Rating:
Genre:
Jazz
Release Date: 05/13/2008
The bottom line is simply this:
Ten Years Hence, originally released in 1975 on
Atlantic as a double LP, is
Yusef Lateef as you've never heard him before -- or since. This set was produced by
Joel Dorn and recorded live at San Francisco's legendary
Keystone Corner, with some other elements overdubbed later in the studio. The band is stellar:
Yusef playing no less than eight instruments,
Kenny Barron on piano and cowbell, upright bassist
Bob Cunningham (who also plays percussion instruments),
Albert "Kumba" Heath on drums and various percussion, and a lone track with
Bill Salter on electric bass. The shortest tune here is eight and a half minutes, and it's no less a composition that
Barron's classic tune
"A Flower"; the rest are all 12 minutes and up -- there are only five tunes for four LP sides! The album kicks off with
Cunningham's three-part suite
"Samba de Amor." Clocking in at over 22 minutes, it begins as a spiritual percussion orgy with all bandmembers joining in.
Lateef uses a shanir to get inside, but also uses it as a percussion instrument. Two minutes in,
Cunningham is bowing his bass elegiacally, but the melody is sweet, like a lost, haunted love song.
Yusef's flute enters two minutes later and joins him in this slow skeletal song before the percussion section enters again in a joyous route as the second part begins and gives way to the longest section, a proper samba, full of lithe flute blowing, saxophone blowing, kit drums playing insane breaks, and wordless vocals covering the backdrop. This is followed by the tenor burner
"Yusef's Mood," which covers soul, jazz, rhythm & blues, and boogie-woogie in its 18 minutes. The band is shouting and chanting a chorus as the audience goes nuts! Think of the audience participation on the
Jazz Crusaders live albums times ten. There is a gorgeous reading of
Jimmy Van Heusen and
Johnny Burke's standard
"But Beautiful," which ranks as one of the best ever committed to tape. The intuition and ease these players have with one another allows them to go out on ledges and keep melodies and time signatures together, yet experiment wildly with harmonics. The overdubbed strings on
Barron's tune don't do much for it, frankly, but his piano improvisation around
Lateef's flute is stunning. The encore is
Lateef's killer
"I Be Cold." There is a female backing chorus that was added later, but
Lateef raps and plays call and response with his seal horn, while
Cunningham's fuzzed-out bowed bass is gutbucket funky and greasy. The flute solo is so deep, so tight, that it demands the overdubbed trumpets and backing vocals to support and accent it. The funky horns and
Heath's breaks set fire to the whole damn thang. This is not an album for everybody, but it is easily one of the most underrated sets in
Lateef's vast catalog.
~Thom Jurek, All Music Guide