Review: Tony Hightower | Legacy

Legacy. If you know Tony Hightower, you understand why he titled this treasury of songs. If you don’t, you will come to appreciate his talent. He was weaned on the classics and his selection of songs as well as his writing and arranging speak to his unique understanding of those who came before. He has accepted the torch and is crafting a distinctive voice to tell his stories. Taking his cues from decades of musical history, as you listen, you will hear the influences as he bares his soul to give you an unabashed glimpse into the pleasures and sorrows of his life.

The opening song, written by the legendary Skip Scarborough, was originally recorded in 1973 as You Can’t Hide Love by the California R&B group Creative Source.  It would be two years before Maurice White would drop it down to a ballad for Earth, Wind & Fire and garner wider recognition. Now, nearly fifty years later, a new voice gives it a swing arrangement that shows his maturity to introduce a new generation to a classic song with a different beat. It sets the tone for what is to follow.

Swing is always a fun vehicle to begin an album and it speaks to a historical note of the music that a century ago drew dancers to the floor. Tony’s arrangement of Can’t Hide Love takes us in a new direction and gives us those big band horns, adding a sprinkle of background ladies with drum highlights and a bass line driving the music and you have a classic arrangement that sets the tone for what is to follow. The Doll further illuminates his storytelling acuity with this mid-tempo groove about an elegant lady who is in a league of her own. She turns heads, can stop a room, and is the dream of most men. I think at one time Duke and Billy called her Satin Doll. The Don Redman/And Razaf composition Gee Baby takes the third position sans fanfare, slowing down with an easy opening bass line and a bluesy piano as it begs the question, Ain’t I Good To You? Written at the end of the Roaring Twenties, Tony puts the bass again in the center spotlight to assist in setting the mood as he weaves this tale of a young man trying to understand why the expensive trappings combined with his love mean so little to this woman who is obviously looking for things he is incapable of giving.

Rendez Vous stretches Hightower’s voice in falsetto beyond his familiar tenor. It is a bossa nova getaway tribute to a young man’s love for a woman. She has captured his heart and this is where he can escape from the world and lose himself in her arms on the beach in Ipanema. All To The Good takes us to church but not in the tradition. He keeps a mid~tempo beat alive as he opens with a bit of scatting before delving into his homage to the beautiful spirit that was his mother. Taking wing for that celestial residence is only softened by those left behind with memories of times well spent together. It’s ballad time and Plain Jane takes a deep look inside dreams, aspirations and realities that keep one humble and looking towards the future. It’s acceptable to remove the masks we wear and be the plain people whistling along the boulevard. Need You lightens the mood again with an easy beat as a young man does his best to let the lady in his life know how he feels. One can only envision her smiling.

The Gift is a love song of lament. The orchestration brings to mind theme songs and interlude music of many film noir or those black and white television shows of the Fifties and Sixties. The strings add an eerie but comforting ambience as he unfolds his choices and the subsequent outcome. Love & Happy raises the temperature with this remake of the quintessential Al Green/Teenie Hodges composition Love And Happiness that was first released in the UK in 1973, however, America didn’t get the single until 1977. Tony gives us a funky blues swing tempo with those horns blazing that pays tribute to its raw grittiness that was originally expressed.

There are many songs that one should not tackle unless they have truly done their homework. Here’s To Life is one of those seminal songs that has become a modern day jazz standard and an appropriate closer. Composed by Artie Butler with lyrics by Phyllis Molinary, it became Shirley Horne’s signature song and one of my favorites as the title says it all. “No complaints and no regrets, I still believe in chasing dreams and placing bets, I have learned that all you give is all you get, so give it all you got…” As it unfolds you will hear Tony pay his respects and emerge with the mantra he lives by.

If you are hesitant, don’t be. Tony Hightower’s maturity is evident in his lyricism, composing, arranging and delivery. Penning six of the ten selections he presents here, I implore you to pay very close attention to the musicianship of those who accompany him. The music is as much a part of each story as the lyric, for it plays an equally impassioned role in the story. I also encourage you not to disregard his tracking, as it is reminiscent of past producers who created studio albums that were concerts, where you just drop the needle and let it play. This is one of those albums.

To say this young man is on his way to being one of the great storytellers of his generation is by no means an exaggeration. Listen with intent. For us hip audiophiles, we applaud those who defy popular taste for original design. Legacy.

carl anthony | notorious jazz | october 7, 2021

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