Revisiting and remastering two 1958 albums on the Riverside Label (Monk in Action and Misterioso), then remastered as At The Five Spot on Milestone in 1977, this quartet show a different take on Monk's music through the authoritative playing and interpretations of Monk's music by tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin, intensified by drummer Roy Haynes and bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik's solid support.
Label: ezz-thetics by Hat Hut Records Ltd Catalog ID: ezz-thetics 1147 Squidco Product Code: 32730
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2022 Country: Switzerland Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold Recorded at Five Spot Cafe, in NYC, on August 7th, 1958.
Originally issued in 1958 as a vinyl LP on the Riverside Records label As Thelonious In Action with catalog code RLP 12-262 and as Misterioso with catalog code RLP 12-279.
"Monk is Monk, was and ever shall be, according to the recordings and films that have survived him, and secure our experience of his unique and consistent creativity. Nevertheless, as the context changes our perspective shifts, given the interactive qualities and individual contributions of the participants in any jazz ensemble. In this case, we have a one-time document, the only known recording of Monk working in a live performance with these particular musicians. How did it come to be, and what makes it special?
Over the years, it seems Monk chose the members of his working bands for reasons of comfort and contrast, familiarity and availability. If we pick up his story in 1957, Monk had been recording for Riverside for two years, his Blue Note and Prestige days behind him, and he had recently regained his cabaret card, necessary for performing in New York City clubs - although offers for appearances were at first few and far between. A fortunate long-term gig began in July 1957 at the Five Spot, which had initially opened as a small neighborhood hangout for artists and writers, but by this time had presented Cecil Taylor (unknown and just beginning his career), the equally youthful pianist Randy Weston, and Charles Mingus' Jazz Workshop. Monk's quartet consisted of the still-impressionable John Coltrane on tenor saxophone, bassist Wilbur Ware, and drummer Shadow Wilson. Ware was Monk's first-call bassist, but when he failed to show one night, he was replaced by Ahmed Abdul-Malik.
Ahmed Abdul-Malik was a converted Muslim and Brooklyn native who had previously played with Randy Weston, and shared with him an interest in North African and Arabic music and culture; he learned to play violin, cello, and oud, and later in 1958 recorded the first of two albums that brilliantly combined jazz with African and Middle Eastern sources. He was still a part of Monk's band when it was re-hired at the Five Spot in June 1958. This time, Monk chose Roy Haynes to play drums. Haynes, then 33 years old, was already established as one of the most dynamic drummers of his generation, having worked with Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Stan Getz, and Sonny Rollins prior to this. With both of his preferred saxophonists, Rollins and Coltrane, unavailable, Monk turned to Johnny Griffin, who proved to be the group's wild card.
Griffin was no novice. Starting out in the rhythm-and-blues-fueled bands of Lionel Hampton, Joe Morris and Wynonie Harris, Griffin released his debut discs for Blue Note and Argo in 1956 - the latter with Wilbur Ware on bass, who was to use Griffin on his own exciting album, The Chicago Sound, for Riverside the next year. 1957 found Griffin in demand and among fast company; he recorded his second quartet album for Blue Note and was the nominal leader of A Blowing Session, a combustible three-tenor excursion with Coltrane and Hank Mobley; and joined Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, as part of no less than seven recording sessions that year - most notably one for Atlantic that featured guest artist Thelonious Monk.
Monk's familiarity with and appreciation of Griffin playing his compositions so well on the Atlantic date no doubt led to his being called for an ill-fated studio session nine months later, in February 1958, which Monk cancelled after the band struggled with a single tune, the newly composed "Coming on the Hudson" - and then again in June, for the Five Spot residency. (These experiences left a permanent mark on Griffin, as he frequently dropped Monk tunes into his repertoire for the rest of his career; recorded an entire Monk program (Lookin' at Monk for the Jazzland label) in 1961 during his popular partnership with fellow rambunctious tenorman Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis; and reunited with Monk for a series of European concerts in 1967.)
Griffin came to Monk with a reputation as a speed demon - double-timing the tempo was his default mechanism, elaborating melodies with a mixture of mellow swing and complex bop phrasing, and impishly inserting song quotes a la Rollins and Dexter Gordon. "Rhythm-a-ning" here becomes a quote-fest: "Love in Bloom," "Jumpin' with Symphony Sid," "Fascinatin' Rhythm," "Swingin' on a Star," and Mendelssohn's "Wedding March" are tossed into the fray, colliding with Monk's wry solo construction on his opening theme and repeated descending lines. Their contrasting nature - Griffin's fluid extravagance and Monk's percussive dissections - intensified by Haynes' forceful divisions of the beat, generate a tension unlike any of Monk's subsequent groups. "Let's Cool One" is a case in point; Griffin concocts a shrewd solo that pushes the unassuming melody to extremes, and the entire rhythm section drops out, allowing the tenor saxist to hover, freely, out in empty space.
Alas, the summer ended and Griffin left the band, citing financial woes. He was replaced, briefly, first by Coltrane, then Rollins, until October 1958 when Sonny suggested a new replacement, Charlie Rouse, and the next chapter in the Monk saga was written."-Art Lange, Chicago, October 2022