Left & Right

Left & Right

For his second studio album for Atlantic, Roland Kirk was paired with a full-scale orchestra. With his blustery and mercurial disposition, Kirk was an odd choice for an orchestra. But as usual, he rose to the challenge and delivered a set of performances that highlight his vulnerability (a quality often overlooked when people discuss this indefatigable saxophonist). His reading of Charles Mingus’ “IX Love” shows the natural affinity between the two strong-willed but highly sensitive musicians, while the interpretation of Billy Strayhorn’s “A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing” is spine-tingling, second only to Johnny Hodges’ legendary original. The ballads “Quintessence” and “I Waited for You” owe much to Hodges, whose pining tone brought melodies to life in a manner usually reserved for vocalists. While Kirk was famous for playing multiple instruments at once, here he sticks mostly to a single tenor saxophone, as if to disprove persistent criticisms that his use of horns was just a gimmick. The exception is the 19-minute “Expansions,” a boiling cauldron of a song into which Kirk throws every last one of his ideas.

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