46. Mendacity
Same album as yesterday, with vocals by Abbey Lincoln.
The music is by Max Roach and the lyrics are by Chips Bayen, a lyricist, soprano saxophonist, and musician manager (of Charlie Parker in particular, and Elmo Hope wrote the song Chips), he was the son of the Ethiopia emporer Haïlé Selassié.
The song starts with a heartbreaking cry on the horns, accompanied by cymbals, and continues with the voice of Abbey Lincoln, simply accompanied by piano and bass. After the first verse comes the moment of choruses, first Eric Dolphy (I guess). It goes on with a drum solo (at 3:42), where Max Roach articulates short phrases, separated by noticeable silences, as if he speaked — there is anger, but it is as if it couldn't go out in full. (In her liner notes, Margo Guryan notes that as well, she adds: that “Max describes it as ‘taking a breath’, a technique often overlooked by many musicians.”) Then the piano/bass/drums trio resumes for the second verse, with a nice background horn accompaniment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kyhnNM1RRM
Now voting rights in this fair land
We know are not denied
But if I tried in certain states
From treetops I'd be tied
At an era of moral panics, it is good to remember that in 1960 (and already in 1900, and already in 1850, and already…) people had the sense that the power was confiscated in the benefit of a few.
#PouetRadio #Jazz #MaxRoach100