Right Now! | |
Type: | album |
Artist: | Howard Johnson and Gravity featuring Taj Mahal |
Cover: | Howard_Johnsons_Right_Now.jpg |
Released: | 1997 |
Recorded: | December 1–3, 5, 9–10, 1996 |
Studio: | Manhattan Center Studios, New York City |
Genre: | Jazz |
Length: | 1:00:57 |
Label: | Verve 314 537 801-2 |
Producer: | Suzi Reynolds |
Chronology: | Howard Johnson |
Prev Title: | Gravity!!! |
Prev Year: | 1996 |
Next Title: | Testimony |
Next Year: | 2017 |
Right Now! is an album by multi-instrumentalist Howard Johnson and his band Gravity, with guest vocalist Taj Mahal appearing on three tracks. Johnson's third release as a leader, it was recorded during December 1996 at Manhattan Center Studios in New York City, and was issued in 1997 by Verve Records. On the album, Johnson is joined by tubists Dave Bargeron, Joseph Daley, Nedra Johnson, Carl Kleinsteuber, Earl McIntyre, and Bob Stewart, pianist Ray Chew, double bassist James Cammack, and drummer Kenwood Dennard.[1] [2] [3]
In a review for AllMusic, Richard S. Ginell called the album "elegant fun," and wrote: "The idea of a tuba sextet might seem a bit too daffy a defiance of the laws of gravity, but Hojo's ensemble... comes up with some surprisingly mellifluous textures... The tuba harmonies oddly often bear a pleasing kinship with those of Steve Turre's massed conch shells, and the shadow of Gil Evans is everywhere."[1]
The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings awarded the album a full four stars, and stated: "Opening with Charles Tolliver's 'Right Now' was a master-stroke. What follows is equally enterprising.... The arrangements are tighter and more adventurous than ever; the other brassmen in the band are exceptional players and idiosyncratic enough not to sound homogenized; Suzi Reynolds's production work is first rate."
Bob Blumenthal of The Atlantic described the album as "a spirited, wide-ranging program that proves that even the lowest instrumental voices can soar." He commented: "Johnson is deservedly the star. He arranged all the music, spreading the voicings in a manner that best takes advantage of the range and dexterity of his partners, and he roars through his several tuba solos."[4]
Writing for All About Jazz, Jim Santella noted that the band provides "a pleasant harmony" as well as "varied excitement and expression," and remarked: "The enthusiasm, soulful expression, and a professional approach to the tuba's role, combine to make Gravity's session welcome for those who appreciate mainstream jazz. Highly recommended."[5]