Requisites

Home Cookin’ ~ Jimmy Smith | By Eddie Carter

I’d had a really long week and wanted to hear some organ jazz when I came across a title I always enjoyed but hadn’t listened to in a while. Jimmy Smith provides the recipe for seven courses of hard bop and soul-jazz with a side of the blues in Home Cookin’ (Blue Note BLP 4050/BST 84050). It’s a delicious quartet meal of pure organ bliss taken from three different sessions that hit the stores in 1961. Jimmy is joined by Percy France (tracks: A1, A4, B1, B2) on tenor sax, Kenny Burrell on guitar, and Donald Bailey on drums. My copy is the 1992 Toshiba EMI Japanese Stereo reissue sharing the original catalog number.

Side One opens with See See Rider by Gertrude “Ma” Rainey and Lena Arant. Jimmy and the trio introduce the theme at a slow tempo. Kenny has the first spot and swings lightly to the leader’s fat bass lines and Donald’s subtle brushwork. Percy follows with a down-home reading, and then Jimmy is equally elegant in a short solo ahead of the song’s finale. Sugar Hill by Kenny Burrell is dedicated to an area of Harlem and picks up the pace significantly as the composer leads Smith and Bailey through the melody. Kenny gets things going with a lively lead solo, and then Jimmy comes in for a spirited statement that moves along nicely. Burrell adds a few more comments preceding the reprise and slow fadeout.

I Got A Woman by Ray Charles would become a big hit for Jimmy McGriff a year later. Smith and company offer a change of pace from that swinger with a medium groove featuring Jimmy in the solo spotlight. The organist’s soulful presentation is a danceable treat until the threesome reprises the ending theme into a slow dissolve. Messin’ Around by Jimmy Smith brings back France to the foursome for the medium melody. Burrell is up first again with a sparkling statement. France puts a lot of heart and emotion into the following reading, then Smith’s short solo leads back to the quartet’s theme restatement and fade out.

Side Two begins with an introduction to a lovely lady named Gracie by Jimmy Smith. The quartet’s leisurely theme sets the tone for Percy’s contagious opening statement. Kenny skillfully constructs the second solo, and then Jimmy delivers one of his smoothest readings preceding the out-chorus. Come On Baby by Kenny Burrell is a solid blues that grabs the listener from the start of Smith’s melody and informal, easy opening interpretation. France steps up next with an excellent example of his superb tone quality. Burrell enters the picture next for a brief presentation before Jimmy adds a few last thoughts until the slow fade into nothingness.

Jimmy’s Motoring Along is the album’s closing number and the final trio track. The beat shifts upward for the melody. Kenny gets his message across in the lead solo, and Jimmy is a joy to listen to in the closer. Donald keeps the excitement in the beat going until the theme’s closing chorus and the trio’s slow exit. Alfred Lion produced Home Cookin’, and Rudy Van Gelder was the man behind the dials. The sound quality is good but not great, and the reason is the same issue I had with Hootin’ ‘n Tootin’ and Open House. The microphone placement for Jimmy’s organ has a level of distortion that is particularly noticeable on every track but not as bad on Come On Baby.

The front and rear covers are both laminated, and the record is incredibly quiet until the music starts. That aside, the good news is I enjoyed the music, particularly Percy France who I was unaware of, but pleasantly surprised with his playing because he reminded me of Stanley Turrentine. Burrell and Bailey are as solid a rhythm section as anyone could have, and they’ve collaborated with Jimmy on four other albums: Back At The Chicken Shack, Houseparty, Midnight Special, and The Sermon. If you’re a fan of hard bop, soul-jazz, or Jimmy Smith, I hope you will check out Home Cookin’ on your next record shop visit. It’s a tasty musical meal I’m sure you won’t regret adding to your library!

~ Back At The Chicken Shack (Blue Note BLP 4117/BST 84117), Hootin’ ‘n Tootin’ (Blue Note BLP 4094/BST 84094), Houseparty (Blue Note BLP 4002/BST 84002), Midnight Special (Blue Note BLP 4078/BST 84078), Open House (Blue Note BLP 4269/BST 84269), The Sermon (Blue Note BLP 4011/BST 84011) – Source: Discogs.com

~ See See Rider – Source: Wikipedia.org

© 2024 by Edward Thomas Carter

More Posts: ,,,,,,,,