Night Dreamer

Night Dreamer
Studio album by Wayne Shorter
Released September 1964[1]
Recorded April 29, 1964
Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs
Genre Modal jazz, post-bop
Length 41:06 original LP
Label Blue Note
BLP 4173
Producer Alfred Lion
Wayne Shorter chronology
Wayning Moments
(1962)
Night Dreamer
(1964)
JuJu
(1964)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
All About Jazz(favorable)[2]
Allmusic[3]
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide[4]

Night Dreamer is the fourth album by Wayne Shorter, recorded and released in 1964. It was Shorter's debut on Blue Note. With a quintet that includes trumpeter Lee Morgan, pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Elvin Jones, Shorter performed six of his originals on this April 29 session.[5]

In 2005, it was reissued as part of the RVG Edition series with liner notes by Nat Hentoff.[6]

Concept and compositions

At this point of his career, Shorter felt his writing was changing. While the previous compositions had a "lot of detail", this new approach had a simplistic quality to it. "I used to use a lot of chord changes, for instance, but now I can separate the wheat from the chaff."

In an interview with Nat Hentoff, Shorter focused on the album's meaning: "What I'm trying to express here is a sense of judgment approaching - judgment for everything alive from the smallest ant to man. I know that the accepted meaning of "Armageddon" is the last battle between good and evil - whatever it is. But my definition of the judgment to come is a period of total enlightenment in which we will discover what we are and why we're here."

"Night Dreamer" has mostly a minor feel, often perceived by Shorter as "evening or night", hence the "Night" in the title. It is a 3/4 "floating" piece, yet, "although the beat does float, it also is set in a heavy groove. It's a paradox, in a way, like you'd have in a dream". This explains the "Dreamer" part. Shorter first heard "Oriental Folk Song" as the theme for a commercial, then he discovered it was an old Chinese song. He meant "Virgo" (Shorter's sign) to be "optimistic", whilst in "Black Nile" he tried to get a flowing feeling, like a "depiction of a river route." "Charcoal Blues" should represent a sort of backtracking piece, linking the past and the present time together: "The old blues and funk were good for their times and place, but what I'm trying to do now is to get the meat out of the old blues while also presaging the different kind of blues to come. [...] I'm both looking back at the good things in those older blues and also laughing at that part of my background". Shorter underlines that the laughter is not mocking but satirical, "from the inside". Ultimately, "Armageddon" was considered by Shorter as the focal point of the album.[7]

Track listing

All tracks composed by Wayne Shorter.
  1. "Night Dreamer" – 7:18
  2. "Oriental Folk Song" – 6:54
  3. "Virgo" – 7:09
  4. "Black Nile" – 6:29
  5. "Charcoal Blues" – 6:54
  6. "Armageddon" – 6:22
  7. "Virgo" [Alternate Take] – 7:03 Bonus track on CD reissue

Personnel

Musicians

Additional personnel

References

  1. Billboard Oct 3, 1964
  2. All About Jazz review
  3. Allmusic review
  4. Swenson, J. (Editor) (1985). The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide. USA: Random House/Rolling Stone. p. 180. ISBN 0-394-72643-X.
  5. AMG.com review
  6. Night Dreamer Product Notes
  7. Original liner notes by Nat Hentoff
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