Bud Like – Charles McPherson
This blues head combines bebop and more angular post-bop vocabulary. Snappy rhythm section hits accompany most of the head. The changes are based on a classic bebop blues variation from the ‘40s.
- Recording: Charles McPherson - The Journey
- Recorded on: April 21, 2014
- Label: Capri (74136-2)
- Concert Key: F
- Vocal Range: , to
- Style: Swing (medium up)
- Alto Sax - Charles McPherson
- Tenor Sax - Keith Oxman
- Piano - Chip Stephens
- Bass - Ken Walker
- Drums - Todd Reid
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Video
- Description
- Historical Notes
- Solos
- Piano Corner
- Bass Corner
- Drum Corner
- Guitar Corner
- Inside & Beyond
- Minus You
As you hear from our excerpt, this one has a lot of great rhythmic interplay between the melody and the rhythm section right from the start, so all three recordings start with a drum set up to get everyone in focus.
Get ready to have some fun! On this recording, the drums has eight bars to set up the melody.This snappy medium-up blues head combines bebop and post-bop influences with lots of built-in rhythmic drive. During the melody, the rhythm section punctuates the melody with a series of hits in a repeated two-measure pattern, except for the last two measures of the head where everybody, including the piano and bass, gets to play the melody. These measures either set up the return of the melody, or propel you into the first soloist or into the ending.
The melody often switches from outlining the changes to more patterned phrases, such as the pentatonic phrase in the 5th and 6th measures which contrasts with the more linear phrase two measures earlier. The changes of the first four measures are based on a classic bebop-era blues variant used in Bud Powell’s Dance Of The Infidels, with a distinctive tritone substitute II-V7 in the fourth measure going to B♭. The rest of Bud Like’s changes are more standard, without descending II-V7s in the 7th and 8th measures.
Please note that the lead sheets available under this album cover are identical to those under the other two album covers.
Get ready to have some fun! On this recording, the drums has eight bars to set up the melody.This snappy medium-up blues head combines bebop and post-bop influences with lots of built-in rhythmic drive. During the melody, the rhythm section punctuates the melody with a series of hits in a repeated two-measure pattern, except for the last two measures of the head where everybody, including the piano and bass, gets to play the melody. These measures either set up the return of the melody, or propel you into the first soloist or into the ending.
The melody often switches from outlining the changes to more patterned phrases, such as the pentatonic phrase in the 5th and 6th measures which contrasts with the more linear phrase two measures earlier. The changes of the first four measures are based on a classic bebop-era blues variant used in Bud Powell’s Dance Of The Infidels, with a distinctive tritone substitute II-V7 in the fourth measure going to B♭. The rest of Bud Like’s changes are more standard, without descending II-V7s in the 7th and 8th measures.
Please note that the lead sheets available under this album cover are identical to those under the other two album covers.
This was the first recording of Bud Like, and it's become part of Charles McPherson's repertory with all of his bands ever since. It's got those magic ingredients: it's both a crowd pleaser and a musician pleaser.
We talk more about the rhythm section in The Journey notes.
We talk more about the rhythm section in The Journey notes.
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- Recording: Charles McPherson - Love Walked In
- Recorded on: April 27, 2015
- Label: Quadrant (Q00064J)
- Concert Key: F
- Vocal Range: , to
- Style: Swing (medium up)
- Alto Sax - Charles McPherson
- Piano - Bruce Barth
- Bass - Jeremy Brown
- Drums - Stephen Keogh
0:00
0:00
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Video
- Description
- Historical Notes
- Solos
- Piano Corner
- Bass Corner
- Drum Corner
- Guitar Corner
- Inside & Beyond
- Minus You
On this recording, there is a four-measure drum set up for the melody. This quartet recording uses the same head changes as the original quintet version. The rhythm section activity is slightly different: in each two-measure phrase, the hit on beat 4 of the second measure is played by bass and drums but not piano. On the last two measures the bass doubles the melody, but the piano holds out an F9 chord on beat 2 of the second to last measure (the start of the melody phrase).
This recording, made in Barcelona, is pianist Bruce Barth’s only album with Charles McPherson so far. Bassist Jeremy Brown and drummer Stephen Keogh are based in London. Three months before this session, Bruce Barth played on drummer Michael Benedict’s album “Circulation,” a tribute to composer Gary McFarland.
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- Recording: Charles McPherson - Live At Dizzy's 2016
- Recorded on: July 28-31, 2016
- Label: Jazz At Lincoln Center ()
- Concert Key: F
- Vocal Range: , to
- Style: Swing (medium up)
- Alto Sax - Charles McPherson
- Guitar - Yotam Silberstein
- Piano - Jeb Patton
- Bass - David Wong
- Drums - Chuck McPherson
- Description
- Historical Notes
- Solos
- Piano Corner
- Bass Corner
- Drum Corner
- Guitar Corner
- Inside & Beyond
- Minus You
On this version, the drum set up for the melody is back to eight bars, as was done on the first recording.This live quintet version has slightly different changes from the two studio recordings. Those two versions have a “walk up” of ascending changes in the 5th and 6th measures; this one adds a similar “walk up” in the first two measures. The guitar doubles the melody with the alto; the piano and bass join for the last two measures as on the original recording.
Drummer Chuck McPherson, Charles’s son, has played on five of his father’s albums. The most recent of these is 2001’s “Charles McPherson With Strings,” a tribute to Charlie Parker’s recordings with strings. The rest of the rhythm section (with Billy Drummond on drums) were with Charles again only a few months ago (December, 2019) at the Van Gelder Recording Studio, recording a new Charles McPherson album. Hope to have details about that soon!
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Charles McPherson
born on July 24, 1939
Charles McPherson's new CD, "Jazz Dance Suites" is available. A product of his love and admiration for his daughter Camille, Charles wrote two suites of new music for the CD. Read more...
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