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Recorded in January 2000, Walk On was the latest release by bassist
Ray Brown before his passing in July 2002. Maynard Ferguson once remarked that he
was attracted to jazz because jazz musicians always seemed to enjoy what they were
playing. The sense of joy is present throughout Walk On.
“America the Beautiful” begins with Brown playing that most-famous melody on bass.
Suddenly, Geoffrey Keezer and Karriem Riggins join in with kinetic piano and drum
improvisations, leaving the melody behind and taking the song out. The rest of the disc
stays at this high level of group interaction and cohesion. Fats Waller’s “Honeysuckle
Rose” gets a slow-as-molasses blues treatment by Keezer with gentle caressing of the
eighty-eights. Brown’s playing is characterized by a very tasteful, melodic sense of swing
that never lets up.
If one wants an example of that often-talked about, but hard-to-define
jazz thing called “swing,” this record provides a complete lesson on the subject.
Brown’s bass anchors the proceedings on Walk On, but generous solo space is given
to Keezer and Riggins. There is not a boring track on this two disc set. And as is the case
on Telarc recordings, the sound quality is crystal clear with lots of definition. Walk On is
a total joy to listen to and one of the best releases of the year. Ray Brown
went out on the highest of notes.
Telarc on the web: www.telarc.com.
This review first appeared in All About Jazz: Los Angeles.
~ Ollie Bivins
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Track Listing: (Disc 1) America the Beautiful, Sunday, Stella By Starlight, Lined With
a Groove, Honeysuckle Rose, Fried Pies, You Are My Sunshine, That's All, Ray
Brown Suite: Movement I, Ray Brown Suite: Movement II, Ray Brown Suite: Movement
III, Hello Girls, (Disc 2) F.S.R., Stardust, Evidence, Woogie Boogie, In a Mellow
Tone, The Nearness of You, Much in Common, This Is Always, Three by Four, Down
by the Riverside.
Personnel: Ray Brown- bass; Geoffrey Keezer- piano; Karriem Riggins- drums
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