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reviews

Henry Grimes - The Call

hgrimescall.jpg

ESP-Disk

Career rebirths usually serve as manna for the receptive jazz press. Few, if any, are as remarkable as that achieved by bassist Henry Grimes: More than three decades spent in anonymity practically erased by a prodigal return. This ESP reissue gives a composite idea of how he originally went out, on the top of his game and poised to take the logical step to influential leader status. Sadly, that career trajectory wasn’t in the cards. Despite a number of auspicious sideman appearances in the following year Grimes eventually succumbed to personal demons and an ensuing life off the grid.

Perry Robinson practically deserves credit as co-leader on the date. The pair had previously appeared together on the clarinetist’s Funk Dumpling session for Savoy in 1962 and their creative rapport is even stronger in this free-leaning setting from late ‘65. Nods to the earlier meeting include the Grimes tune “Son of Alfalfa”. Robinson brings a battery of extended techniques previously largely the province of the saxophone, from chirrups and hiccups to split tones and judiciously deployed shrieks. These tactics lack artifice and instead feel wholly integrated into the music, something not easily said of certain other contemporaneous albums by peers. “Walk On” and “Saturday Night What Th’” promote the trio’s freebop interests with Robinson and Grimes engaging in some bracing exchanges and the bassist’s scuttling spider legs strums particularly memorable.

As the bluntest point of the triangle, drummer Tom Price is a bit heavy-handed, particularly on snare, and not quite on par with his colleagues. He builds up quite a vertical barrage on “Fish Story”, but there’s little in the way of horizontal movement in the resulting cascade. The suite-like “For Django” asks more from his sticks and he manages to respond with enhanced color and nuance around Robinson’s chalumeau explorations. Grimes is brilliant throughout, his bone dry sawing on the opening of the first piece contrasting with richer harmonic shades in the final minutes of the second. Robust pizzicato patterns shoot forth like gossamer webs and the newly scrubbed sound aids in discerning their complexities. The stereo mix parcels him cleanly into the left channel leaving Robinson and Price plenty of space in the right. Grimes appears busier than ever these days though debate about his abilities lingers. This set harkens to a time when the contingent of doubters was substantially slimmer and as such seems a slice of required listening.

~ Derek Taylor

Discussion

24 comments for “Henry Grimes - The Call

  1. Unless I’m half asleep, you haven’t mentioned the drummer’s first name, Derek. It’s TOM Price. You might not like him that much but give him a namecheck!
    Since ESP promos are now downloads (aren’t they?) or because you have to sign your name in blood promising to review the disc for a national daily newspaper before they send you a real copy (and I haven’t, and I won’t), I haven’t got my copy of this one. I had it once on cassette but don’t remember being blown away. But I should relisten.
    Aaagh, that other Grimes thread you linked to.. had forgotten that one!

    Posted by Dan Warburton | June 25, 2008, 7:39 am
  2. Nope, Dan, looks like you

    Posted by derek | June 25, 2008, 10:20 am
  3. Keep in mind that, whether you like Tom Price’s playing, this was a working trio for the most part. The bass chair was alternately occupied by Grimes and David Izenzon.

    Posted by clifford | June 26, 2008, 4:26 pm
  4. This just spotted from Margaret Davis Grimes:

    Posted by Dan Warburton | July 7, 2008, 3:42 am
  5. File this under: “Things that Make You Go Hmmm…”

    Posted by derek | July 7, 2008, 4:19 am
  6. Do you think she means she expects punters to pay twice for the same album?
    I’d love to see that contract though!

    Posted by Dan Warburton | July 7, 2008, 9:02 am
  7. We can all thank Margaret for making Henry’s comeback a relative dud.
    She is so obsessed with getting him money that very few “good” albums of his new work have been able to make it out.
    He has a ton of great projects but what the public gets is that terrible Ribot project.

    That would have been fine after a few solid projects on labels with good visibility.

    Posted by margot Tennenbaum | July 7, 2008, 9:47 am
  8. This is pretty dicey stuff, & a veritable breeding ground for conjecture of all species, so I

    Posted by derek | July 7, 2008, 12:35 pm
  9. I would love to hear the duo with Ali, is it out yet? It is not on emusic yet. Is it mostly bass or violin?
    I like the bass quartet on Splasch (though it is tough to isolate Grimes) and the duo with my old friend Oluyemi Thomas - that is fantastic.

    Posted by damon Smith | July 7, 2008, 3:10 pm
  10. I’m keeping my lips zipped on this whole shebang re: Grimes, beyond my appreciation of this ESP record.

    You can tell I just want to start a flame-war, cantcha?

