Product Details
Song for Sisyphus

Song for Sisyphus
Phil Woods Quartet

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Track Listing

  1. Song for Sisyphus
  2. Last Night When We Were Young
  3. Nuages
  4. Change Partners
  5. Monking Business
  6. Summer Afternoon - Phil Woods
  7. When My Dreams Come True
  8. Shaw 'Nuff

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #31734 in Music
  • Released on: 1998-02-10
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

One of Phil's best5
This is Phil Woods at his prime. While I still think his best album is "Birds of a Feather" (one of the best alto saxophone albums of all time, in my opinion), "Sisyphus" showcases his passionate, lyrical approach, deeply rooted in bebop but not simply rehashing phrases. He came up in the era of bebop and has a thorough understanding of the language, so he can construct his own phrases, sentences, paragraphs and not simply plagiarize those originated by others. His tone is huge and extremely nuanced, with scoops, growls, and glissandos only serving to enhance his melodic phrasing. All in all, Phil is a serious, moving musician, a true master, and this is a great introduction to his musicianship.

One of his best - alto sax as it was meant to be5
Important note on duplicate releases: This 1977 recording was released on CD in 1998 with its original title (Song for Sisyphus) and cover art, and again in 1999 under a new title (Summer Afternoon Jazz) and different cover art. The tracks are identical. Keep this in mind when shopping for Phil Woods CDs on Amazon. When I accessed the product information for Summer Afternoon Jazz, Amazon's "Better Together" ad urged me to buy both of these CDs. Don't do it unless you want two copies of the same thing.
But be sure you buy at least one copy. This is Phil Woods in his prime, backed up by the same quartet that was with him a year earlier when he won a Grammy award for his double-album set Live From The Showboat. Phil plays the horn the way it was meant to sound in the jazz idiom, rich and full across its whole range and at all dynamic levels. From lush ballads ("Last Night When We Were Young" and "Summer Afternoon") to up-tempo intensity ("Shaw `Nuff") and straight-ahead fun ("Change Partners" and "Monking Business"), that sound, and the technique and style behind it, never falter.
Phil shares the spotlight with his talented sidemen. Pianist Mike Melillo is all alone on "When My Dreams Come True," as is guitarist Harry Leahey on "Nuages."
The album is a bit short at just over 34 minutes, but all eight tracks are keepers.

I'll always love this one5
Phil was my idol back when I was in high school and college, playing alto. That was around 1978-80, during his quartet years with Melillo on piano. I heard him live many times and he was always awesome. I heard him a couple of times later on, post-Melillo, and was disappointed. I've heard very little of his work after this period, but from what I've heard, I've concluded that Woods hit his peak during this time. Song For Sissyphus captures the level of his playing during this time very well. The playing is just outstanding, and "Choose Partners" alone is worth the price of admission. There's a passage following the solos when Phil comes back and plays an improvised duet with bassist Gilmore, starting low and soft and gradually building up as the other members of the quintet join in one by one, and it's all executed with such perfection, it's just one of the most exciting things I've ever heard on record.

The recording is like a Woods quintet live set in miniature, in that he gives pianist Melillo and guitarist Leahy a cut each to themselves, just like in performance when he always gave them an unaccompanied solo each set. (It's a measure of Melillo's sense of humor that he chose a tune from a Marx Brothers movie for his solo on this recording.)

I don't like everything Phil does; he is often frustrating for me to listen to, as he tends to repeat himself a lot when he's not inspired (but then, I guess everyone does; even Charlie Parker played some of the same phrases a million times). His two live quartet albums from this period were, to my great disappointment, not up to the quality of which he was capable. But when he's 'on', he comes from a wellspring of creativity from which he constructs solos of tremendous power and beauty, and he's definitely 'on' here.

I'm adding this a few years later, just having re-listened to the live quartet albums. I take it back, they are excellent.