By Ric Bang
Buy CD: The Greg Abate Quintet Featuring Phil Woods
Greg Abate is a 67-year-old
saxophonist, flautist, composer and arranger. His music career began
shortly after high school, when he gigged with relatively unknown bands in the
California area, but he didn’t really become “known” until joining the Ray
Charles band in 1973. Another job with the reincarnated Artie Shaw orchestra
followed in ’82, along with stints with the likes of Red Rodney, but the major
part of Abate’s time has been spent with lesser-known groups. His
discography is quite limited (about a dozen albums).
Phil Woods, a famed
saxophonist, clarinetist and composer, is in his 80s. Unlike Abate, Woods has
worked with most of the name musicians who ruled the roost from the 1960s
onward. His discography is in the hundreds, both as a sideman and
leader. Abate — and the music world — consider Woods to be one of the
premier alto saxophonists of the bop era, which explains Abate’s thrill at
having this giant as a member of the quintet featured on this album.
The supporting members
include pianist Jesse Green, son of trombonist Urbie Green (an icon unto
himself); bassist Evan Gregor; and drummer Bill Goodwin. The latter is another
elder statesman, still swinging at age 71. Green is in his 40s and Gregor
is the youngster, still in his 30s. I must note that Woods performs on
only five of these 10 tracks, and thus the quintet becomes a quartet on the
other tunes.
Abate composed and arranged
all but two of the selections. “Marny” is a John Patrick chart, and Woods contributed “Goodbye Mr. Pepper,” a tribute to
the great Art Pepper. The genre is bop; except for “Marny,” delivered as a ballad,
everything is done at mid- to up-tempos. Woods performs exclusively on alto sax,
while Abate switches between alto, soprano, baritone saxes and flute.
This session takes me back
to the peak of the period that began in the 1950s. This group feels more West
Coast than East; it’s relaxed and pensive. Both Abate and Woods are
exceptional talents, but there’s no doubt that Phil remains one of the major
names on alto. Charlie Parker was “the man,” but Woods fully deserved —
and still deserves — his reputation as “one of the new Parkers.” The fact that
he’s in the sunset of his career (age-wise) pains me deeply, but he still blows
up a storm.
This is a stellar
album, and Abate deserves kudos for producing it.
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