    Posted by clifford | July 7, 2008, 8:40 pm
  11. Yeah, you

    Posted by derek | July 8, 2008, 8:05 am
  12. Of course the bass quartet is pile up! That doesn’t keep it from being great.
    I love the duo with Silva, if I am not mistaken, Alan plays Lisle Ellis’ bass who was my main teacher. I have been playing duo with Oluyemi for many years, I remember showing up to a gig about 12 years ago having practiced all my classical stuff, and as soon as we started
    I had to throw it out the window and “play like Alan Silva” to get it to work.
    I think I have my own way to play with him now, but there is a real compatibility with Silva’s music and his.
    I still love the duo with Grimes.

    As far as the royalties issue, Esp could give Henry some money.
    This album has been issued enough times that I am sure it is not in the red.
    On the other hand, albums do a lot more for a musician than money, and having better albums out can get Henry better live work, and lead to better album deals, if there are any out there at this point.
    So a balance has to be struck between getting paid and getting the music out there.

    Posted by damon Smith | July 8, 2008, 10:24 am
  13. Hello all. I thought I should put in my two cents here. I am the General Manager at ESP-Disk’. I wanted to let you all know that I have personally been in touch with Margaret Davis and Henry Grimes and everything is being worked out. ESP has been undergoing an internal audit of its sales history for the last few months. We are now in touch with dozens of the original artists. Any ESP artist can get current royalty statements by contacting the number or email below.
    Phone: 1-800-685-2163
    Email: artist@espdisk.com

    Feel free to contact me directly if you have questions about getting promos or anything else.(tom@espdisk.com) No need to speculate!

    Posted by Tom Abbs | July 17, 2008, 6:18 pm
  14. How is Tom Price heavy handed compared to Sunny Murray? I think the drums are jacked up in the mix really. That snare drum pops out because it’s not mixed right. As a drummer, I am quite glad that Tom Price is on this Henry Grimes album. Compare his drumming on Grimes’ album to his drumming on the Frank Wright material he appeared on. There really isn’t much else to listen to. I am really glad that Tom Price is on this album. I really like his playing. His approach is so odd. I think you are just having a hard time figuring him out. I think that if Henry Grimes and Perry Robinson thought Tom Price was good enough, that’s good enough for me. I had never really heard of Tom Price before. I am wondering why I hadn’t. To me, he is just as good as many other well known drummers.
    He was probably too busy working his day job. Who knows, maybe he got a bad review early on and quit playing. Some of us drummers are really sensitive that way.

    Posted by matthew armistead | July 20, 2008, 7:08 am
  15. Burton Greene has some Tom Price stories.

    I really like his playing. Don’t think his work has much to do with Sunny, as far as I can tell, though it’s been some time since I’ve listened to either back-to-back.

    Keep yr eyes out for a Greene/Perry Robinson duo forthcoming on Tzadik.

    Posted by clifford | July 20, 2008, 5:11 pm
  16. Really? Burton finally got a Tzadik gig? That’s f**kin cool, and long overdue (Burton’s been pushing the envelope with klezmer for years and JZ hasn’t released any of it). He can paint that houseboat now!

    Posted by Dan Warburton | July 20, 2008, 10:13 pm
  17. tom price is okay. i haven’t listened to the grimes esp-disk in years, but i seem to remember it sounding okay and liked the drumming (and mix) on it just fine.

    let’s just say that if i gotta pick between bobby kapp and tom price, i pick the former any day!

    nyuk nyuk,

    ww

    Posted by weasel walter | July 20, 2008, 11:15 pm
  18. I like Tom Price, too. I really like this trio. It would be cool the hear with Izenzon. Good news about ESP. I assume it is Tom Abbs the bass/tuba player..

    Posted by damon Smith | July 20, 2008, 11:17 pm
  19. Yeah, Kapp just kills - as do Colbeck, Burrell, Cathy Norris and Sirone - on the Noah Howard at Judson Hall.

    Re: Tzadik, yes, Burton & Perry are part of a group called Klez-Edge that Zorn just put out.

    Posted by clifford | July 21, 2008, 12:31 pm
  20. Did anyone hear the Grimes/Dunmall/Cyrille gig at Vision this year? If, as you say Derek, debate still lingers concerning the merrits of Henry’s playing these days, that extended burst of varying voltage should have dispelled it. I’ve seen a couple of Henry’s projects before, but that one was just stunning, one of the best moments of the festival.
    As for margaret making Henry’s comeback a dud, what bullshit! Henry’s genius and Margaret’s continued love and fostering of his music are complementary; she has worked damn hard to facilitate many extraordinary playing situations for Henry, her years of dedication to the music and its practitioners informing their choices. She has been a great help to me during the last couple years of my research, and while she and I have had several disagreements on what constitutes good music, I have never known anyone more dedicated, more ready to stand up for herself and for what she believes, than Margaret.
    BTW, nice to see Tom jumping in to help out the ESP-contracted musicians! Nice new album, Tom! I hope payment is made, as I’ve heard a few things from the musicians I wish I’d never heard. For Burton Greene to come out on a reissue and justify Bernard’s failure to pay the musicians based on world-wide exposure is in poor taste at best. Please, anyone at ESP following this, treat the artists right!

