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Dave Ellis - In the Long Run (1998)

Dave Ellis - In the Long Run (1998)

BAND/ARTIST: Dave Ellis

  • Title: In the Long Run
  • Year Of Release: 1998
  • Label: Monarch Records
  • Genre: Hard Bop, Post-Bop, Soul Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
  • Total Time: 68:09
  • Total Size: 400 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Ced & Dunn (Ellis) - 6:15
02. You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To (Porter) - 5:34
03. Evil Deals (Reed) - 5:56
04. Pillars (Apfelbaum) - 6:42
05. Meltdown (Ellis-Chimenti) - 6:07
06. Black Narcissus (Henderson) - 7:40
07. Monk's Dream (Monk) - 4:37
08. Tootie Rootie (Reed) - 5:17
09. The Waterbearer (Roberson) - 5:59
10. Just Squeeze Me (Ellington) - 7:39
11. In the Long Run (Ellis-Chimenti) - 6:23

Dave Ellis - tenor saxophone
Peter Barshay, Robert Hurst - bass
Jeff Chimenti, Eric Reed - piano
Deszon Claiborne, Albert "Tootie" Heath - drums
Dimitri Matheny - flugelhorn
Marty Wehner - trombone

Dave Ellis' more intellectual side wins out on his second album, In the Long Run, which was produced by veteran Orrin Keepnews. The Bay Area saxman's debut album, Raven, had its share of groove-oriented soul-jazz, but on this sophomore effort, he stays away from R&B-influenced material and sticks to the acoustic and straight-ahead. Having worked with Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, Sonny Rollins and countless other jazz greats, Keepnews had quite a track record when it came to producing jazz, and he helps Ellis deliver a solid collection of hard bop and modal post-bop. Under Keepnews' supervision, Ellis tackles Duke Ellington's "Just Squeeze" and Thelonious Monk's "Monk's Dream" with warm and honest results. Another high point of the CD (which employs such notables as drummer Al "Tootie" Heath, flugelhornist Dmitri Matheny and pianist Eric Reed) is Joe Henderson's "Black Narcissus," a modal jewel that Henderson unveiled on a Keepnews-produced session in 1969. Although "Black Narcissus" had been recorded by Frank Morgan, Cal Tjader, Ambiance, Flora Purim and others, it never became the standard it deserved to be. But Ellis recognizes the song's greatness, and his appealing version slows it down to the point that it becomes a ballad. Like Raven, In the Long Run isn't exceptional, but is enjoyable and stimulating.


Dave Ellis - In the Long Run (1998)

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  • Jason Longwell
  •  wrote in 00:20
    • Like
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Hello. This is an excellent CD. Thank you for posting it. I have a question. Do the liner notes of the album specify which tracks feature which musicians? I do a radio show about jazz, and I want to play tracks from this CD on my show, but, I want to give proper credit to the correct personnel on each track. For instance, I don't know which tracks feature Eric as the piano player, and which feature Jeff, or, which tracks feature Albert as drummer and which feature Deszon. Any help here would be very appreciated. Thank you!