After several sessions with
Columbia and
Candid,
Charles Mingus briefly returned to
Atlantic and cut the freewheeling
Oh Yeah, which has to rank as the wildest of all his classic albums.
Mingus plays no bass whatsoever, hiring
Doug Watkins to fill in while he accompanies the group on piano and contributes bluesy vocals to several tracks (while shouting encouragement on nearly all of them).
Mingus had always had a bizarre sense of humor, as expressed in some of his song titles and arranging devices, but
Oh Yeah often gets downright warped. That's partly because
Mingus is freed up to vocalize more often, but it's also due to the presence of mad genius
Roland Kirk. His chemistry with
Mingus is fantastically explosive, which makes sense -- both were encyclopedias of
jazz tradition, but given over to oddball modernist
experimentation. It's a shame
Kirk only spent three months with the band, because his solo interpretations are such symbiotic reflections of
Mingus' intent as a composer. Look no further than "Hog Callin' Blues," a stomping "Haitian Fight Song" descendant where
Kirk honks and roars the
blues like a man possessed.
Mingus' vocal selections radiate the same dementia, whether it's the stream-of-consciousness
blues couplets on "Devil Woman," the dark-humored modern-day
spiritual "Oh Lord Don't Let Them Drop That Atomic Bomb on Me," or the dadaist
stride piano bounce of "Eat That Chicken," a nod to
Fats Waller's comic
novelties. Elsewhere, "Passions of a Man" sounds almost like
musique concrete, while "Wham Bam Thank You Ma'am" nicks some
Monk angularity and "Ecclusiastics" adds some testifying shouts and a
chorale-like theme to
Mingus'
gospel-
jazz hybrid.
Oh Yeah is probably the most offbeat
Mingus album ever, and that's what makes it so vital. [Some reissues add three bonus tracks from the session, first released on
Tonight at Noon.] ~ Steve Huey