Tag Archives: Hank Mobley

Episode19 Jazz

1. Ron Carter – Woolaphant, Milestone
2. Kenny Burrell – Rock salt, Blue Note
3. Jimmy Smith – Dancin on the ceiling, Guest Star Records
4. Sonny Rollins – Playing on the yard, Milestone
5. Andrew Hill – Morning flower, SleepleChase Records
6. Hank Mobley – Hanks’s other souL, Blue Note
7. Coleman Hawkins Encounters Ben Webster – Shine on the Harvest Moon, Verve
8. Lionel Hampton – At the Woodchoppers ball, Joker
9. Johnny Hodges and his Orchestra – Squatty roo, Verve
10. Thelonius Monk – Reflections, Prestige
11. Art Blakey – Dawn on the Desert, Roulette Records
12. Larry Young – Tyrone, Blue Note

Episode18 Jazz

1. Hank Mobley – the Flip, Blue Note
2. Art Pepper – More for les, Contemporary Records
3. the Dave Brubeck Quartet – Take five, Cbs
4. John Dennis – Seven Moons, Debut Records
5. Milt Buckner Trio – I only have eyes for you, Mps
6. Lionel Hampton – Flying home, Timeless
7. Coleman Hawkins – Sancticity, Riverside
8. Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers – the Theme, Blue Note
9. Sonny Rollins – the Most beautiful girl in the world, Prestige
10. Sonny Red – Blues in the pocket, Blue Note
11. Jimmy Smith – Off the top, Elektra Records
12. Thomas ‘Fats’ Waller – Your time is now, Music for Pleasure

Episode16 Jazz

1. Paul Bley / Charles Mingus / Art Blakey – Spontaneous combustion, Replica
2. Art Farmer & Benny Golson – Blues on down, Argo
3. Buddy Tate – Send for you yesterday, Black and blue
4. Lester Young, Roy Eldridge and Harry Edison – Romping, Verve
5. Sonny Sitt – Ain’t Missbehavin, Prestige
6. Lionel Hampton – Mezz and the Hamp, Barclay
7. Buddy Rich – Sonny and sweets, Verve
8. Coleman Hawkins – Centerpiece, Spotlite
9. Budd Johnson and the Four Brass Giants – Blues for Lester, Riverside
10. Dexter Gordon / Fats Navarro / Chubby Jackson – Lemon Drop, Xanadu
11. Charles Mingus – Original faubus fables, America
12. Hank Mobley – Message from the border, Prestige

Episode15 Jazz

1. Dexter Gordon – Junior, Affinity
2. Wayne Shorter – Pug nose, Vee Jay
3. Charles Mingus – Wednesday night prayer meeting, Peerless
4. Sonny Rollins -Bluenote, Blue Note
5. Tad Damerson with John Coltrane – Romas, Prestige
6. the Cedar Walton / Hank Mobley Quintet – Breakthrough, Muse Records
7. Coleman Hawkins  & the Trumpet Kings – Embraceable you, Emarcy Records
8. Duke Ellington and his Orchestra ft. Mahalia Jackson – Part 1 , Cbs
9. Art Tatum – Song of the vagabonds, Black Lion
10. Lester Young – Sweet Georgia brown, Musidisc
11. Benny Carter – In a mellow tone, Pablo
12. Oscar Peterson – Spinning wheel, Pablo

Episode14 Jazz

1. Kenny Burrell – Tin tin deo, Concord Jazz
2. the Barry Harris Trio with Ron Carter and Leroy Williams – Dexterity, Prestige
3. Hank Mobley with Kenny Clarke – Doug’s minor b’ok, Savoy
4. Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers – A night in Tunisia, Philips
5. Sidney Bechet – Achin’hearted blues, Cbs
6. Lionel Hampton with Dexter Gordon – Seven come eleven, Who’s who in Jazz
7. Jimmy Smith – Caravan, Blue Note
8. Coleman Hawkins – Ooga dOoga, Oriole Records
9. Charles Mingus – So long Eric, America
10. Ornette Coleman – Voice poetry, Artists house
11. Oscar Peterson – Wave, Mps
12. Wayne Shorter – Speak no evil, Jamey Aebersold

Episode13 Jazz

1. Erroll Garner – Easy to love, Fontana
2. Dizzy Gillespie – Mas que nada, Clave
3. Wynton Marsalis – Bitter dose, Kingdom Records
4. Coleman Hawkins & Bud Powell – Stuffy, Freedom Records
5. Jimmy Smith – Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Verve
6. Eric Dolphy Quartet – On green Dolphin street, Musidisc
7. Lionel Hampton – Honeysuckle rose, Black and blue
8. Benny Goodman his Trio & Quartet – Tiger rag, Quintessence Jazz Series
9. Hank Mobley – Double exposure, Blue Note
10. Ornette Coleman – Doughnut, Base record
11. Wayne Shorter – the Soothsayer, Blue Note
12. Kenny Burrell – Lost in the stars, Concord Jazz

