Tommy Smith with:
Guy Barker
Julian Arguelles
Steve Hamilton
Terje Gewelt
Ian Froman
Engineered by Calum Malcolm.
Recorded at Castle Sound Studios, Pencaitland on 19,20 December, 1994.
All compositions written by Tommy Smith and based on poems by Norman MacCaig.
All works commissioned by Ibis Productions with assistance from The Scottish Arts Council.
"Misty Morning and No Time"
The music on this album represents a new peak in the progress of saxophonist and composer Tommy Smith. It seems a long time now since he was a teenage prodigy setting out from Edinburgh for Berklee college in Boston back in 1984, but he has matured both as a person and as a musician, and is now set to fulfill all the promise we heard in him as a fifteen year old those dozen or so years ago.
It has not all been easy, nor has progress always been smooth, but the knocks and setbacks have surely contributed their own valuable lessons to his development. If things maybe came at him a little too fast in those first few years, he has learned a great deal in the process, and that is reflected in the superbly creative and utterly assured music on this recording.
This is Tommy’s second album for Linn, following last year’s trio set Reminiscence. It is also his second commission for Sextet, and represents a massive leap forward from the already impressive achievement captured on Paris (Blue Note, 1992.)
His Forward Motion trio which cut Reminiscence are here again, with bass player Terje Gewelt and drummer Ian Froman providing the rhythmic and harmonic foundation alongside pianist Steve Hamilton, another young Scot who has followed Smith’s pioneering road to Berklee (which is, of course, where Tommy met Terje and Ian in the first place.)
The band is completed by trumpeter Guy Barker and saxophonist Julian Arguelles. They are two of the best horn players on the British jazz scene, and had to prove that over and over again in mus