The Real McCoy cover

The Real McCoy

Released

McCoy Tyner had always made albums under his own name during his tenure in saxophonist John Coltrane’s quartet, but it took two years after his departure for him to record again as a leader. This, his Blue Note debut, featured drummer Elvin Jones, who had also left Coltrane’s group; bassist Ron Carter, then working with Miles Davis; and saxophonist Joe Henderson, himself a Blue Note solo artist. (Tyner and Jones had played on Henderson’s albums In ’n’ Out and Inner Urge, both recorded in 1964.) The Real McCoy is a high-flying fireball of a record, opening with the explosive “Passion Dance,” on which both Henderson and Jones take absolutely wailing solos; the drummer’s playing is a wall of fire consuming everything in its path. Even on relatively subdued tracks like “Contemplation” and “Search for Peace,” though, there’s a simmering intensity that never truly lets the listener relax.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
What It Is cover

What It Is

Clifford Jordan, Mal Waldron, Dannie Richmond, Cecil McBee
Home cover

Home

David Murray
Playing cover

Playing

Charlie Haden, Ed Blackwell, Don Cherry, Dewey Redman
Pianism cover

Pianism

Michel Petrucciani
A Genuine Tong Funeral cover

A Genuine Tong Funeral

The Gary Burton Quartet
Gnu High cover

Gnu High

Jack DeJohnette, Kenny Wheeler, Dave Holland, Keith Jarrett
The Bandwagon cover

The Bandwagon

Jason Moran
Hear You Say cover

Hear You Say

Ray Anderson, Marty Ehrlich
Free Spirits cover

Free Spirits

Mary Lou Williams
Anthony Wilson cover

Anthony Wilson

Brad Mehldau, Ira Nepus, Anthony Wilson, Pete Christlieb, Carl Saunders