Thesaurus | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Clare Fischer |
Cover: | Thesaurus (Clare Fischer album).jpg |
Released: | 1969 |
Recorded: | August 16 and 17, 1968 at T.T.G. Studios |
Genre: | Jazz |
Length: | 40 min |
Label: | Atlantic SD 1520 |
Producer: | Albert Marx |
Chronology: | Clare Fischer |
Prev Title: | One to Get Ready, Four to Go |
Prev Year: | 1968 |
Next Title: | Great White Hope! (and his Japanese friend) |
Next Year: | 1970 |
Thesaurus is an album by American composer/arranger/pianist Clare Fischer, recorded and released in 1969 by Atlantic Records.[1] Reissued in 1979 as 'Twas Only Yesterday by Discovery Records,[2] and on CD, again by Discovery, in 1988 as part of a CD entitled Waltz, encompassing both Thesaurus and the 1980 LP, Duality.[3] In 2000, Thesaurus received a dedicated CD reissue under its original title from Koch Records.[4]
Ken Dryden reviewed Thesaurus for Allmusic and wrote: "Fischer's potent originals and first-rate arrangements bring out the best in his musicians...A well-conceived chart of Billy Strayhorn's 'Upper Manhattan Medical Group' swings mightily. The leader even makes a rare appearance on alto sax in the brief 'In Memoriam,' dedicated to the assassinated Kennedy brothers."The New York Times review by Martin Williams was written shortly after the album's original release:
West Coast pianist Clare Fischer has done what I wish Monk would do: he has written his own big band arrangements; the results are admirable. Fischer can make his ensembles whisper, sing, shout, praise, explain, cajole, proclaim. He is not afraid to be simple when simplicity will work; he can write for a mere quintet within the ensemble when he wants to. The solos by tenor saxophonist Warne Marsh, particularly, and baritone saxophonist Bill Perkins are the best I've heard from these men, but, the leader excepted, some of the other improvisers confine themselves to other people's ideas.
All selections composed by Clare Fischer except where noted.
All selections arranged by Clare Fischer with the exception of "Calamus," which is arranged by the composer.
Side One
Side Two
On "Calamus," "Bitter Leaf" & "Upper Manhattan Medical Group," Buddy Childers is replaced by John Audino.