Freddie Hubbard: The Body & The Soul
I always love the sound of the trumpet. In the right hands, a trumpet can sound like a human voice. Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, and Clifford Brown are some of my favorite trumpet players, and now I am adding Freddie Hubbard to this list. I listened to Hubbard before, but I didn’t know much about him. In recent days, I immersed into Hubbard’s The Body & The Soul.
The album kicks off his Hubbard’s emotional rendition of “Body and Soul.” His trumpet is clear and can put you to tear. The orchestrated reinterpretation of “Carnival (Manhã de Carnaval)” is just astounding. The tune begins with the horn section playing the sweet melody to get you into the mood. Hubbard blazes his trumpet with a magnetizing solo, especially in the high register.
In “Aries,” Hubbard showcases his post-bop chops with his all-star players: Eric Dolphy, Wayne Shorter, Cedar Walton, Curtis Fuller, Reggie Workman, and Louis Hayes. Recorded in 1963, the album still sounds fresh today.