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Donald Byrd at The Half Note Café, Volume 2 | By Eddie Carter

I enjoyed listening to the first set of Donald Byrd at The Half Note Café so much that I decided to hear the second set as well, which inspired this morning’s discussion. So, as the quintet makes their way back to the stage, let’s all sit back in our seats to enjoy Donald Byrd at The Half Note Café, Volume 2 (Blue Note BLP 4061/BST 84061). Donald Byrd is on trumpet, Pepper Adams is on baritone sax, Duke Pearson is on piano, Laymon Jackson is on bass, and Lex Humphries is on the drums. My copy is the King Record Company Japanese Stereo reissue (Blue Note BST 84061 – GYK-8105).

The rhythm section lays the foundation to begin Jeannine by Duke Pearson with their introduction ahead of the front line’s opening chorus. Donald lights the first solo like a shining beacon. Pepper succeeds him with a briskly exciting performance; then Duke keeps your foot tapping with swinging precision ahead of the ensemble’s closing chorus and trio ending softly. The leader then introduces the group’s theme, Pure D. Funk, before leading the trio through the bluesy theme. Pepper is up first with a relaxing interpretation. Duke has a very fine spot next, and then Donald is as smooth as Tennessee Whiskey preceding the group’s reprise and climax.

Side Two starts with Lex’s percussive introduction to the quintet’s medium melody of Donald’s second tune, Kimyas. Pepper swings easily in an impressive opening statement. Donald follows with another equally blissful gem. Duke completes the solos at a leisurely pace anchored by Laymon and Lex until the quintet’s ending theme. When Sonny Gets Blue by Marvin Fisher and Jack Segal opens with the front line delivering a very pretty opening chorus. Duke gets the song’s only solo and delivers a wonderful expression of incredible beauty and solace, leading to the quintet’s theme restatement. Donald ends the evening by thanking the crowd for being a receptive audience.

Alfred Lion produced this live date, and Rudy Van Gelder was the recording engineer. The sound quality possesses a top-notch soundstage that truly makes you feel like you’re right there in the Half Note Café audience. King Record Company has beautifully remastered the original mono tapes, enhancing the experience. If you’re new to the music of Donald Byrd or only know of his later ’70s jazz-funk releases, I invite you to check out Donald Byrd at The Half Note Café, Volume 2, on your next record hunt. Like its companion, Volume 1, the musicians are wonderful. The music has stood the test of time and both albums are excellent documents of a live jazz performance the listener can revisit anytime!

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