Sweet Honey Bee
Sweet Honey Bee | ||||
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Studio album by Duke Pearson | ||||
Released | 1967 | |||
Recorded | December 7, 1966 | |||
Studio | Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 39:27 | |||
Label | Blue Note BST 84252 | |||
Producer | Alfred Lion | |||
Duke Pearson chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
The Penguin Guide to Jazz | [2] |
Sweet Honey Bee is an album by American jazz pianist and composer Duke Pearson, released on the Blue Note label in 1967.[3] The woman on the cover was Pearson's fiancee Betty.[4]
Reception
Allmusic awarded the album with 4 stars and its review by Scott Yanow states: "Pianist/composer Duke Pearson leads an all-star group on this run-through of seven of his compositions. The musicians (trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, altoist James Spaulding, Joe Henderson on tenor, bassist Ron Carter, drummer Mickey Roker, and the pianist/leader) are actually more impressive than many of the compositions, although the swinging minor-toned "Big Bertha" deserved to become a standard."[5] The Penguin Guide review says: "the highlights are the lushly voiced melodies of 'Sudel' and 'Gaslight', the former a tune which Pearson had recorded some years earlier with a different group. Hubbard and Henderson eat up their solo opportunities without sundering the essentially easy-going feel which was [a] Pearson trademark, and while not all the material is up to this standard, as a showcase for the pianist as writer and group-leader, this is surely the best thing available at present [2004]."[2]
Popular culture
In David Mitchell's novel Ghostwritten, Satoru, a young Japanese jazz-lover working in a record shop in Tokyo, says of a girl who comes into the store, "if you know Duke Pearson's 'After the Rain,' well, she was as beautiful and pure as that."[6]
Track listing
All compositions by Duke Pearson.
- "Sweet Honey Bee" – 5:00
- "Sudel" – 5:43
- "After the Rain" – 4:45
- "Gaslight" – 6:01
- "Big Bertha" – 5:58
- "Empathy" – 6:00
- "Ready Rudy?" – 6:01
Personnel
- Duke Pearson – piano
- Joe Henderson – tenor saxophone
- Freddie Hubbard – trumpet
- James Spaulding – flute, alto saxophone
- Ron Carter – bass
- Mickey Roker – drums
References
- ^ Yanow, Scott (2011). "Sweet Honey Bee – Duke Pearson | AllMusic". allmusic.com. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
- ^ a b Richard Cook and Brian Morton, The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD, 7th ed. (Penguin, 2004: ISBN 978-0-14-101416-6).
- ^ Duke Pearson discography accessed September 6, 2010
- ^ Nat Hentoff, liner notes to Sweet Honey Bee (Blue Note CDP 0777 7 89792 2 7).
- ^ Yanow, S.Allmusic Review: Sweet Honey Bee accessed 06 June 2010
- ^ David Mitchell, Ghostwritten (Random House Digital, Inc., 2001: ISBN 0375724508), p. 41.
- v
- t
- e
leader
or
co-leader
- Profile (1959)
- Tender Feelin's (1959)
- Angel Eyes (1961–62)
- Dedication! (1961)
- Hush! (1962)
- Wahoo! (1964)
- Honeybuns (1965)
- Prairie Dog (1966)
- Sweet Honey Bee (1966)
- The Right Touch (1967)
- Introducing Duke Pearson's Big Band (1967–68)
- I Don't Care Who Knows It (1968–70)
- Now Hear This (1968)
- The Phantom (1968)
- How Insensitive (1969)
- Merry Ole Soul (1969)
- It Could Only Happen with You (1970)
Donald
Byrd
- Fuego (1959)
- At the Half Note Cafe (1960)
- Byrd in Flight (1960)
- The Cat Walk (1961)
- A New Perspective (1963)
- Fancy Free (1969)
- Kofi (1969–70)
- Electric Byrd (1970)
others
- Little Johnny C (Johnny Coles, 1963)
- Idle Moments (Grant Green, 1963)
- The Kicker (Bobby Hutcherson, 1963)
- Mean What You Say (Thad Jones and Pepper Adams, 1966)
only
- I'm Tryin' to Get Home (for Donald Byrd]], 1964)
- Lush Life (for Lou Donaldson, 1967)
- Am I Blue (for Grant Green, 1963)
- Boss Horn (for Blue Mitchell, 1966)
- Heads Up! (for Blue Mitchell, 1968)
- A Slice of the Top (for Hank Mobley, 1966)
- Standards (for Lee Morgan, 1967)
- Rough 'n' Tumble (for Stanley Turrentine, 1966)
- A Bluish Bag (for Stanley Turrentine, 1967)
- The Return of the Prodigal Son (for Stanley Turrentine, 1967)
- The Look of Love (for Stanley Turrentine, 1968)