Fly With the Wind
Terell Stafford, trumpet
Dick Oatts, alto saxophone
Bruce Barth, piano
Tim Warfield, tenor saxophone
Mike Boone, bass
Justin Faulkner, drums
Fly With the Wind is available for streaming and download on all major platforms. Physical CDs are available for sale on Bandcamp.
The single Yes I Can, No You Can't is also available.
Whatever its reputation for being brash and confrontational (justified, but well-intentioned), Philly has long been a nurturing place for music. The Sound of Philadelphia is one of the cornerstones of soul, and the city was certainly a cradle for rock and roll, wherever you feel its birthplace might have been. And then there’s jazz.
Ever since it became one of the key destination points for The Great Migration, landing future icons like Dizzy Gillespie and John Coltrane within the city limits, Philadelphia has been a rich source for generations of jazz greats. The list of names that have emerged from the City of Brotherly Love and gone on to shape the music in vital ways could fill the remainder of these notes.
The four composers represented on the present album – Trane, McCoy Tyner, Lee Morgan, and Jimmy Heath – are among the most celebrated and influential of those names. But generation after generation, the outflow has continued. From those bop-rooted pioneers through the organ greats that forged their soulful sound in the city; avant-gardists like Sun Ra and fusion alchemists like the Brecker Brothers; through the classmates-turned-masters generation of Christian McBride, Kurt Rosenwinkel and the late Joey DeFrancesco down to rising stars of today like Immanuel Wilkins, the continuum is a striking one.
The gifted musicians that make up the jazz faculty of Temple University recognize their place in that lineage, helping to shape the next generation of innovators. The membership of the Temple Jazz Sextet is such that this would be an all-star group without the renowned school’s imprimatur. The fact that Terell Stafford, Tim Warfield, Dick Oatts, Bruce Barth, Mike Boone and Justin Faulkner unite so vibrantly under the university’s banner just goes to prove how important they deem its educational mission.
There’s nothing didactic about the music on Fly With the Wind, however. This exhilarating outing is a chance for these six brilliant artists to look back at some of the key figures who have shaped their voices as well as the music as a whole.
“For me this album represents the rich tradition of songs written by Philly composers,” says Barth, who selected and arranged the four compositions on Fly With the Wind. “I hope we captured the spirit of Philadelphia music. I think the Philly vibe, in terms of the deep feel for the rhythm and the blues and a certain deep soulfulness, comes through in the playing.”
Named for the title track from Tyner’s string-drenched 1976 Milestone debut, Fly With the Wind also allows the ensemble to bid a loving farewell to two legends close to their hearts who passed away in the last few years. Stafford in particular worked closely with both Tyner and Heath, the latter also being a dear friend and supporter of the Temple jazz program. “Their music still carries on,” Stafford eulogizes, “so that helps carry us through their loss.”
Heath’s “All Members” was recorded by the diminutive saxophonist and his quartet on 1975’s Picture of Heath. Barth’s arrangement slows the piece down a touch without losing any of its robust swagger. Propelled by the lurching swing laid down by Boone and Faulkner, the tune sparks an incisive solo from Stafford, who the wordplay-loving Heath nicknamed “Staff Inflection.” That’s followed by Warfield’s gritty honk and then Oatts with a more lithe and lyrical turn. Barth’s nimble keyboard dance leads into a steely yet understated statement from Boone.
The band’s take on Trane’s classic “Naima” luxuriates in its languid, aching melody while enveloping it in rich, haunting new harmonies. Warfield’s breathy solo may cause listeners to catch themselves holding their breaths in the face of its hushed intimacy, while Boone answers with a heartfelt, elegant beauty.
“Yes I Can, No You Can’t” is reprised from Stafford’s 2015 tribute to Lee Morgan, BrotherLee Love, which also featured Warfield and Barth. “Sometimes people sleep on what an interesting and sophisticated composer Lee Morgan was,” Barth says. “Sure, that tune is a down home, funky 24-bar blues. But when you look closely at the melody it’s just so hip and sophisticated.” Barth elaborated that melody into three-part harmony for the frontline, setting the groove-fueled pace for Faulkner’s explosive drum feature.
At more than 13 minutes, “Fly With the Wind” is the album’s breathtaking centerpiece. Announced by a portentous fanfare devised by Barth, the song launches at a relentless pace and never lets up. The passion poured into this performance by all six members of the sextet exemplifies the esteem in which Tyner was held. Barth has long acknowledged the pianist’s importance in his own development, paying homage with two earlier compositions of his own: “Blues for Mr. Tyner” on the Temple sextet’s previous release, Family Feeling, and “Let’s Go” on his most recent solo album, Dedication.
“McCoy played with an intensity that’s hard to describe and that we all strive to get to,” Barth says. “The power and the depth of his expression came through on the records, but there were a few times hearing him live where it was almost an otherworldly experience.”
Barth tailored the solo sections for his bandmates, having Stafford and Oatts play over the changes but then crafting a C Minor vamp for Warfield, unleashing a blistering blowing session that gives away to a pugilistic duet between the saxophonist and Faulkner’s thunderous drumming.
Having played with Tyner so often, Stafford was able to get closer to that estimable power than anyone. “To record ‘Fly With the Wind’ with these guys and create that same energy that I remember from playing with McCoy was unbelievable,” he describes.
The camaraderie that Stafford hints at is key to the Temple Jazz Sextet and to the infectious joy that shines through on Fly With the Wind. “The choice of tunes on this album really speaks to my heart,” he says, “and of course the guys that play them are all my close colleagues and friends. When you play with your boys, the music is different because you trust them and they trust you. You just want to play because it feels so good.”
“The wonderful thing about writing for friends that you know and admire,” adds Barth, “is that you’re so familiar with their voices that you’re writing for. I sometimes use the term, ‘The pencil moves itself.’ They all have such distinctive musical voices and I’m probably their biggest fan. It’s an exciting and inspiring experience and an honor to be tapped to write music for them.”
-- Shaun Brady
Philadelphia, February 2023