Product Details
Misterioso

Misterioso
Thelonious Monk Quartet

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Track Listing

  1. Nutty [Live]
  2. Blues Five Spot [Live]
  3. Let's Cool One [Live]
  4. In Walked Bud [Live]
  5. Just a Gigolo [Live]
  6. Misterioso [Live]
  7. 'Round Midnight [Live][*]
  8. Evidence [Live][*]

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #54429 in Music
  • Released on: 1991-07-01
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Live

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
After he was denied club work in New York for years because a marijuana conviction kept him from holding a "cabaret card," Thelonious Monk's late-'50s stays at the Five Spot provided him with a forum through which he could reach an audience and also acted as an intense musical laboratory. Misterioso and its companion disc, Thelonious in Action, were Monk's first professionally recorded live dates, and they feature the excellent 1958 quartet with tenorist Johnny Griffin stretching out on Monk tunes like "In Walked Bud" and "Evidence." Monk could not only find new dissonances, but he could also find new meanings for dissonance, imbuing his sometimes elliptical, even minimalist, compositions with a joyous playfulness. Griffin adds a strong blues flavor and some unlikely quotations that leaven his intense focus. If this nugget tickles the ear enough to drive you toward the completist's deep end, check out Monk's Complete Riverside Recordings mega-box. --Stuart Broomer


Customer Reviews

Johnny Griffin at his Best5
I won't review this CD as a whole since many others have already. But in all these reviews I note scant mention of Johnny Griffin. In this live session from that now defunct little hole-in-the-wall, the Five Spot, Grif shows why he is considered the 'fastest tenor alive.' He's also the most passionate. His solos on this session are consistently amazing in their dexterity, imagination, and sheer emotional charge. He often moans ecstatically as he blows flourish after flourish of blue fire, yet never takes himself too seriously. He truly GETS Thelonious: the wry twinkle of Monkish humor. The second cut, 'Blues Five Spot,' is one of the greatest tenor solos of all time (See my Listmania, "Great Tenor Sax Solos.") Astonishing speed and melodic invention with the trio are followed by an un-accompanied cadenza of clean blues logic, topped off by the theme from Popeye the Sailor Man. Sonny Rollins was more magisterial and conscious of his greatness when he played with Monk; Trane was more esoteric and, well, heavy; but no one played Monk with more understanding than Johnny Griffin: they were friends for life. Grif knew the secret of Monk. The Master wasn't avant garde and he wasn't heavy: he was funky, blue, and full of laughter. Despite the primitive quality of the recording, and the idiots at the bar who keep dropping their glasses, this sizzling July evening in 1958, in the hippest of New York bars, at the heart of a by-gone era, is captured for all time here in one of the GREAT live jazz recordings.

A tragically underrated, spectacular album5
Monk fans who instinctively think of Charlie Rouse should listen to this album; Johnny Griffin is in excellent form (e.g., "Let's Cool One"). Some first-rate drumming too (solo on "In Walked Bud" is downright melodic). The reviewer that dinged this wasn't listening very well. Buy it and see!

Masterful5
Monk's quirkiness and brilliant originality are on display here in spades, but aside from that this cd is also so melodic and charming that it should be of value to anyone, not just jazz snobs. This is a brilliant but also oddly lovely cd.