Episode12 Jazz

1. Kenny Burrell & John Coltrame – Big Paul, Prestige
2. Thelonious Monk – ‘Round about midnight, Byg Records
3. Hank Mobley – Suite, Blue Note
4. the Oscar Peterson Trio – It’s all right with me, Verve
5. Jimmy Smith – Some of my best friends are blues, Metro
6. Sonny Rollins – Ee-ah, Prestige
7. Lionel Hampton – Hamp, Elite Special
8. Coleman Hawkins, Roy Eldridge & Johnny Hodges – the Rabbit in jazz, Verve
9. Andrew Hill – From California with love, Artists house
10. Art Blakey & All Star Jazz Messengers – Moanin’, Eastworld
11. Erroll Garner – the Tease, Philps
12. Sammy Price – Royal garden blues, Musidisc

Episode11 Jazz

1. Duke Ellington and his Orchestra – Perdido, Rca
2. Kenny Burrell wirh Art Blakey – Birks’ Works, Blue Note
3. Coleman Hawkins – Just friends, Rca
4. Charlie Chan  ‘Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Max Roach, Charlie Mingus‘ – Hot house, Debut Records
5. Ornette Coleman – Good old days, Blue Note
6. Hank Mobley – the Vamp, Blue Note
7. the Oscar Peterson Trio – Band call, Verve Records
8. Wayne Shorter – Footprints, Blue Note
9. Lionel Hampton – Gladys, Musidisc
10. Andrew Hill – Soul special, Blue Note
11. Sonny Rollins – Come, gone, Contemporary Records
12. Roy Eldridge – Minor Jive, Musidisc

Episode10 Jazz

1. Gil Evans Orch, Kenny Burrell & Phil Woods – Blues in Orbit, Verve Records
2. Thelonious Monk – Blue Monk, BYG Records
3. Dexter Gordon – Home Run, Prestige Records
4. Philly Joe Jones – Stablemates, Milestone
5. Hank Mobley – Hanks’s Waltz, Blue Note
6. Jimmy Smith – Sonnymoon for two, Blue Note
7. Charles Mingus – What Love, Cbs
8. Kenny Burrell – Mother-In-Law, Cadet
9. Sonny Rollins – To a wild rose, Milestone
10. Lester Young – In a little Spanish town, Jazz Anthology
11. Lionel Hampton – Meet Benny Bailey, Rca
12. Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young – The man i love, Musidisc

Hank Mobley

One of the Blue Note label’s definitive hard bop artists, tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley remains somewhat underappreciated for his straightforward, swinging style. Any characterization of Mobley invariably begins with critic Leonard Feather’s assertion that he was the “middleweight champion of the tenor saxophone,” meaning that his tone wasn’t as aggressive and thick as John Coltrane or Sonny Rollins, but neither was it as soft and cool as Stan Getz or Lester Young. Instead, Mobley’s in-between, “round” (as he described it) sound was controlled and even, given over to subtlety rather than intense displays of emotion. Even if he lacked the galvanizing, mercurial qualities of the era’s great tenor innovators, Mobley remained consistently solid throughout most of his recording career. His solo lines were full of intricate rhythmic patterns that were delivered with spot-on precision, and he was no slouch harmonically either. As a charter member of Horace Silver’s Jazz Messengers, Mobley helped inaugurate the hard bop movement: jazz that balanced sophistication and soulfulness, complexity and earthy swing, and whose loose structure allowed for extended improvisations. As a solo artist, he began recording for Blue Note in the latter half of the ’50s, and hit his peak in the first half of the ’60s with hard bop cornerstones like Soul Station, No Room for Squares, and A Caddy for Daddy.

Henry “Hank” Mobley was born on July 7, 1930, in Eastman, GA, and grew up mostly in Elizabeth, NJ. Several family members played piano and/or church organ, and Mobley himself learned piano as a child. He switched to the saxophone at age 16, initially modeling his style on players like Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Dexter Gordon, Don Byas, and Sonny Stitt. He soon started playing professionally in the area, and built enough of a reputation that trumpeter Clifford Brown recommended him for a job without having heard him play. That job was with Paul Gayten’s Newark-based R&B band, which he joined in 1949, doubling as a composer. He departed in 1951 and joined the house band at a Newark nightclub, where he played with pianist Walter Davis, Jr. and backed some of the era’s top jazz stars. That led to a job with Max Roach, who hired both Mobley and Davis after performing with them; they all recorded together in early 1953, at one of the earliest sessions to feature Roach as a leader. Meanwhile, Mobley continued to gig around his home area, playing with the likes of Milt Jackson, Tadd Dameron, and J.J. Johnson, among others; he also served two weeks in Duke Ellington’s orchestra in 1953.