    Posted by marc medwin | July 28, 2008, 4:15 am
  21. I have to say I am really enjoying Henry’s duo with Rashied, (Great notes, Marc!). Henry is playing absolutely great on it, I wouldn’t call it meandering, I’d call it taking their time - as musicians that age tend to do.
    It is mostly bass and drums duo, there is a couple great violin interludes and the poetry is short and not bad at all.
    His bass playing is solid and creative and very contemporary - it isn’t just picking up where he left off, he has certainly made up for lost time.

    Posted by damon Smith | July 28, 2008, 9:54 am
  22. Time for a Grimes Times update, y’all!

    Henry Grimes events, March, ‘O9

    Tuesday, March 3rd: Amiri Baraka and Henry Grimes, Issue Project Room, 232 Third St., 3rd floor (at Third Ave.), Brooklyn, 8 p.m., 718-33O-O313, issueprojectroom.org/events, directions issueprojectroom.org/contact, issueprojectroom.org/2009/01/26, info @ issueprojectroom.org.

    Sunday, March 15th; Wednesday-Sunday, March 18th-22nd; and Wednesday, March 25th*: Fred Anderson 8Oth-birthday gala celebration concerts at Fred’s Velvet Lounge, 67 East Cermak Rd. betw. S. Michigan & S. Wabash Ave’s, Chicago, 312-791-9O5O, velvetlounge.net, velvetchicago @ gmail.com.
    Henry Grimes will play as special guest in various groups:
    > Wednesday, March 18th, 2nd set (around 1O p.m.);
    > Saturday, March 21st going into Sunday, March 22nd, 4th set (around 12:3O a.m.); and
    > Sunday, March 22nd (Fred’s actual birthday), 2nd set (around 8:3O p.m.).

    Other musicians participating will include Fred Anderson/ Harrison Bankhead/ Hamiet Bluiett/ Mwata Bowden/ Billy Brimfield/ Ari Brown/ Richard Davis/ Ernest Dawkins/ Hamid Drake/ Kahil el’Zabar/ Douglas Ewart/ Edward “Kidd” Jordan/ Nicole Mitchell/ Dushun Mosley/ Jeff Parker/ Avreeayl Ra/ Chad Taylor/ Ed Wilkerson, Jr./ Corey Wilkes/ the AACM star-studded Great Black Music Ensemble, and many more throughout the festivities.
    *The program on March 25th is at the Hideout, 1354 West Wabansia, 773-227-4433.

    Wednesday, March 25th, check time: Justin Desmangles’ radio show on Henry Grimes, featuring Henry’s new music and poetry and including an on-air interview, broadcasting from KDVS (Davis, California), 9O.3 FM, and on the Web at kdvs.org, 53O-754-KDVS, kdvsjazz@gmail.com.

    Friday, March 27th: Henry Grimes and Marc Ribot (both unplugged!), Rubin Museum of Art (housing a beautiful collection of Himalayan art in many media), 15O West 17th St., NYC, 7 p.m. promptly!, 212-62O-5OOO, box office ext. 344, rmanyc.org, info@rmanyc.org

    ======================

    Recent Henry Grimes events (the past 6 months):

    September 13th, ‘O8: Roswell Rudd’s Trombone Tribe, w/ Barry Altschul, Joe Daley, Henry Grimes, Steve Swell, & Deborah Weisz, Lake George (NY) Jazz Festival;

    September 15th: Henry Grimes: solo bass, violin, & poetry, Carnegie Mellon U., College of Fine Arts, Pittsburgh, PA;

    September 16th: Henry Grimes: solo bass, violin, & poetry (1st set), w/ Faruq Z. Bey, Skeeter Shelton, & Steve Rush (2nd set), Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, MI;

    September 17th: Henry Grimes’s Chicago, w/ Fred Anderson, Douglas Ewart, and Avreeayl Ra, at Fred Anderson’s Velvet Lounge, Chicago, IL;

    September 18th: Henry Grimes (solo bass, violin, poetry, & spell-casting), Beachland Ballroom, Cleveland, Ohio;

