The Congregation
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Congregation
- Latin Quarter
- I'm Glad There Is You
- Main Spring
- It's You or No One
- I Remember You [*]
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #140720 in Music
- Brand: Griffin Technology
- Released on: 2006-08-15
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
Customer Reviews
A very good company!
The super famous Congregation with the ultra cool Andy Warhol cover has finally been reissued in the Rudy Van Gelder Blue Note series. In this album the Griff played with some very good pals, Sonny Clark (piano), Paul Chambers (uprightbass that he played even with the arch in his solos), Kenny Dennis (drums). The opener is an original by Johnny, a sort of Doxy, if you know the tune by Sonny Rollins. It is a very nice tune, a funky-blues infected tune, it has a sort of backbeat drum, "hand clapped" arrangement. The second tune Latin Quarter is a contrafact by John Jenkins (a melody based on Tangerine chord progression), is in swing time (it's not a latin), medium tempo. I'm glad there is you is a standard taken not too fast. Main spring is a fine blues, medium tempo too. It's you or noone by Styne-Cahn is the second pure standard and the fastest tune of the album. Johnny is in top form here and Sonny Clark is a good choice for him, because he is very good in comping and he is a boppish kind of sololoist. The last tune I remember you is a bonus track that was not present in the original LP of the fifties is medium tempo. I'm sure you know what kind of player Johnny was at the time. An hard bopper very into Bird's discoveries very technical, with great chops, but very near the blues feeling. This Congregation was the last of three albums Johnny recorded for Blue Note (Introducing and Blowing session were the other two). I have almost all the things Griffin recorded in the fifties and sixties. This one is surely a very consistent and interesting release.
The gunslinger takes the pulpit and despatches fewer souls.
Wish I could warm up to this album. The "world's fastest saxophonist" holds back on his technique, the lightning-fast articulations, double-timing, etc., but what that leaves is a pretty basic, limited rhythm-harmonic vocabulary. Eighth-note lines alternating with held top-tones and, of course, that distinctive sound. In fact, the "Little Giant's" tone has a lot in common with his namesake's, the Big Giant Dexter Gordon's--slow, "Leslie-like" vibrato and a way of "sticking" his notes in favor of smooth legato tonguing. But Dexter's behind-the-beat phrasing and logical-emotive story-telling, employing all of the tension-creating notes of a chord's extensions, is not nearly as much in evidence in Griffin's playing.
"The Congregation" is another variation on "Show Me the Way to Go Home" changes (i.e. "The Preacher"). And all of the tunes are practically interchangeable in tempo, expecially with "I'm Glad There Is You" taken at a medium rather than ballad tempo. Helping offset the homogeneity of the tempos is the happy choice of tunes, each a winner in itself. Some of the soloist's most impressive work on the date comes on "Latin Quarter," especially with its double-time chorus and concluding cadenza.
Still, I'd tend to go with one of Griff's dates with Jaws (Live at Minton's) or Ira (Blue Stroll) or the commanding "Return of the Griffin" ahead of this one. The rhythm section is predictably fine (just like the last hundred or so CDs I've purchased with Paul Chambers plus Sonny Clark, Red Garland, Wynton Kelly, Kenny Drew, or whomever). At least "The Congregation" doesn't disappoint like "A Blowin' Session," the three-tenor date that fails to live up to its promise due to an overly "hot" audio mix which, even on the remastered edition, practically makes Griffin, Coltrane and Mobley sound like three undifferentiated buzz saws.
Griffin the LEADER
This is a must have for anyone's collection, and Rudy Van Gelder has done yet another superb job at bringing these old Blue Note recordings to life. Johnny Griffins' blowing on his tenor sax is so strong and funkified, and he has a great cast of sidemen along for the ride: Sonny Clark (piano), Paul Chambers (bass), and Kenny Dennis (drums).
By the way, who DIDN'T Paul Chambers play with throughout the 50's? Man does he stand out on these tracks, by the way.
The title track, "Congregation", is a a solid piece from start to finish. Kenny Dennis and Paul Chambers keep the beat throughout on this album, and Chambers gets to show his stuff on more than a few occasions. But the true star on this album is Griffin himself, who proved himself a solid leader and an equal among others like Coltrane, Mobley and Gordon. This album right here is musical bliss, and I only wish Rudy would crank them all out faster. Oh, you also get a bonus track on this release called "I Remember You" that was not on the OG LP.
This album is a must if you want a great remastering job of this classic album or if you are new to the world of Johnny Griffin. The Congregation is THE place to start and belongs in every jazz lovers' collections.




