Oliver Nelson And His Orchestra - Fantabulous [Argo/Cadet CA 737] (1964)

Dynamic Range Released: 1964
Country: US
Label: Argo/Cadet
Catalog: CA 737
Genre: Big Band, Jazz


T R A C K L I S T:
01 Hobo Flats
02 Post No Bills
03 A Bientot
04 Three Plus One
05 Take Me With You
06 Daylie's Double
07 Teenie's Blues
08 Laz-ie Kate




Fantabulous
Oliver Nelson And His Orchestra







Submit an album review.

Album Review

Thom Jurek [allmusic.com]

By the time Oliver Nelson and his big band had recorded Fantabulous in March of 1964 for Argo, the great composer, saxophonist, conductor, and arranger was a man about town in New York. He had released some truly classic dates of his own as a leader in smaller group forms -- Blues and the Abstract Truth and Full Nelson among them -- and had done arrangement work for everyone from Eddie ''Lockjaw'' Davis and Johnny Hodges, Nancy Wilson, Frank Wess, King Curtis, Etta Jones, Jimmy Smith, Jack Teagarden, Betty Carter, Billy Taylor, and Gene Ammons, to name more than a few. For Fantabulous, he took his working big band to Chicago for a gig sponsored by Daddy-O-Daylie, a famous local disc jockey. He had also worked with a number of the players on this date before, even recording an earlier version of the tune ''Hobo Flats'' that opens this set a year before on an album of the same name. Altoist Phil Woods, baritone roarer Jerome Richardson, trumpeters Snooky Young and Art Hoyle, bassist Ben Tucker, and drummer Grady Tate are a few of the names on Fantabulous. Nelson holds down the tenor chair, and Patti Bown is on piano with additional brass and reed players. Another Nelson original, ''Post No Bills'' features killer alto work from Woods, and a brief but smoking hot baritone break form Richardson on the same cut. This program is compelling in that it provides an excellent meld of all of Nelson's strengths-as an advanced, colorful harmonist who insisted on the hard swinging esthetic, as an excellent tenor saxophonist and a killer conductor. Another highlight is ''Daylie's Double,'' (which bears a similarity to Nat Adderley's ''Work Song'''') named for the aforementioned DJ, with smoking tenor breaks from Nelson, and big fat soulful chord soloing from Bown. Likewise Billy Taylor's ''A Bientot,'' it opens in true big brass Ellingtonian elegance, and unravels itself as a gorgeous bluesy ballad with echoes of ''I Only Have Eyes for You'' in its melody. The subtle shades of flute and twinned clarinet are a nice touch before the entire band arrives to carry it out on a big yet tenderly expressive lyric cloud. That said, there isn't a weak moment here, there isn't anything that doesn't captivate, delight, and even astonish, as in the smoking, striated harmonic bop head on ''Three Plus One.''