Mobley spent much of 1954 performing and recording with Dizzy Gillespie. He left in September to join pianist Horace Silver’s group, which evolved into a quintet co-led by Art Blakey and dubbed the Jazz Messengers. Their groundbreaking first album for Blue Note, 1955’s Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers, was a landmark in the genesis of hard bop, with its sophisticated solos and bright, almost funky rhythms. Mobley led his first session for Blue Note, The Hank Mobley Quartet, in 1955, and recorded for Savoy and Prestige during 1956. In the middle of that year, the original lineup of the Jazz Messengers split, with Blakey keeping the name and Silver forming a new group. Mobley stayed with Silver until 1957, by which time he had begun to record prolifically as a leader for Blue Note, completing eight albums’ worth of material over the next 16 months. Some of his best work, such as Hank Mobley and His All Stars and The Hank Mobley Quintet, was cut with a selection of old Messengers mates. Not all of his sessions were released at the time, but some began to appear as import reissues in the ’80s. Often composing his own material, Mobley was beginning to truly hit his stride with 1958’s Peckin’ Time, when a worsening drug problem resulted in an arrest that took him off the scene for a year.

Upon returning to music in 1959, Mobley oriented himself by rejoining Art Blakey in the Jazz Messengers for a short period. His comeback session as a leader was 1960’s classic Soul Station, near-universally acknowledged as his greatest recorded moment. Mobley cut two more high-quality hard bop albums, Roll Call and Workout, over 1960-1961, as well as some other sessions that went unreleased at the time. In 1961, Mobley caught what looked to be a major break when he was hired to replace John Coltrane in Miles Davis’ quintet. Unfortunately, the association was a stormy one; Mobley came under heavy criticism from the bandleader, and wound up leaving in 1962. He returned to solo recording with 1963’s No Room for Squares, often tabbed as one of his best efforts, before drug and legal problems again put him out of commission during 1964. Energized and focused upon his return, Mobley recorded extensively during 1965, showcasing a slightly harder-edged tone and an acumen for tricky, modal-flavored originals that challenged his sidemen. At the same time, Dippin’ found a funkier soul-jazz sound starting to creep into his work, an approach that reached its apex on the infectious A Caddy for Daddy later that year.

Mobley recorded steadily for Blue Note through the ’60s, offering slight variations on his approach, and continued to appear as a sideman on a generous number of the label’s other releases (especially frequent collaborator Lee Morgan). 1966’s A Slice of the Top found Mobley fronting a slightly larger band arranged by Duke Pearson, though it went unissued until 1979. After cutting the straightforward Third Season in 1967, Mobley embarked on a brief tour of Europe, where he performed with Slide Hampton. He returned to the U.S. to record the straight-ahead Far Away Lands and Hi Voltage that year, and tried his hand at commercially oriented jazz-funk on 1968’s Reach Out. Afterward, he took Hampton’s advice and returned to Europe, where he would remain for the next two years. 1969’s The Flip was recorded in Paris, and Mobley returned to the States to lead his final session for Blue Note, Thinking of Home, in 1970 (it wasn’t released until ten years later). He subsequently co-led a group with pianist Cedar Walton, which recorded the excellent Breakthrough in 1972.

Sadly, that would prove to be Mobley’s last major effort. Health problems forced him to retire in 1975, when he settled in Philadelphia. He was barely able to even play his horn for fear of rupturing a lung; by the dawn of the ’80s, he was essentially an invalid. In 1986, he mustered up the energy to work on a limited basis with Duke Jordan; however, he died of pneumonia not long after, on May 30, 1986. During Mobley’s heyday, most critics tended to compare him unfavorably to Sonny Rollins, or dismiss him for not being the innovator that Coltrane was. However, in the years that followed Mobley’s death, Blue Note hard bop enjoyed a positive reappraisal; with it came a new appreciation for Mobley’s highly developed talents as a composer and soloist, instead of a focus on his shortcomings.

Website

Records:

  1. Hank Mobley – Hanks’s Waltz, Blue Note
  2. Hank Mobleythe Vamp, Blue Note
  3. Hank MobleySuite, Blue Note
  4. Hank MobleyDouble exposure, Blue Note
  5. Hank Mobley with Kenny Clarke – Doug’s minor b’ok, Savoy
  6. the Cedar Walton / Hank Mobley QuintetBreakthrough, Muse Records
  7. Hank MobleyMessage from the border, Prestige
  8. Hank Mobley – the Flip, Blue Note
  9. Hank MobleyHanks’s other souL, Blue Note
  10. Hank MobleyCute ‘n pretty, Blue Note

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