The lion's share of recordings by this artist are in a piano trio setting, and this mid-'60s session finds him working with one of the best combinations he ever had. Bassist Earl May is a solid, inventive player who is beautifully recorded here with a sound that can have the soulfulness of a classical guitar at times. On drums, Paul Motian is something of a legend, and here is heard at his most straight-ahead, simple and swinging with some nice touches from the brushes. He is also recorded extremely well, giving the pianist a really beautiful base to take off from, as well as making the overall tracks sound brilliant. The art of recording piano trios in this manner, with such a clear and immediate sound, seems to have been lost unfortunately. Sometimes a weak link on his records, even the Allison instrumentals come across forcefully. Is there a Cecil Taylor influence, or is it just the same Duke Ellington touches heard in Taylor's music? The instrumental track "Power House" is one of the finest numbers of this sort Allison has recorded. Vocal performances are smooth as always, although the set does not contain any totally classic numbers. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide
Wild Man on the Loose
01/28/1965 | Collectables
All Music Guide Review
Track Listing
Similar Albums
Credits
- Arif Mardin
- Supervisor
- Earl May
- Bass
- Paul Motian
- Drums
- Leslie Tomkins
- Liner Notes
- Haig Adishian
- Cover Design
- Nick Samardge
- Cover Photo
- Nesuhi Ertegun
- Supervisor
- Phil Lehle
- Engineer
- Mose Allison
- Piano, Vocals, Main Performer












