Making his name associated with his mentor Dizzy Gillespie, James Moody carved his own niche as one of the most bebopping sax and flute players of modern jazz. This three disc set covers his more obscure year on the Mercury, Emarcy and Prestige labels, and they are a joyous treat.
The first disc focuses his sessions from 1951-54, starting with a swinging team of Moody with Cecil Payne/bsax, John Grimes/tp and Johnny Acea/p in a septet session with Moody’s alto swooning on “Serenade In Blue” and his tenor digging into “Wiggle waggle”. Moody has a bit of Lester Young in his sound on a 1952 reading with “Hey Jim” and “St. Louis Blues” while his alto is reminiscent of Johnny Hodges during “Hey Jim”. Moody even sings a bit on “The James Moody Story” while his alto sounds California Cool on “Feelin’ Low”. Bop vocalist Eddie Jefferson gets hip on “ Worksho9p” and in 1955 returns for a loose blues of “Disappointed” and flexible “I Got The Blues”. Bassist John Latham is hip on “Blues In The Closet” and some thick textures get into an Afro Cuban mood for “Mambo With Moody”. The team shuffles with vocalist Iona Wade on ”That Man O’ Mine” and the Moody digs in deep for Benny Golson’s “Blue Walk” .
Golson’s pen continues to be heard on a 1955 session with Moody’s tenor gorgeously breathy on “The Nearness of You” and jamming with a JATP feel with Dave Burns/tp, William Shepherd/tb, Numa Moore and Jimmy Boyd on “Jammin’ With James” and Moody’s alto pre aching it on “Wail Moody Wail”. The boxed set also includes two informative booklets about the recordings as well as well researched studio info. This is the music that made modern jazz, well, MODERN! When did it start sounding so old, as it does today?