Joe Henderson, tenor sax
John Scofield, guitar
Al Foster, drums
Dave Holland, bass
John Scofield, guitar
Al Foster, drums
Dave Holland, bass
Recorded October 12-14, 1992
Power Station, NYC
Engineer: Jim Anderson
Miles Davis's death on September 28, 1991, triggered numerous tributes and memorials, proving once again that in the music industry death is a good career move. I normally avoid tribute albums, preferring to play deceased artists' original albums. But Joe Henderson's So Near, So Far (Musings for Miles) has become one of my favorites over the past 35 years, and it grows in esteem each time I hear it. It is vastly more engaging than Henderson's more celebrated Lush Life (Verve, 1991), a tribute to Billy Strayhorn.
Davis composed or co-composed all of the tunes except for "So Near So Far," which was written by British jazz artists Benny Green and Tony Crombie. The nine Davis compositions covered on Musing for Miles are not the most obvious choices. Some of the classics are here ("Miles Ahead," "Flamenco Sketches," "Milestones"), but some are cuts from Davis's earliest 10" albums.
Pairing Henderson's tenor with John Scofield's electric guitar was a stroke of genius. Although Davis relied heavily on strong pianists (e.g., Wynton Kelly, Herbie Hancock), he generally avoided guitars until his electric funk stage (Bitches Brew and beyond). On So Near, So Far, Scofield supplants the piano's chording and soloist roles while the dream rhythm team of Al Foster and Dave Holland handle the rest.
Scofield and Henderson complement each other superbly. The unison and harmony sections sound fresh, and Scofield's comping is funky but respectful of Miles' legacy and stature.
The extensive booklet notes include tributes from members of the quartet, all of whom had played in Davis's bands of the 1970s and 1980s, long after the tunes on the CD were originally composed. I'm touched by the closeness of Davis's relationship with Al Foster, as told by Miles in an excerpt from his autobiography, included in the booklet. Foster died in 2025 at age 82.
Henderson died in 2001 at age 64. His music was also memorialized by tribute albums such as Jim Snidero's The Music of Joe Henderson (Double-Time, 1998), which is the subject of a future post in this blog.
So Near, So Far was recorded digitally, so it is unlikely to be reissued on vinyl. Used CDs are abundant and preferred over downloads or streaming because of the booklet.
If you don't know this music, get it. You won't be disappointed.
For my reviews of two other Joe Henderson albums, go to:
Post: Edit An Evening with Joe Henderson
Post: Edit The State of the Tenor: Live at the Village Vanguard, Vols. 1 and 2
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