Covering prime early recordings from 1956-1960 and one mid-'80s cut,
Blue Note's
The Best of Jimmy Smith offers up a fine introduction to the trailblazing
jazz organist.
Smith's
Blue Note sessions not only introduced the world to the complex solo possibilities of the Hammond B3 organ, but simultaneously ushered in the
soul-
jazz era of the '60s, spawning a wealth of fine imitators in the process. Before delving into more commercial terrain on
Verve in the late '60s,
Smith cut a ton of jam-session dates for
Blue Note, often with the help of
hard bop luminaries like trumpeter
Lee Morgan, alto saxophonist
Lou Donaldson, tenor saxophonists
Tina Brooks and
Stanley Turrentine, and drummers
Art Blakey and
Donald Bailey. All are heard here on classic cuts like
"The Sermon," "Back at the Chicken Shack," and
"The Jumpin' Blues," with
Smith regular
Turrentine and a young
Morgan availing themselves in especially fine form. For his part,
Smith eats up the scenery on all the sides here, taking his solo to particularly impressive heights on a fleetly swinging rendition of
"When Johnny Comes Marching Home." Rounded out by a 1986 reading of
Blue Mitchell's
samba groove
"Fungii Mama" (marking
Smith's return to
Blue Note after a 23 year absence),
The Best of Jimmy Smith qualifies both as an excellent first-choice disc for
Smith newcomers and an appropriate entree into the
soul-
jazz catalog. ~ Stephen Cook