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Roy Haynes
@ the Barbican Centre
18 November 2011
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
When Roy Haynes plays his drums, sixty years of experience informs
every authoritative stroke. A working musician since 1942, Haynes'
unrelenting swing and sound of surprise has graced the bands of
a who's-who list of jazz innovators across a wide spectrum of improvisation.
Roy Haynes was born in Boston, March 13, 1926, and was keenly interested
in jazz ever since he can remember. Primarily self-taught, he began
to work locally in 1942 with musicians like the Charlie Christian
inflected guitarist Tom Brown, bandleader Sabby Lewis, and Kansas
City blues-shout alto saxophonist Pete Brown, before getting a call
in the summer of 1945 to join legendary bandleader Luis Russell
(responsible for much of Louis Armstrong's musical backing from
1929 to 1933) to play for the dancers at New York's legendary Savoy
Ballroom. When not travelling with Russell, the young drummer spent
much time on Manhattan's 52nd Street and uptown in Minton's, the
legendary incubator of bebop, soaking up the scene.
Haynes was Lester Young's drummer from 1947 to 1949, worked with
Bud Powell and Miles Davis in '49, became Charlie Parker's drummer
of choice from 1949 to 1953, toured the world with Sarah Vaughan
from 1954 to 1959, did numerous extended gigs with Thelonious Monk
in 1959-60, made eight recordings with Eric Dolphy in 1960-61, worked
extensively with Stan Getz from 1961 to 1965, played and recorded
with the John Coltrane Quartet from 1963 to 1965, has intermittently
collaborated with Chick Corea since 1968, and with Pat Metheny during
the '90s. Metheny was featured on Haynes' previous Dreyfus release
Te Vou! (voted by NAIRD as Best Contemporary Jazz Record of 1996).
He's been an active bandleader from the late ‘50s to the present,
featuring artists in performance and on recordings like Phineas
Newborn, Booker Ervin, Roland Kirk, George Adams, Hannibal Marvin
Peterson, Ralph Moore and Donald Harrison. A perpetual top three
drummer in the Downbeat Readers Poll Awards, he won the Best Drummer
honors in 1996, and in that year received the prestigious French
Chevalier des l'Ordres Artes et des Lettres.
On “Praise,” he gathers a top-shelf quintet of improvisers
half his age. The 72-year-old master attacks nine tunes from each
conceivable angle and possible configuration; typically, his young
cohorts have to exert every ounce of creative energy not to be left
in the dust. Those youngbloods include two newcomers to Haynes'
circle, altoist Kenny Garrett and tenorist David Sanchez. Roy’s
son Graham Haynes adds his distinctive sound on cornet and flugelhorn
to the powerful front line. Pianist David Kikoski has been with
Haynes for 15 years, while bassist Dwayne Burno is a recent initiate.
As on his previous two recordings for Dreyfus (When It’s
Haynes, It Roars and Te Vou!), “Praise” refers to Haynes’
glorious legacy while adhering firmly to his credo, “Now is
the time.” Within the imaginative arrangements, Haynes stamps
his personality on each tune, intuitively designing rhythmic phrases
like a great tap dancer. “I structure pieces like riding
a horse,” he says. “You pull a rein here, you
tighten it up here, you loosen it there. I'm still sitting in the
driver's seat, so to speak. I let it loose, I let it go, I see where
it's going and what it feels like. Sometimes I take it out, sometimes
I'll be polite, nice and let it move and breathe -- always in the
pocket and with feeling. So the music is tight but loose.”
Haynes elicits remarkable performances. For example, there's a
startling duo with Kenny Garrett on “My Little Suede Shoes.”
49 years after Haynes played traps alongside two congueros on Charlie
Parker’s original recording, he dialogues with the ferocious
altoist almost in free meter, implying the beat. “Israel”
is a tribute to Haynes’ friend, composer John Carisi, which
premiered on the April 1949 Birth of the Cool session for Capitol
with Kenny Clarke on drums. Here the soloists take precise, elegant
solos on the challenging changes, spurred by Haynes' all-over rhythm
painting. “The Touch Of Your Lips” is the latest in
a series of Sarah Vaughan ballads that Haynes has recorded, featuring
a compelling Graham Haynes statement on flugelhorn. David Sanchez,
in fine form throughout, blows full bore on Kikoski's Coltranesque
“Inner Trust,” while the versatile pianist gets two
trio features -- a tasty interpretation of the traditional hymn
“Morning Has Broken” and a rollicking version of McCoy
Tyner's “Blues On The Corner,” playing electric piano.
The three horns handle Chick Corea’s rhythmically tricky “Mirror,
Mirror” with panache, while there’s keen ensemble interplay
throughout “After Sunrise,” augmented by in-demand Latin
percussionist Daniel Moreno. The proceedings conclude with a finely
textured drum solo, “Shades of Senegal.”
Haynes assesses his restless persona – “I am constantly
practicing in my head. In fact, a teacher in school once sent me
to the principal, because I was drumming with my hands on the desk
in class. My father used to say I was just nervous. I’m always
thinking rhythms, drums. When I was very young I used to practice
a lot; not any special thing, but just practice playing. Now I'm
like a doctor. When he’s operating on you, he's practicing.
When I go to my gigs, that's my practice. I may play something that
I never heard before or maybe that you never heard before. It’s
all a challenge. I deal with sounds. I'm full of rhythm, man. I
feel it. I think summer, winter, fall, spring, hot, cold, fast and
slow -- colours. But I don't analyse it. I've been playing professionally
over 50 years, and that’s the way I do it. I always surprise
myself. The worst surprise is when I can’t get it to happen.
But it usually comes out. I don’t play for a long period,
and then I’m like an animal, a lion or tiger locked in its
cage, and when I get out I try to restrain myself. I don't want
to overplay. I like the guys to trade, and I just keep it moving,
and spread the rhythm, as Coltrane said. Keep it moving, keep it
crisp.”
Source: dreyfusrecords.com
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