Wallace Roney
Meu Menino - Wallace Roney, Caymmi, Danilo
In Her Family - Wallace Roney, Metheny, Pat
Michelle - Wallace Roney, Lennon, John
Cafe - Wallace Roney, Gismonti, Egberto
Mist?rios - Wallace Roney, Maestro, Joyce
Last to Know - Wallace Roney, Metheny, Pat
Memoria E Fado - Wallace Roney, Gismonti, Egberto
71+ - Wallace Roney, Pastorius, Jaco
Muerte - Wallace Roney, Piazzolla, Astor
I Will Always Love You - Wallace Roney, Parton, Dolly
Release Date: 6/28/1994
| 06/15/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This CD qualifies as one of the most pleasantly surprising of my recent acquisitions. Appropriately titled, it offers Roney delivering dark, smoky trumpet sounds in the best tradition of his hero, Miles Davis. In fact, I was more than a little worried about the release before I had heard it, because of Roney's occasional predilection for paying too much homage to Miles. The cover shows a pensive Roney, trumpet in hand, sitting next to a music stand in a dark studio. One can almost see a young Miles, and the impression is reinforced when you find that Teo Macero served as a producer for the date.Not to worry. This is Roney's date all the way. True, "Misterios" treads in the same territory as "Sketches of Spain," "Milestones" and the rest of Miles's great orchestral dates. But Wallace is in complete command as he flows through these beautiful charts. He's lyrical, yet technically complex and he meets the challenge, as Miles did, of transforming pop material, such as Lennon and McCartney's "Michelle" and Dolly Parton's "I Will Always Love You" into lush jazz ballads.He gets considerable help, as well, from his brother Antoine on tenor sax, and the great pianist Geri Allen. Antoine glides in and out of what feels like a three-tune suite, "Cafe," "Misterios," and "Last to Know," spicing up the first and last of these with some fiery work. This is subtle material, best exemplified for me by the gorgeous "In Her Family," a melancholic exchange between Roney and Allen, backed by delicate strings and woodwinds. Gil Goldstein's fine conducting is displayed when the tune discreetly shifts to a quicker tempo, then lapses just as quickly back to its somber theme.This release should have gotten much more attention than it did. Perhaps critics were stuck with the perception that Roney was nothing more than a Miles clone. This should have been the CD that dispelled the perception once and for all. It's never too late."