Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Lush Life: The Music of Billy Strayhorn

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Released
  
1992

Length
  
61:50

Release date
  
1992

Genre
  
Jazz

Recorded
  
September 3–8, 1991

Artist
  
Joe Henderson

Label
  
Verve Records

Lush Life: The Music of Billy Strayhorn httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesI5

Producer
  
Richard Seidel, Don Sickler

Lush Life The Music of Billy Strayhorn (1992)
  
So Near, So Far (Musings for Miles) (1993)

Similar
  
Joe Henderson albums, Jazz albums

Lush Life: The Music of Billy Strayhorn (also known as Lush Life) is an award-winning 1992 tribute album by jazz composer and tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson. Composed entirely of songs written by jazz legend Billy Strayhorn, the album was a critical and commercial success, leading to the first of three Grammys Henderson would receive while under contract with Verve Records and helping to establish Henderson an international star. The album had sold nearly 90,000 copies at the time of Henderson's death in 2001 and has been multiply re-released by Verve, Polygram Records and, in Hybrid SACD, by Universal.

Contents

Background

Before this record, in March 1991, Henderson had recorded "The Standard Joe", with Rufus Reid on bass and Al Foster on drums, produced by Italian label Red Records. Henderson had been featured throughout the late 80s and early 90s on recordings by a number of modern jazz musicians, including Wynton Marsalis, when producer Richard Seidel proposed to him the idea of the tribute album to be released under his own name. The album separated the songwriter from his usual material, which according to The New York Times suited Henderson, highlighting his evolution into "one of jazz's most detailed improvisers". Like The New York Times—which credits the album's producers for understanding jazz culture of 1992, "where challenging acoustic music is both an artistic necessity and a play for a market"—Ink Blot Magazine describes the album's success as largely due to its instrumental combinations; rather than performing with a band, Henderson is featured in solo performance, in duet, in trio, in quartet and quintet. Entertainment Weekly agrees that the idea of highlighting the material by dramatically changing personnel "works without getting gimmicky".

Critical reception

The album was praised on its release by The New York Times as being "as close to artistic genius as jazz gets nowadays". In another article in 2002, the same reviewer described the album as "perfectly produced", "thoughtful, carefully experimental and cross generational". Entertainment Weekly declared Henderson's "originality and sheer strangeness" a match for Strayhorn's compositions, stating that Henderson's "fierce muscularity" counterbalanced "Strayhorn's angst—as exquisitely, in a new way, as Duke Ellington and his orchestra used to". The album comes "highly recommended" by Allmusic, which notes that "it does deserve all of the hype".

Commercial performance and accolades

The album went to #1 on the Billboard Top Jazz Albums chart, holding its position at top of the charts for two months. With the track "Lush Life", Henderson received the 1992 Grammy Award for "Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Soloist".

Track listing

All tracks by Billy Strayhorn except where noted.

  1. "Isfahan" (Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn) – 5:59
  2. "Johnny Come Lately" – 6:30
  3. "Blood Count" – 7:19
  4. "Rain Check" – 5:54
  5. "Lotus Blossom" – 4:31
  6. "A Flower is a Lovesome Thing" – 6:58
  7. "Take the "A" Train" – 7:11
  8. "Drawing Room Blues" – 7:33
  9. "U.M.M.G. (Upper Manhattan Medical Group)" – 5:02
  10. "Lush Life" – 5:03

Performers

  • Joe Henderson – tenor saxophone
  • Wynton Marsalis – trumpet
  • Stephen Scott – piano
  • Christian McBride – bass
  • Gregory Hutchinson – drums
  • Production

  • William Claxton – photography
  • Stanley Crouch – liner notes
  • Larry Offsey – design
  • Dean Pratt – liner notes
  • Susan Ragan – photography
  • Richard Seidel – production
  • Don Sickler – arranging, production, transcription
  • Maureen Sickler – assistant engineering
  • Camille Tominaro – production assistance
  • Rudy Van Gelder – engineering, digital mastering, mixing, surround mixing, compilation mastering
  • Songs

    1Isfahan5:59
    2Johnny Come Lately6:30
    3Blood Count7:20

    References

    Lush Life: The Music of Billy Strayhorn Wikipedia