Franklin, Henry
The Skipper At Home
Bassist Henry Franklins 1972 release for Black Jazz, The Skipper, is one of the highlights in a label catalog full of
many, and his 1974 follow-up, The Skipper at Home ("The Skipper" is Franklins nickname), lives up to its predecessors
high standard and might even surpass it. Which is no surprise given that a lot of the same players are on it, including
trumpeter/flugelhornist Oscar Brashear, tenor/soprano saxophonist Charles Owens, and pianist Bill Henderson (here billed
as Kemang Sunduza). But The Skipper at Home also boasts ace talents like keyboardist Kirk Lightsey (memorably featured
on the Roland Haynes Black Jazz release 2nd Wave), trombonist Al Hall, Jr. (who appeared on Black Jazz releases from
Doug Carn, Chester Thompson, and Calvin Keys), and drummer Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, whos played with everyone from Miles
Davis to Joe Henderson. The result is an album that, like The Skipper, is rooted in bop but one that nods to some of the
currents that were swirling in jazz at the time; its a little freer, a little more electric. And, as is true of just
about every Black Jazz release, the ensemble work is remarkably intuitive and swinging, driven by Franklins melodic,
inventive bass playing. The Skipper at Home has never been reissued on vinyl outside of Japan, and its never sounded
better thanks to Mike Milchners remastering. Pat Thomas liner notes complete the package. A beautiful record.
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
30-07-2021
Label
Item-nr
1292801
EAN
0848064012641
Availability
Not in stock