Multiple cover

Multiple

Released

In 1963, pianist Bill Evans began using the studio to layer his piano and record Conversations With Myself, while the next year John Coltrane famously overdubbed his voice chanting the title of A Love Supreme, and Miles Davis – with producer Teo Macero – used the studio itself as an unofficial band member to make a fusion of rock and jazz. But a decade on, Joe Henderson still faced critical grumbling for using multi-tracking to expand the dimensions of the music. Case in point, 1973’s Multiple, a career highlight that was ignored for decades. It wasn’t fusion per se, but Henderson fused plenty of things here: free jazz, funk, spiritual vibes, and more. “Tress-Cun-Deo-La” is a lilting samba plunked inside a raucous Blaxploitation strut, brimming at the edges with bells, interweaving horn lines, Henderson’s chants, wordless moans, and the like. “Bwaata” is a gentle ballad tethered to the muscular rhythm section of Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette. Henderson – on a short list for greatest tenor players of the 20th century – delivered one of his most adventurous efforts here and Multiple is a must-hear for fans thinking jazz was in decline that decade.

Andy Beta

Suggestions
Maria's First cover

Maria's First

Calvin Keys
Source cover

Source

Nubya Garcia
Kofi cover

Kofi

Donald Byrd
Ntsano cover

Ntsano

Mara, Naná Vasconcelos
Suite for Max Brown cover

Suite for Max Brown

The New Breed, Jeff Parker
Milagre dos Peixes cover

Milagre dos Peixes

Milton Nascimento
Variables cover

Variables

Alfa Mist
 Ghosted II cover

Ghosted II

Andreas Werliin, Johan Berthling, Oren Ambarchi