#38) Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers - Keystone 3 (1982)
In a career spanning 50 years, drummer Art Blakey produced a tremendous output of music with a number of combinations of his group The Jazz Messengers. If I'm being honest though, I don't really check out much Blakey stuff outside of his 1954-1965 heyday. The strength of the albums in that timeframe is so tremendous as are the artists involved (Lee Morgan, Hank Mobley, Clifford Brown, Thelonious Monk, Wayne Shorter). There's stuff to be gleaned from his material 1965, but hey there's only so much time in the day and why wouldn't one return to such great albums like Moanin', Free For All, Indestructible, and Caravan rather than spin, say, 1978s In This Korner (with Russian trumpeter Valeri Ponomarev (?!)). Also, Blakey did not really bring too much new to the table from 1965 to 1980 while the rest of the jazz world was experimenting with free jazz and fusion.
Still, branching out can be a good thing so I wanted to highlight a late-Blakey album that was not in the original Excursion - Keystone 3 , a live album recorded in 1982 at the Keystone Korner in San Francisco. You may notice two names of the cover both with the last name Marsalis. In 1979, Blakey assembled a larger band than he typically worked with, an 11-piece band to tour Europe with brothers Wynton (trumpet) and Branford (alto sax) among the members. This helped launch the Marsalis Brothers career and brought an interest back on Blakey's band. Wynton stayed with Blakey and Branford would later join again after finishing music school to form this combo that would play at Keystone.
History aside, it's a pretty cool set. Branford and Wynton would each develop their own styles as bandleaders, but hearing them early on, you really appreciate why it was such a big deal when they emerged. Wynton especially has such a crisp tone and really shows his dexterity on pieces like "In Walked Bud". Don't want to forget Bill Pierce, the tenor sax here, who has some nice playing here alongside the bros. Nice live hard bop set worth checking out if you enjoy Blakey's older stuff.