Demon's Dance
Demon's Dance is a post-bop jazz album by American alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, recorded in December 1967 at Rudy Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, and released in October 1970 by Blue Note Records.[1][2][3] Featuring a quintet that blends hard bop energy with modal and free jazz elements, the album represents McLean's final recording as leader for Blue Note during his prolific 1959–1967 tenure with the label, capturing him at the height of his artistic prime before a five-year hiatus from studio work.[3] The ensemble includes McLean on alto saxophone, Woody Shaw on trumpet, LaMont Johnson on piano, Scott Holt on bass, and Jack DeJohnette on drums.[1] It comprises six tracks: Demon's Dance and Floogeh composed by McLean, Toyland and Message from Trane by Cal Massey, and Boo Ann's Grand and Sweet Love of Mine by Shaw.[2] Standout pieces include the intense title track, driven by a grinding 6/8 bassline and crashing drums that set a tone of dark menace, and the reflective Message from Trane, a tribute to John Coltrane featuring exultant solos from McLean and Shaw.[3] Demon's Dance showcases McLean's mastery of bebop roots alongside avant-garde explorations, with dynamic interplay among the musicians—particularly DeJohnette's restless drumming and Johnson's supportive piano work—earning praise for its vitality and emotional depth.[3] The album's distinctive cover art, painted by Mati Klarwein, evokes surreal, psychedelic imagery akin to his work for Miles Davis's Bitches Brew.[1] Critically regarded as a career highlight, it holds an 8.8/10 rating on AllMusic, underscoring its enduring influence in post-bop jazz.[4]Background
Jackie McLean's 1960s evolution
In the late 1950s, Jackie McLean solidified his reputation as a leading hard bop alto saxophonist through a series of recordings for the Blue Note label, including albums such as New Soil (1959) and Jackie's Bag (1959), where his fiery, emotive playing drew comparisons to Charlie Parker while embracing the rhythmic drive and blues-inflected harmonies of the style. These sessions, often featuring sidemen like trumpeter Donald Byrd and pianist Sonny Clark, showcased McLean's technical prowess and improvisational intensity within the mainstream jazz framework dominant at the time.[5] By the early to mid-1960s, McLean began exploring avant-garde and modal jazz influences, marking a significant evolution in his sound, as evident in albums like Capuchin Swing (1960), which incorporated freer structures, and One Step Beyond (1963), where he delved into experimental harmonies and abstract forms inspired by contemporaries such as Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane. This shift reflected broader currents in jazz toward innovation, with McLean adapting modal scales and atonal elements to his hard bop roots, creating a distinctive hybrid that pushed boundaries without fully abandoning accessibility.[6] Throughout this period, McLean grappled with severe personal challenges, including a long battle with heroin addiction that led to the revocation of his New York cabaret card in the late 1950s following a 1957 arrest and a six-month prison sentence in 1964 for possession. McLean achieved recovery following the 1964 imprisonment, stabilizing his life and career.[7] These struggles limited his performing opportunities and contributed to a more introspective output, compounded by his appointment in 1968 as a faculty member at the Hartt School of Music at the University of Hartford, where teaching duties began to shape his focus toward mentorship and education alongside music-making. By the late 1960s, amid pressures from Blue Note Records to align with commercial expectations and following his personal recovery, McLean opted to return to a more roots-oriented hard bop approach, viewing it as a stabilizing pivot that reaffirmed his foundational strengths; this culminated in sessions like Demon's Dance (1967), which blended subtle avant-garde traces with driving, conventional grooves to bridge his experimental phase and earlier style.[3]Album conception and influences
