Tears for Dolphy explained

Tears for Dolphy
Type:studio
Artist:Ted Curson
Cover:Tears for Dolphy.jpg
Released:20 December
Recorded:1 August 1964
Genre:Jazz
Length:61:24 (CD)
Label:Fontana (LP)
Black Lion (CD)
Producer:Alan Bates
Prev Title:Ted Curson Plays Fire Down Below
Prev Year:1962
Next Title:The New Thing & the Blue Thing
Next Year:1965

Tears for Dolphy is a 1964 album by jazz trumpeter Ted Curson. The album's title track, an elegy for Eric Dolphy (who died at the end of June that year), has been used in many films.

Reception

Brian Morton and Richard Cook, writing for The Penguin Guide to Jazz, give Tears for Dolphy a favorable review, noting "a raw sorrow in the title tune," a robust rhythm section, and the leader's "high, slightly old-fashioned sound." Earlier editions of The Penguin Guide to Jazz give the album a rating of three-and-a-half stars.

Chuck Berg, writing for Down Beat, said Curson and saxophonist Bill Barron's "tough, but highly melodic lines above the steady and crisp rhythmic substructure ably provided by bassist Herb Bushler and drummer Dick Berk."

Scott Yanow of AllMusic asserts that most tracks "manage to be both explorative and surprisingly accessible."

Track listing

All tracks recorded on August 1, 1964.

  1. "Kassim" (Ted Curson) – 7:41
  2. "East 6th Street" (Bill Barron) – 5:38
  3. "7/4 Funny Time" (Barron) – 5:28
  4. "Tears for Dolphy" (Curson) – 8:32
  5. "Quicksand" (Curson) – 6:39
  6. "Reava's Waltz" (Curson) – 7:10

The Black Lion CD (1993) appends three tracks from the same recording session, but that originally appeared on the album Flip Top:

7. "Searching for the Blues" (Curson) – 7:47

8. "Desolation" (Barron) – 8:45

9. "Light Blue" (Barron) - 3:43

Personnel