“Grande-Terre,” recorded in Guadeloupe in 1997, shows off the high-wire, from-the-gut jazz Hargrove played most nights of his life.
Unlike most “lost” posthumous jazz albums, “Grande-Terre,” a release from the trumpeter Roy Hargrove and his bebop-goes-Havana band Crisol that arrived on Friday, is no live recording, rehearsal tape or leftover session scraps best suited to die-hard fans. The LP, recorded in Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe, in 1998 as a sequel to “Habana” from the previous year, is an ambitious, studio-recorded, global jazz party, sun-kissed and island-hopping.
The alto saxophonist Sherman Irby, currently in the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, felt a relieved surprise when he recently heard the album for the first time, at a listening party hosted by Aida Brandes-Hargrove, Hargrove’s widow and the co-founder of Hargrove Legacy, LLC. “We were tighter than I thought we were!” he said with a laugh.
On “Priorities,” Hargrove’s rousing playing shimmers atop mesmeric Caribbean grooves laid down by four percussionists and two pianists. The album’s ballads are as tender as lovers’ whispers, while sprees like “Afreaka,” a tune by Cedar Walton, swing with such abandon, it feels like the band might spin out of control. It never does, of course, but the very possibility is part of the exhilaration of the high-wire, from-the-gut jazz Hargrove played most nights of his life.
Nobody at Verve Records or in Hargrove’s orbit can say precisely why “Grande-Terre” was shelved until Brandes-Hargrove contacted Verve about the sessions in mid-2022. The answer is probably a matter of abundance. “You can only release so many albums at a time,” Brandes-Hargrove said in an interview, and in the late 1990s Hargrove was restlessly productive, planning an album with strings (“Moment to Moment,” from 2000), getting his big band up and running, helping found the nonprofit performance venue the Jazz Gallery, being a father. The “Grande-Terre” blissout “Kamala’s Dance” is named for his daughter, born in 1997.
Brandes-Hargrove has overseen two other posthumous Hargrove releases: “In Harmony,” collecting 2016 and 2017 duo performances with the pianist Mulgrew Miller, and “The Love Suite: Mahogany,” Hargrove’s first piece written for a large ensemble. Hargrove was only 23 when he premiered “The Love Suite” at Jazz at Lincoln Center in 1993, less than seven years after Wynton Marsalis heard him play as a student at Dallas’s Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and invited him to sit in at a gig that weekend.
We are having trouble retrieving the article content.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.
Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.
Thank you for your patience while we verify access.
Already a subscriber? Log in.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Source: Music - nytimes.com