    October 14th: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Le Poisson Rouge (formerly the Village Gate), NYC;

    October 23rd: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Teatro Grazia Deledda, Paulilatino (Oristano), Sardinia, Italy;

    October 24th: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Teatro Comunale, Cormons (Gorizia), Italy;

    October 25th: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Klub Uljanic, Pula, Croatia;

    October 27th: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Avant Music Festival at Firlej Music Club, Wroclaw (Breslau), Poland (Matthew Shipp & Kostas New Programm also played that night);

    October 28th: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Jazz & Beyond series at Upper Silesian Cultural Center, Katowice, Poland;

    October 29th: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, De Singel Internationale, Antwerp[en], Belgium;

    October 3Oth: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Maison de la Cuture de Grenoble (MC2), France;

    October 31st: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Salzburger JazzHerbst Festival, Salzburg, Austria (this festival also included Dave Douglas, Amina Claudine Myers, & many more);

    November 1st: Marc Ribot Trio featuring Henry Grimes & Chad Taylor, Porgy & Bess Club, Vienna, Austria;

    November 2nd & 3rd: Henry Grimes, special guest w/ Josh Abrams, Martin Brandlmayer, Alex Doerner, Peter Evans, Christof Kurzmann, Clayton Thomas, Ken Vandermark, et al., at Ausland, Berlin, Germany;

    November 8th: Roswell Rudd w/ Barry Altschul, Henry Grimes, Bob Stewart, Steve Swell, & Deborah Weisz, at Haus der Berliner, Jazzfest Berlin, Germany;

    November 9th: Roswell Rudd w/ Barry Altschul, Henry Grimes, Bob Stewart, Steve Swell, & Deborah Weisz, at Bimhuis, Amsterdam, Netherlands;

    November 11th: Henry Grimes w/ Pierre Dorge & Kresten Osgood, at Stengade 3O, Copenhagen, Denmark;

    November 12th: Henry Grimes w/ Pierre Dorge & Kresten Osgood, at Huset’s Cafe, Aalborg, Denmark;

    December 11th: Henry Grimes w/ Douglas Ewart & Inventions (Adegoke Steve Colson, Craig Harris, & Reggie Nicholson), at Roulette, New York City;

    December 15th: Gala benefit for the Vision Festival / Arts for Art people to purchase a building to house an Innovative Arts Center, at Angel Orensanz Center, New York City, performances by Yerba Buena, William Parker’s Inside Songs of Curtis Mayfield, and Greg Tate’s Burnt Sugar w/ special guest Henry Grimes;

    December 26th,’O8: Greg Tate’s Burnt Sugar, the Arkestra Chamber, w/ special guest Henry Grimes, at Temple M, Village of Harlem (New York);

    ==================

    January 19th, ‘O9 (Martin Luther King, Jr. Day) : Release date for “Henry Grimes Solo,” the double-CD set on the ILK Music label (#151);

    January 22nd: Deep Tones for Peace fundraiser at the United Nations in New York City, with Henry Grimes playing solo bass in person, Mark Dresser playing via ustream.tv, and others among the Deep Tones for Peace musicians appearing in Powerpoint format;

    January 29th-31st: Henry Grimes residency w/ Rashied Ali at Hamilton College of Performing Arts, Clinton, NY, including master classes with students, interview and short violin solo on WHCL college radio, filmed interview for the Hamilton College Jazz Archive, Henry Grimes and Rashied Ali duo concert at Fillius Events Barn, and other related events;

    February 7th: Henry Grimes & Rashied Ali, concert at Rutgers U., Camden Center for the Arts, Gordon Theater, Camden, NJ;

    February 23rd-27th: Henry Grimes residency at Berklee College of Music and at New England Conservatory, Boston, MA (workshops, master classes, radio interview, classroom visits and consultations, etc.), + Henry Grimes’s “Future Music,” a solo bass / violin / poetry performance February 24th at Berklee’s David Friend Recital Hall …

    … and much more to follow!

    For bookings, high-resolution photos, interviews, further information,or to purchase a recording or book by the NEW Henry Grimes,please contact Margaret Davis Grimes: musicmargaret@earthlink.net, 212-841-O899

    Posted by musicmargaret | March 20, 2009, 5:19 am
  23. P.S. Did I forget to mention Henry’s Web address?: http://www.henrygrimes.com!

    Posted by musicmargaret | March 20, 2009, 5:21 am
  24. You probably did, but you obviously mentioned just about everything else there.
    Any plans for him to hook up with Giuseppe Logan, now he’s surfaced?

    Posted by Dan Warburton | March 20, 2009, 10:54 am

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