I don't get it, but all I can truthfully say is, "better late than never". Right?! Maybe the (Alfred) Lion & the (Frances) Wolfe, Blue Note Records owners, had a premonition of the "British Invasion" (Beatles, Stones, etc.) that was about to happen, and upset the whole music industry. Who knows? In any case, when you look back at the cast of characters on this recording: Hutcherson, age 22; Henderson, age 26; Grant Green, age 28; these were the "young lions" of the day. Pearson & Cranshaw, age 31 where the mature lions, and Harewood, at age 40, the "seasoned veteran". Together, for this session, they made a loosely swinging, tightly knit, soulful unit.
"Mirrors" is a ballad composition by a different Joe, drummer / pianist Joe Chambers (age 21). As Chambers was also very familiar with the vibraphone, he was able to compose the perfect ballad for Bobby Hutcherson, with a beautiful, lyrical mood, haunting melody, and with intriguing chord changes. Henderson's short solo here is gorgeously understated, almost sub-tone.
The album's title tune "The Kicker", an innovative, uptempo modified blues, and a Joe Henderson original, has it's debut (although not the definitive version) here. The classic version was recorded almost ten months later (with Henderson as a recently recruited member of the Horace Silver Quintet), on Silver's classic album "Song For My Father".
Another Henderson original, the medium bounce, Basie-style blues "Step Lightly" is, at 14 plus minutes, the longest track on the album. Pearson, Hutcherson, Green & Henderson all say their piece with funky eloquence.
"Bedouin", the date's only Duke Pearson original, is a unique tune, recorded again about a year later on Pearson's own date, which produced the album "Wahoo", featuring Henderson and Cranshaw, as well. It gets more of an medium-up treatment here than on the "Wahoo" date, which to my ears is the superior version.
Nevertheless, this is a great album, as every tune here is enjoyable and worthy of study. If you ain't got it, get it!
Anyway, you "got it" on YouTube. Here's the rest of it.
B. Stern
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