Demon's Dance represented Jackie McLean's deliberate return to the accessible hard bop aesthetic following his mid-1960s forays into avant-garde jazz, blending post-bop energy with modal elements for a more commercially viable yet innovative sound.[3] This shift was influenced by reflections on his past struggles with heroin addiction, which dated back to the 1940s and had led to arrests, the revocation of his New York cabaret card in 1957, and a reliance on studio recordings to sustain his career.[3] The album's title, Demon's Dance, evoked these internal battles with addiction and artistic challenges, reflecting McLean's introspective reflections on his life's hardships.[3] McLean's influences drew from contemporaries like John Coltrane's modal and spiritual jazz explorations, evident in the inclusion of Cal Massey's tribute "Message from Trane," while incorporating echoes of Miles Davis's cool jazz restraint to temper the hard bop drive, ultimately prioritizing a revival of the genre's blues-infused, groove-oriented roots.[3][8] Blue Note Records producer Alfred Lion encouraged this direction, guiding McLean toward a balance of commercial appeal and creative freedom after his more experimental phase, in line with the label's legacy of fostering hard bop as an accessible evolution of bebop.[9][1] Prior to the December 1967 recording session, McLean composed originals such as the energetic title track "Demon's Dance" and the playful "Floogeh," both penned that year to capture his renewed focus on rhythmic vitality.[3][1] The selection also featured Cal Massey's original "Toyland," offering a lighthearted contrast to the album's intense themes and underscoring McLean's intent to blend tradition with personal expression.[1]Recording
Session logistics
The recording sessions for Demon's Dance took place on December 22, 1967, at Rudy Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.[2] This location served as the primary venue for Blue Note Records' sessions during the era, offering an acoustically optimized space for jazz ensembles.[10] The sessions were engineered by Rudy Van Gelder, whose involvement ensured the album's characteristic warm analog sound, a hallmark of his work on numerous Blue Note releases from the 1950s through the late 1960s.[11] Van Gelder captured the performance in stereo using analog tape, prioritizing a broad dynamic range to highlight the interplay between the horns and the rhythm section.[12] The quintet completed all six tracks in a single day-long session, a testament to their rehearsal efficiency under McLean's direction.[13] The tapes were subsequently mastered for vinyl LP release, preserving the session's live energy and sonic depth.[14]Quintet lineup and contributions
The quintet assembled for Demon's Dance featured alto saxophonist and bandleader Jackie McLean alongside trumpeter Woody Shaw, pianist LaMont Johnson, bassist Scott Holt, and drummer Jack DeJohnette, creating a dynamic ensemble that blended hard bop precision with forward-leaning improvisation during the December 22, 1967, session.[1] This lineup, captured at Rudy Van Gelder's studio, emphasized collective interplay, with the front line and rhythm section supporting extended, interactive solos across the album's six tracks.[8] Woody Shaw's trumpet work stood out for its bold, precise lines that offered sharp counterpoint to McLean's urgent, piquant alto saxophone, as heard in tracks like the title cut where Shaw's rich buzzes and growls intertwined with McLean's solos to heighten the music's intensity.[3] [15] This collaboration marked Shaw's rising prominence as a Blue Note regular in the late 1960s, following his sideman appearances on key label dates and contributing two compositions—"Boo Ann's Grand" and "Sweet Love of Mine"—that showcased his tuneful yet adventurous style.[16] [1] Jack DeJohnette's drumming bridged traditional hard bop swing with hints of emerging fusion, delivering versatile, omnidirectional polyrhythms and explosive rolls that propelled the group's energy, particularly in his boisterous solo on "Message from Trane" and crashing accents on the title track, just prior to his tenure with Miles Davis starting in 1968.[3] [15] His inventive support enhanced the quintet's cohesion, allowing for fluid transitions between swing and more restless, layered grooves.[8] In the rhythm section, LaMont Johnson's piano provided sophisticated harmonic choices that added depth and fire, such as his delicate yet swinging solo on the ballad "Toyland," while anchoring modal explorations and uptempo swings throughout.[3] [8] Complementing this, Scott Holt's solid bass lines—exemplified by the grinding 6/8 groove on "Demon's Dance" and his improvisational flair in "Floogeh"—offered a firm foundation, enabling the horns' bold exchanges and the overall group's seamless, driving improvisations.[3] [15] Together, these elements defined the album's sound as a vibrant return to post-bop roots with subtle avant-garde edges.[8]Composition and style
Overall musical approach
