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A photograph on the inside of Soulville 's CD cover shows Webster with his head tilted back,
eyelids drooping and a cigarette dangling from his mouth. It’s a great photo, simply because
Webster
approaches soloing in much the same way. A relaxed and patient improviser who first made his
name with Ellington’s band playing one definitive solo after another, the tenor saxophonist really
blossomed once he struck out as a solo artist where he wasn’t boxed in by the confines of the big
band.
From the very first note of this 1957 classic, you know that you’re listening to Webster--he
possesses a style consisting of
sweeping phrases that end with a fluttering vibrato, sometimes using nothing but air--and no tune is
ever taken faster than a loping gait. Befitting the title, the first two tunes are blues played with a lot of
grease and vinegar, but once we get to the ballads, like “Ill Wind,” Webster creates a mood of
beautiful smoky melancholy using only a handful of notes.
The Oscar Peterson Trio provides restrained backing (Herb Ellis getting more
space than usual) with Stan Levey added to provide some light stickwork for gentle swing. Of
marginal interest are the bonus tracks, which feature Webster at the piano; they’re decent enough
boogie woogie, but don’t really fit in with the rest of the set. Soulville is a classic recording
from one
of jazz’s greatest artists, a romantic and sentimental masterpiece.
See the Combing the Verve Catalog column
for related reviews.
Visit Verve on the web.
~ David Rickert
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Track Listing: 1. Soulville 2. Late Date 3. Time On My Hands 4. Lover, Come Back To Me 5. Where Are You? 6.
Makin’ Whoopie 7. Ill Wind 8. Who 9. Boogie Woogie 10. Roses of Picardy.
Personnel: Ben Webster-tenor sax, piano on #8-10; Oscar Peterson-piano; Ray Brown-bass; Herb Ellis-guitar;
Stan Levey-drums.
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