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Frank Minion - The Soft Land of Make Believe (1959-1960)
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 282 Mb
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 42 Mb


Features the latest remastering. Includes a Japanese description and lyrics. Frank Minion's one and only recording is a fascinating window into the world of a jazz performer. Quite cynical and sarcastic toward the jaundiced American view of the jazz life, Minion minces no words in stating his case, his reasons why, and his conclusions as to the home country of the music so thoroughly dismissing the music he loves. As this project was done back in the late '50s and early '60s, it reflects a syndrome that unfortunately still exists 50 years later. The CD reissue begins with a five-part suite based on the talking points and songs reflecting the vagaries and perceptions of a fictional big city neighborhood, which just as easily could be the reality of renaissance Harlem,
references to Atlanta, or perhaps his native Baltimore.

The second half features familiar standards with Minion's original lyrics or vocal lines adapted and extended with Minion's further remarks. "Introduction to Black Opium Street" has nine total sub-segments centered on the tough life of a jazzman, social issues, relations with women, and inferences to drug use. It is not all that dissimilar to the famous Charles Mingus poetry piece "Scenes in the City." The title track is a speak-out on squares, "Knowbody Knows" says that J.C. Heard and Billie Holiday know what others don't, "Bongo Blues" adopts a pseudo-Latin stance on a cautionary tale of playing the "skins" for cigarettes and pork & beans, while "Things Ain't Like They Used to Went" is an over the top wigged-out shout very similar to Babs Gonzales. The remainder of the songs are spoken or sung ballads as Minion is bummed out about a "brother" in "Salaam My Child," plays the sad clown in "Laughing Boy," and espouses hip bluesy jargon of the day in "Later." Roland Alexander's tenor sax and especially flute playing, and the emerging pianist Tommy Flanagan, stand out. Three cuts with the Bill Evans trio that worked with Miles Davis show Minion's ability to stretch familiar themes, and comprise his most vibrant work. His clever melding of "All Blues" and "Flamenco Sketches" is a love plea, including the self-deprecating phrase "Hey flamenco, I bet you think I am stinko." "'Round Midnight" expresses the same romantic sentiment as the original with a slightly added-on lyric, while "So What" is a completely different line, incorporating a theme of reaching out for help. The remaining two tracks, originals of Minion, have his voice in a distant thin echo. "Watermelon" is a Latin-ish shoutin' blues, while the statement "You I Love" precludes 36 lines of pleading calypso-fired rhythms in different keys, accented by an occasional Mickey & Sylvia "Love Is Strange" rock & roll phrase from guitarist Kenny Burrell. A time capsule of male post-vocalese jazz, and a tone parallel to Babs Gonzales without the histrionics or comedic rapport, Minion's lone statement is a very good one, and all should be glad it is finally available again.

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Tracklist:
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01 - The Soft Land Of Make Believe
02 - Knowbody Knows
03 - Autobiography of a Musician
04 - Bongo Blues
05 - Oddville, U.S.A
06 - Things Ain't Like They Used To Went
07 - Salaam My Child
08 - Laughing Boy
09 - Later
10 - Flamenco Sketches
11 - Round Midnight
12 - So What
13 - Watermelon
14 - You I Love

*1959-60, 2013 Solid Records Japan / Bethlehem Records | CDSOL-6054


Personnel on tracks 1-9:
Frank Minion - voice
Roland Alexander - tenor sax, flute
Tommy Flanagan - piano
George Tucker - bass
Dannie Richmond - drums

Personnel on tracks 10-12:
Frank Minion - voice
Bill Evans - piano
Paul Chambers - bass
Jimmy Cobb - drums

Personnel on tracks 13, 14:
Frank Minion - voice
Kenny Burrell - guitar
Jimmy Jones - piano
Joe Benjamin - bass
Ed Thigpen - drums

Recorded: New York 1959 (tracks 1-9) and 1960 (tracks 10-14).


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