Product Details
Up & Down

Up & Down
Horace Parlan

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Track Listing

  1. The Book's Beat
  2. Up and Down
  3. Fugee
  4. The Other Part of Town
  5. Lonely One
  6. Light Blue
  7. Fugee (alternate take)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #96200 in Music
  • Released on: 2009-02-10
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Extra tracks, Original recording remastered
  • Dimensions: .20 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
As the house rhythm section for Minton's Playhouse in Harlem and in the studio for Blue Note Records, pianist Horace Parlan, bassist George Tucker, and drummer Al Harewood frequently made jazz history in the early-'60s. This June 18, 1961 session adds tenor saxophonist Booker Ervin, a frequent associate, and guitarist Grant Green, and the result is one of Parlan's most soulful and successful albums. This Rudy Van Gelder-remastered edition marks the first American release of this album on CD with an additional alternate take.


Customer Reviews

Everything's Up on "Up & Down"5
Horace Parlan's "Up & Down" is a most welcome addition to the RVG Series. Over the past twenty years, only three of Parlan's seven Blue Note albums were even issued in the States, with all of them currently out of print. (Thankfully they were all collected on a Mosaic set.) As a result, you may not have any CDs by Horace Parlan as a leader, but you might be surprised by the sessions he appeared on as a sideman. In the late 1950s, Parlan was a mainstay in the band of Charles Mingus, appearing on the classic Atlantic album "Blues & Roots" and Columbia's "Mingus Ah Um." On Blue Note, the great rhythm trio of Parlan, bassist George Tucker and drummer Al Harewood was the foundation for many classic dates of the early 1960s -- Dexter Gordon's Doin' Allright, Lou Donaldson's "Midnight Sun" and several Stanley Turrentine recordings, including Look Out, "Comin' Your Way" and "Up At Minton's." This June 18, 1961 session, Parlan's sixth for the label, added tenor saxophonist Booker Ervin and guitarist Grant Green to that trio to great effect. On "Up & Down," the pianist continues to showcase the funky hard bop grooves of earlier efforts, but the solos stretch out here in a more modern direction, led by the contributions of Ervin and Green. Look no further than Ervin's solo on "The Book's Beat" or Green and Parlan's solos on the blues "The Other Part of Town" as examples, though my favorite track has to be the forward thinking "Fugee." You can see why when Parlan returned one final time to the studio for Blue Note in 1963 (for the session known both as "Happy Frame of Mind" and "Back to the Gig"), the only players he brought back were Ervin and Green. It's too bad these three weren't able to cut as many dates as the Turrentine/Parlan groups were, but that's the "Up & Down" of the jazz life -- at least we've got this one to enjoy!

parlan's parlance3
Horace Parlan came to my attention on several of Roland Kirk's albums where his quirky, futuristic, individualized style defined the rythm section for Kirk.

Nevertheless, on "Up and Down" Parlan's playing is uneven, forced and boring. I am referring to his solos only. The arrangements and ensemble playing are great and behind Grant Green and Booker Little, he makes the rhythm section sizzle.

His solos do feature his signature rising-diminished-chord riff that is so definitive of his work with Kirk, but absent are the many quotes from show tunes that I came to identify him with. Instead we get forced, bluesy riffs repeated ad nauseum. I say forced because they depart so dramatically from the elegant bop lines played by Green and Little.

I heard Parlan on Stanley Turrentine's "Up at Minton's" where he murdered "Love for Sale" in a similar manner, seemingly unprepared for the piano solo and throwing out unrelated groups of notes just to fill up space.

Parlan's more recent work recorded in Denmark show a lyrical, canny sense of melodic play which focus on the use of space not present on this album.

Parlan's presence on Kirk's "I talk with the Spirits" and "Slightly Latin" show him in a much more favorable light. His work there is exciting and stylistically definitive of the post=bop piano texture.