Another long period of silence followed
Buck Hill's 2000 album,
Uh-Huh! Buck Hill Live at Montpelier, but six years later, at the age of 79, the resilient mailman-by-day, hard-bopper-by-night returned to the recording scene fronting a soul-jazz organ trio. Here,
Hill's big, assertive tenor sax tone seems to take on the dimensions of that of
Hank Crawford or
Stanley Turrentine without quite filching the playing patterns of either. That fits the format very well, and
Hill has competent, technically adept sidemen (
John Ozment, Hammond A 100; Paul Pieper, guitar;
Jerry Jones, drums) who know the style and keep things simmering on low or medium flame. Indeed, the title track, "Relax," is precisely that, a textbook definition of loose, relaxed organ trio swing. The program divides itself more-or-less equally between some ingratiating
Buck Hill originals and
Miles Davis tunes -- with the exception of the old
Charlie Parker vehicle, "Old Folks," which
Davis also covered anyhow. Furthermore, the
Davis tunes aren't always the ones you would expect. The haunting "Flamenco Sketches" from
Kind of Blue isn't covered often, and
Hill finds the introspective beauty of the tune and yearning Andalusian chord changes to his liking. Good, unpretentious, soul-warming music-making all around.
–
Richard S. Ginell, Rovi