Demon's Dance exemplifies hard bop with post-bop extensions, incorporating bluesy riffs, modal improvisations, and angular melodies that fuse into a cohesive yet edgy sound.[8][2] The album's style emphasizes energetic horn interplay between Jackie McLean's alto saxophone and Woody Shaw's trumpet, delivering McLean's trademark angular phrasing over hard bop rhythms.[8] Swinging rhythms drive the quintet's performances at medium-up tempos, creating a propulsive energy that balances structured themes with improvisational freedom.[8][13] This approach highlights collective improvisation among the horns and rhythm section, evoking an avant-garde spirit within accessible melodic frameworks.[8] Spanning approximately 36 minutes across six tracks, the album adheres to the standard jazz LP format, eschewing extended suites in favor of concise, intense compositions.[17] Compared to McLean's earlier avant-garde leanings, Demon's Dance marks a return to driving hard bop aesthetics while preserving emotional depth.[3]Individual track structures
The title track "Demon's Dance" serves as an energetic hard bop opener, lasting 7:06, with a prominent unison horn theme played by McLean's alto saxophone and Shaw's trumpet setting a driving, angular melody. The form follows a standard hard bop structure: head-solos-head-out, allowing extended improvisations that highlight McLean's fiery, post-Coltrane phrasing and Shaw's bold, punchy trumpet lines over the rhythm section's swinging groove led by DeJohnette's dynamic drumming.[3][13][2] "Toyland," a 5:21 reinterpretation of the Christmas standard originally composed by Victor Herbert and Glen MacDonough, adopts a waltz-time (3/4) framework slowed to a melancholic pace, transforming the holiday tune into a contemplative jazz ballad. McLean's tender alto melody guides the theme, while the spotlight shifts to Johnson's lyrical piano solo, which explores harmonic nuances with a reflective, introspective touch amid Holt's subtle bass and DeJohnette's gentle brushwork.[3][18][2] "Boo Ann's Grand," a 6:53 original blues penned by Woody Shaw, emphasizes a rhythmic bass-drums foundation with Holt and DeJohnette locking into a propulsive groove that supports collective improvisation. The track's form centers on a twisting, uptempo melody introduced by the horns, followed by solos from McLean and Shaw that blend bluesy inflections with hard bop urgency, culminating in ensemble interplay.[3][13][2] "Sweet Love of Mine," a 6:01 bossa nova composition by Woody Shaw, unfolds with a breezy samba rhythm led by the rhythm section's gentle swing. McLean's warm, emotive alto lines guide the theme, allowing space for lyrical solos that evoke romantic introspection, while DeJohnette's nuanced brushwork enhances the track's intimate feel.[18][8][19][2] "Floogeh," a 5:19 be-bop composition by McLean, features a fast-paced, intricate head that builds to energetic solos. The track's structure emphasizes McLean's agile alto and Shaw's trumpet in a lively romp, supported by Johnson's probing piano chords and the rhythm section's relentless drive toward a collective peak.[3][13][2] The album closes with "Message from Trane," a 5:29 modal composition by Cal Massey serving as a tribute to John Coltrane, presented in an uptempo swing with heavy propulsion. It features exultant solos from McLean on alto saxophone and Shaw on trumpet, alongside DeJohnette's boisterous drumming that drives the rhythmic intensity.[3][13][18][2]Release
Original issuance
Demon's Dance was first issued in October 1970 by Blue Note Records, under catalog number BST 84345.[20] The album had been recorded on December 22, 1967, but its release was delayed by over two years due to internal transitions at the label following its acquisition by Liberty Records in 1966, which led to a backlog of unreleased material and shifts in production priorities.[21][15] The original format was a stereo vinyl LP pressed at 33⅓ RPM, featuring a striking cover with abstract artwork by painter Mati Klarwein, known for his surreal designs on other notable jazz and rock albums of the era.[2] Distribution focused primarily on the U.S. market, where Blue Note operated as a division of Liberty Records, though the acquisition hampered promotional efforts amid broader industry changes.[22] At the time, the standard list price for a stereo vinyl LP was $4.98, reflecting typical manufacturer's suggested prices through 1971.[23] Initial sales were modest, appealing mainly to a dedicated niche audience of jazz enthusiasts navigating the post-free jazz landscape, where hard bop revivals competed with emerging fusion styles for limited attention.[24]Subsequent editions
