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James Carter - Live At Baker's Keyboard Lounge (CD)

Live At Baker's Keyboard Lounge
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4.3 out of 5.0 stars 3 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Live At Baker's Keyboard Lounge

Release Date:05/17/2005
Label:Warner Bros / Wea
UPC:093624844921

Pro Reviews: Live At Baker's Keyboard Lounge

  • All Music Guide

    Between 1995 and 2004 Detroit saxophonist James Carter released several conceptual discs: a salute to Django Reinhardt Chasin' the Gypsy, electric era Miles Davis Layin' in the Cut, jazz ballads, Real Quiet Storm and the lush Billie Holiday tribute Gardenias for Lady Day. With the release of each disc the unavoidable question remained: Would Carter ever put out another straight ahead session in the vein of his early 90s recordings JC on the Set and Jurassic Classics? Happily, Live at Baker's Keyboard Lounge makes up for lost time. Carter and an amazing array of musicians took flight for three nights in June 2001 at Baker's in Detroit featuring guest appearances by David Murray and Johnny Griffin, alongside fellow Motor City natives Franz Jackson, Kenn Cox, Dwight Adams Larry Smith and Gerald Gibbs. On this set Carter frequently switches reeds, easily juggling tenor, soprano and baritone saxophones while his rock solid rhythm section of bassist Ralphe Armstrong and the split drumming du...ties of Leonard King and the late "Funk Brother" Richard "Pistol" Adams, (who passed away in 2002) keep the music simmering until the heat rises once again. Carter's choice of cover material is impeccable and well balanced. Instead of lazily strolling through the same old tried and true standards and songbooks, Carter and associates reignite tunes from the pen of Oscar Pettiford "Tricotism," Jimmy Forrest, "Soul Street," Eddie Harris, "Freedom Jazz Dance," and Don Byas "Free and Easy," before slowing the tempo on "I Can't Get Started," "Low Flame," and "Sack Full of Dreams," culminating with the fourtenor blowout of George Duvivier's "Foot Pattin." The only time the train jumps the tracks is during "Soul Street." Organist Gerald Gibbs uses a synthesized, sampled vocal section which sounds like a mechanical Swingle Singers. The technology itself may be intriguing but the results are completely out of place in this context. Live at Baker's Keyboard Lounge finds Carter cutting loose like a musician whose been conceptually sidetracked long enough. This is a back to basics blowing session and concepts be damned - Al Campbell, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

James Carter

After Wynton Marsalis, no one caused more of an uproar than James Carter did when he appeared on the New York jazz scene from his native Detroit. Carter's debut recording, JC on the Set, issued in Japan when he was only 23 and in the States a year later in 1993, was universally acclaimed as the finest debut by a saxophonist in decades. Critics lauded his ability to play... Read more