Freddie Hubbard
I played the trumpet or tried to, as a lad. While my efforts
were pretty lame and abandoned pretty quickly, I still love the
instrument. Freddie Hubbard, one of the all time greats of the
trumpet/flugelhorn is my favourite player of the bugle. Tonight we share one of his all time great
albums, from 1961, Ready for Freddie,
about which AMG had this to say.
Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard really came into his own during this Blue Note
session. He is matched with quite an all-star group (tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Art Davis, and drummer Elvin Jones in addition to Bernard McKinney on euphonium), introduces two of his finest
compositions ("Birdlike" and "Crisis"), and is quite
lyrical on his ballad feature, "Weaver of Dreams." Hubbard's sidemen all play up to par and this memorable
session is highly recommended; it's one of the trumpeter's most rewarding Blue
Note albums.
And this bio from the same source.
One of the great
jazz trumpeters of all time, Freddie Hubbard formed his sound out of the Clifford Brown/Lee Morgan tradition, and by the early '70s was immediately
distinctive and the pacesetter in jazz. However, a string of blatantly
commercial albums later in the decade damaged his reputation and, just when Hubbard, in the early '90s (with the deaths of Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis), seemed perfectly suited for the role of veteran
master, his chops started causing him serious troubles.
\Born and raised
in Indianapolis, Hubbard played early on with Wes
and Monk Montgomery. He moved to New York in 1958, roomed with Eric Dolphy (with whom he recorded in 1960), and was in the
groups of Philly Joe Jones (1958-1959), Sonny Rollins, Slide Hampton, and J.J. Johnson, before touring Europe with Quincy Jones (1960-1961). He recorded with John Coltrane, participated in Ornette Coleman's Free Jazz (1960), was on Oliver Nelson's classic Blues and the Abstract Truth album (highlighted by "Stolen
Moments"), and started recording as a leader for Blue Note that same year.
Hubbard gained fame playing with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1961-1964) next to Wayne Shorter and Curtis Fuller. He recorded Ascension with Coltrane (1965), Out to Lunch (1964) with Eric Dolphy, and Maiden Voyage with Herbie Hancock, and, after a period with Max Roach (1965-1966), he led his own quintet, which at the
time usually featured altoist James Spaulding. A blazing trumpeter with a beautiful tone on
flügelhorn, Hubbard fared well in freer settings but was always
essentially a hard bop stylist.
In 1970, Freddie Hubbard recorded two of his finest albums (Red Clay and Straight Life) for CTI. The follow-up, First Light (1971), was actually his most popular date,
featuring Don Sebesky arrangements. But after the glory of the CTI years
(during which producer Creed Taylor did an expert job of balancing the artistic with
the accessible), Hubbard made the mistake of signing with Columbia and
recording one dud after another; Windjammer (1976) and Splash (a slightly later effort for Fantasy) are low points.
However, in 1977, he toured with Herbie Hancock's acoustic V.S.O.P. Quintet and, in the 1980s, on recordings for Pablo,
Blue Note, and Atlantic, he showed that he could reach his former heights (even
if much of the jazz world had given up on him). But by the late '80s, Hubbard's "personal problems" and increasing
unreliability (not showing up for gigs) started to really hurt him, and a few
years later his once mighty technique started to seriously falter. In late
2008, Hubbard suffered a heart attack that left him hospitalized
until his death at age 70 on December 29 of that year.Freddie Hubbard's fans can still certainly enjoy his many
recordings for Blue Note, Impulse, Atlantic, CTI, Pablo, and his first Music
Masters sets.
Track Listing:
01 Arietis
02 Weaver Of Dreams
03 Marie Anoinette
04 Birdlike
05 Crisis
06 Arietis (alt tk)
07 Marie Antoinette
(alt tk)
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