Creed Taylor matched two of his most famous artists,
Wes Montgomery and
Jimmy Smith, on this session (
Montgomery's last for
Verve), and the results are incendiary -- a near-ideal meeting of yin and yang.
Smith comes at your throat with his big attacks and
blues runs while
Montgomery responds with rounder, smoother octaves and single notes that still convey much heat. They are an amazing pair, complementing each other, driving each other, using their
bop and
blues taproots to fuse together a sound. The romping, aggressive
big band charts --
Oliver Nelson at his best -- on
"Down by the Riverside" and
"Night Train," and the pungently haunting chart for
Gary McFarland's
"13" (Death March)" still leave plenty of room for the soloists to stretch out.
"James and Wes" and
"Baby, It's Cold Outside" include drummer
Grady Tate and conguero
Ray Barretto, with
Smith's own feet working the organ pedals. The
Verve Master Edition reissue also includes an alternate take of
"O.G.D." with
Tate and
Barretto, a track previously surfacing on a long-gone
Encyclopedia of Jazz anthology LP from the '60s -- a neat bonus that makes this the preferred version. ~ Richard S. Ginell