Following the original 1970 LP release on Blue Note Records, Demon's Dance saw its first compact disc reissue in 1987 by Blue Note, featuring a digital transfer of the original recording.[25][2] In the 1990s and 2000s, the album experienced limited vinyl repressions, with notable editions including the 2019 Blue Note Tone Poet Series release on 180-gram vinyl, mastered from original analog tapes by Kevin Gray and pressed at RTI for improved sound quality while retaining the original artwork.[1][2] Digital availability expanded in the 2010s, with the album streaming on platforms such as Spotify and high-resolution audio options on Tidal, typically featuring the 2006 Rudy Van Gelder remastered edition.[26] A 2023 Japanese UHQCD reissue was released as part of Blue Note's 85th anniversary series, offering high-quality audio remastering in a limited-edition format.[27] Collectible variants include 1970s pressings with Liberty/UA labels, such as early U.S. and Italian editions, alongside European reissues that lack bonus tracks but incorporate enhanced liner notes for contextual depth.[20][22]Reception
Contemporary critiques
Upon its 1970 release, Demon's Dance garnered limited critical attention amid the broader instability at Blue Note Records, which was navigating corporate turmoil under United Artists ownership from 1970 onward, including management mergers and reduced promotional efforts that affected jazz album visibility.[28] A notable exception was a review in DownBeat magazine's January 21, 1971, issue, where critic Larry Kart awarded the album three stars out of five. Kart commended alto saxophonist Jackie McLean's continued evolution away from Charlie Parker's shadow, particularly on the medium-tempo Latino ballad "Sweet Love of Mine" and the up-tempo, bop-inflected "Floogeh," which showcased the quintet's potential energy. However, he critiqued the ensemble's overall lack of cohesion—attributed to possibly inadequate rehearsal time—with trumpeter Woody Shaw's ornate phrasing occasionally clashing against McLean's more austere approach, and the rhythm section of pianist LaMont Johnson, bassist Scott Holt, and drummer Jack DeJohnette proving effective only in focused moments. Kart suggested the record suited dedicated McLean followers but recommended earlier works like Destination Out! (1963) and Let Freedom Ring (1962) as stronger entry points.[29] The album's firm hard bop foundation aligned with tastes among traditional jazz enthusiasts, though it received scant mention in other periodicals during this period of label transition.[22]Retrospective evaluations
In the decades following its release, Demon's Dance has garnered acclaim as a pinnacle of Jackie McLean's Blue Note catalog, praised for its seamless fusion of hard bop drive and exploratory edges. AllMusic's review highlights the album as the saxophonist's final Blue Note effort, capping an underappreciated streak of innovation with a quintet featuring emerging talents like drummer Jack DeJohnette, and notes its balancing of fierce intensity with melodic poise.[4] A 2007 assessment in All About Jazz elevates it to masterpiece status, distilling the essence of McLean's 21-album Blue Note tenure into hard bop rhythms, modal explorations, and avant-garde spirit, while commending the band's cohesive interplay and standout compositions like the title track and "Message from Trane."[8] More recently, a 2024 JazzTimes feature on DeJohnette spotlights his precocious command on the session—his early major-label appearance—as emblematic of the album's role in bridging hard bop traditions with the era's evolving jazz narratives.[30] Academic references, such as those in Richard Cook and Brian Morton's The Penguin Guide to Jazz (various 2000s editions), position Demon's Dance as an overlooked treasure within McLean's oeuvre, underscoring its sophisticated arrangements and the quintet's dynamic contributions. The album's lasting impact is reflected in high-profile reissues, including the 2006 Rudy Van Gelder remaster and the 2023 Blue Note Tone Poet Series vinyl edition, which have revitalized its availability and cemented its status amid McLean's prolific legacy.Personnel and credits
Performing artists
The performing artists on Demon's Dance formed a quintet led by alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, who also composed the album's original titles "Demon's Dance" and "Floogeh."[31]- Jackie McLean (alto saxophone, composer on originals)[31]
- Woody Shaw (trumpet)[31]
- LaMont Johnson (piano)[31]
- Scott Holt (double bass)[31]
- Jack DeJohnette (drums)[31]