The Hill (David Murray album) explained

The Hill
Type:Album
Artist:David Murray Trio
Cover:The Hill (album).jpg
Released:1987
Recorded:November 29, 1986
Genre:Jazz
Length:48:39
Label:Black Saint
Prev Title:I Want to Talk About You
Prev Year:1986
Next Title:The Healers
Next Year:1987

The Hill is an album by David Murray released on the Italian Black Saint label in 1987. It features performances by Murray, Richard Davis and Joe Chambers.

Reception

The Penguin Guide to Jazz hailed the album as "one of the peaks of Murray's career...Murray has significantly toned down his delivery from the immediately previous sessions and sounds altogether more thoughtful...This is an essential modern album."[1]

Gary Giddins also called The Hill "one of [Murray's] best recordings...a consistently provocative trio session with superb work by bassist Richard Davis and drummer Joe Chambers. Nowhere is Murray's disarming authority more forceful than on 'Fling,' a Butch Morris infrastructure of melody and rhythm that's coolly lyrical on the surface and tricky at the core. It's an enigmatic double-tiered piece in seven/four, with an ascending seven-measure episode of chromatic whole notes in the middle...Murray sails through the unusual meter and phrase lengths as though they were no more difficult than a waltz."[2]

The Allmusic review by Brian Olewnick awarded the album 3 stars, stating that "The Hill offers an accurate snapshot of Murray in the mid-'80s, straddling the mainstream and avant-garde and proving himself quite adept in either.".[3]

Track listing

  1. "Santa Barbara and Crenshaw Follies" - 8:25
  2. "The Hill" - 9:00
  3. "Fling" (Butch Morris) - 7:09
  4. "Take the Coltrane" (Duke Ellington) - 7:42
  5. "Herbie Miller" - 5:52
  6. "Chelsea Bridge" (Billy Strayhorn) - 10:31

All compositions by David Murray except as indicated

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cook, Richard. Richard Cook (journalist). Brian Morton . Brian Morton (Scottish writer) . The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings. 1992. 9th. The Penguin Guide to Jazz. 2008. Penguin. New York. 978-0-14-103401-0. 1061. David Murray.
  2. Book: Giddins, Gary. Gary Giddins . Visions of Jazz: The First Century. 1998. Oxford University Press. Oxford, United Kingdom. 9780195076752. 567. David Murray.
  3. Olewnick, B. Allmusic Review, accessed July 9, 2011.