Mediocre (composition) explained

Mediocre
Artist:Bud Powell
Album:The Lonely One...
Released:1959
Recorded:January 13, 1955
Genre:Jazz
Label:Verve
Composer:Bud Powell
Producer:Norman Granz

"Mediocre" is a composition written by Bud Powell for his album The Lonely One... which has been noted for its unconventional structure and its combination of stride piano with jarring right-hand interpretation.[1] [2]

History

Powell recorded the composition only once in his entire career: on January 13, 1955, at Fine Sound Studios in NYC for Verve Records. He was joined by Percy Heath on bass and Kenny Clarke on drums, and the album was released by Verve as The Lonely One... in 1959.[3]

Reception

The unconventional composition has divided critics. Patrick Burnette of All About Jazz described the first half of the track as "slyly humorous," but criticized the recording quality and summarized it as "a frightening record which seems a direct expression of—rather than an aesthetic response to (a la 'Glass Enclosure')—his unstable mental condition." Barry Harris and Michael Weiss showed similar concern regarding the composition. DownBeat praised the composition as "oddly fetching," and, regarding the place of the composition within the album, remarked that its "idiosyncrasy reaches some lofty plateau."

Weiss noted that the bassline occasionally clashes with the piano during the tune, and suggested that Heath played through the recording by ear.[4]

Notable recordings

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Burnett . Patrick . Bud Powell Box Collections . June 13, 2009 . All About Jazz.
  2. News: September 3, 1959 . The Lonely One . . 27.
  3. Web site: Bud Powell Discography . 2024-01-11 . www.jazzdisco.org.
  4. . Pullman . Peter . Weiss . Michael . 1994 . 124 .