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  1. Tracks 1 to 5 originally issued as Blue Note BLP 4167 and Andrew Hill - Point Of Departure, BST 84167. Tracks 6 to 8 are bonus tracks. All transfers from analog to digital were made at 24-bit resolution. On Front cover: Andrew Hill, Kenny Dorham / Eric Dolphy / Joe Henderson / Richard Davis (2) / Anthony Williams

  2. Recorded in March 1964, Point of Departure expanded Hill’s palette with a 6-piece ensemble of diverse players that included the remarkable frontline of Eric Dolphy on alto saxophone, bass clarinet, and flute, Joe Henderson on tenor saxophone, and Kenny Dorham on trumpet, along with Richard Davis on bass and Tony Williams on drums.

  3. 4 de sept. de 2019 · Gordon invited Henderson up on stage, kick-starting a career that quickly led to him establishing himself as one of the most popular tenors-for-hire at Blue Note, making consistently brilliant contributions to some of the key albums of the era: Lee Morgan’s Sidewinder, Andrew Hill’s Point of Departure, Larry Young’s Unity.

  4. Trumpeter Kenny Dorham and tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson completed the extraordinary lineup. As both a composer and a player, Hill did not fit anyone’s preconceptions. He attracted the greatest of musicians but didn’t gain a mass following and became an elusive figure until his late-career renaissance.

  5. David Weiss & Point of Departure. The late 1960’s were a turbulent but exciting time for jazz. ... Joe Henderson, Tony Williams and music from the unsung Kenny Cox and the Contemporary Jazz Quintet (who recorded two seminal but under-appreciated records for Blue Note in the late 1960’s).

  6. Point of Departure, with its all-star lineup (even then), took jazz and wrote a new book on it, excluding nothing. With Eric Dolphy and Joe Henderson on saxophones (Dolphy also played clarinet, bass clarinet, and flute), Richard Davis on bass, Tony Williams on drums, and Kenny Dorham on trumpet, this was a cast created for a jazz fire dance.

  7. 8 de feb. de 2021 · Kenny Dorham was a multi-gifted man, and Page One—the 1963 debut by Joe Henderson—displays several of his gifts. His eloquence on the trumpet, ... (The pair were also part of the Andrew Hill sextet that cut the equally classic Point of Departure in March 1964)