrane's "classic quartet" rhythm section on both of his previous albums for Blue Note, Shorter altered the configuration somewhat on Speak No Evil, suggesting the influence of his recent drafting into Miles Davis's "second quintet". Held over from the last session is Coltrane's drummer Elvin Jones; but newly arrived from Davis's band are, on piano and bass respectively, Herbie Hancock and Ron Carter. Rounding out the quintet on trumpet is Freddie Hubbard, an associate of Shorter's from his days as musical director of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. Hubbard was also, by 1964, a frequent collaborator of Hancock's.

Compositions

Shorter brought six new compositions to the Christmas eve session. According to Shorter (as quoted in Don Heckman's liner notes), in writing the material for this album he was "thinking of misty landscapes with wild flowers and strange, dimly-seen shapes — the kind of place where folklore and legends are born. And I was thinking of witch burnings too." Fairy tales were also an inspiration: the bluesy "Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum" is titled after the trademark exclamation of the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk.

Also included are "Infant Eyes", a gauzy hymn to Shorter's daughter, fairly similar to other contemporaneous Shorter ballads ("House of Jade"; "Iris"); and the waltzing "Dance Cadaverous", inspired, according to Shorter, by an old photograph of medical students about to start work on a body - but containing melodic echoes of Jean Sibelius's Valse Triste, which Shorter would eventually perform.

Some notable features of the other compositions are the heraldic horn fanfare that opens "Witch Hunt", and the jaunty, waltz-time theme to the eventual standard "Wild Flower". Generally, the material represents a return to "changes"-based hard bop, after a period of predominately modal music (exemplified by JuJu). But the tone of the music is - appropriately for the often-macabre subject matter - rather dark and eerie.

"Witch Hunt"

The melody consisting mostly of perfect fourths, which outline quartal chords. At the time of the song's composition (and first recording, with Freddie Hubbard on trumpet and Herbie Hancock on piano, as well as Shorter), quartal harmony was beginning to gain popularity in "post-bop" jazz circles, under the particular influence of pianist McCoy Tyner.

"Wild Flower"

"Wild Flower" is a jazz standard in waltz time. The composition is notable as one of the few standard jazz waltzes. Its jaunty, wistful melody evokes early Coltrane - especially in its deployment of a single melody line over a shifting harmonic base (vis, "Moment's Notice" on Blue Train). The long suspended rests at the ends of each melodic phrase typify Shorter's compositions and also those of Herbie Hancock (who played piano on the original version) and Lee Morgan (with whom Shorter had just worked on the latter's Search for the New Land.).

Performances

Though the album's ties to the avant-garde have sometimes been noted (as in the The Penguin Guide to Jazz), the tunes are quite rigidly and conventionally structured. Almost all of them begin with a brief written introduction, followed by one or two statements of long-lined theme, played in lockstep harmony by the two horns. All of the pieces follow the head-solo-head format, long a standard in bebop.

Shorter's laconic, austere soloing on Speak No Evil is in marked contrast to his earlier, grace note-laden, Coltrane-derived style. Several of the other performers cue the emotional pitch of their performances to the leader's newfound terseness: several critics have noted that Jones, Carter and Hubbard are uncharacteristically low-key, although Hancock is mostly himself. (His solo on the title track is one of his most acclaimed as a sideman.) Hubbard's contributions are in fact limited to four of the album's tracks; he lays out completely on "Infant Eyes", and appears only on the two statements of theme bookending "Dance Cadaverous". Neither Jones nor Carter perform solos on this album.

Reception

Speak No Evil was one of several albums Shorter recorded for Blue Note in 1964. At the same time, he was also active in Miles Davis's band, and so it is unlikely that Speak No Evil received any special attention at the time of its release. But the passage of time has led to the album being generally regarded as Shorter's finest, and also a highlight of the Blue Note catalogue. The editors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD award Speak No Evil four stars out of four, and admit it into their "core collection";. Allmusic assigns the album five stars. The acclaim has not necessarily been unanimous, though; Down Beat Magazine's website, for example, does not list Speak No Evil among its highlights of Shorter's career, and David Wilson of the website Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews awards the album three stars out of five and describes it as "more or less standard bop" and "antiseptic next to mid-60s classics like Maiden Voyage or Out To Lunch."

Releases

Speak No Evil was initially released on LP in 1964. It was first released on CD in 1986. A remastered version, supervised by Rudy Van Gelder, was released in 1999, featuring an alternate take of "Dance Cadaverous".

Track listing

  1. "Witch Hunt" 8:07
  2. "Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum" 5:50
  3. "Dance Cadaverous" 6:42
  4. "Speak No Evil" 8:21
  5. "Infant Eyes" 6:51
  6. "Wild Flower" 6.00

(All pieces written by Shorter)[1]

Personnel

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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