Showing posts with label Brad Mehldau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brad Mehldau. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2024

Brad Mehldau - Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays The Beatles

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:31
Size: 112,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:14) 1. I Am The Walrus
(2:18) 2. Your Mother Should Know
(3:54) 3. I Saw Her Standing There
(2:28) 4. For No One
(7:19) 5. Baby's In Black
(2:42) 6. She Said, She Said
(3:58) 7. Here, There And Everywhere
(2:25) 8. If I Needed Someone
(6:42) 9. Maxwell's Silver Hammer
(8:17) 10. Golden Slumbers
(4:09) 11. Life On Mars?

This live solo album features the pianist and composer's interpretations of nine songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney and one by George Harrison. Although other Beatles songs have long been staples of Mehldau's solo and trio shows, he had not previously recorded any of the tunes on Your Mother Should Know.

The album ends with a David Bowie classic that draws a connection between The Beatles and pop songwriters who followed. Your Mother Should Know was recorded in September 2020 at Philharmonie de Paris.
https://www.amazon.ca/Your-Mother-Should-Know-Mehldau/dp/B0BN277L5M

Personnel: Brad Mehldau – piano

Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays The Beatles

Saturday, May 11, 2024

Brad Mehldau - Après Fauré

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 42:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 98,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:28) 1. Nocturne No. 13 in B Minor, Op. 119 (1921)
(6:39) 2. Nocturne No. 4 in E-Flat Major, Op. 36 (c. 1884)
(6:20) 3. Nocturne No. 12 in E Minor, Op. 107 (1915)
(3:31) 4. Prelude
(3:40) 5. Caprice
(2:43) 6. Nocturne
(2:03) 7. Vision
(8:39) 8. Nocturne No. 7 in C-Sharp Minor, Op. 74 (1898)
(2:46) 9. Piano Quartet No. 2 in G Minor, Op. 45 (c. 1887) - III. Adagio non troppo (Extract)

Grammy-award winning jazz pianist Brad Mehldau connects the dots as though they were so many 16th notes.

His two new albums, “After Bach II” and “Après Fauré,” use classical music as a foundation for solo explorations that draw a through line from Art Tatum to Thelonious Monk to Bill Evans to Keith Jarrett to Philip Glass. It all sounds like Mehldau, and it all goes back to Bach.

The hybrid sets are out Friday, May 10, and “After Bach II” is a sequel to Mehldau’s absorbing 2018 album, “After Bach.” Once again, interpretations of Bach pieces alternate with original compositions inspired by him. “Après Fauré” follows a similar format, with the French composer’s work bookending four short original Mehldau compositions.

It’s music to delight a church choir or nightclub crowd. And, as Mehldau writes in the liner notes for the Fauré album, “music that breathes austerity and weirdness.”

The Fauré set includes his final two nocturnes, minor-key pieces written in 1915 and 1921. Their restless, romantic melancholy inspires dark, discordant elements in Mehldau’s own pieces, which are filled with percussive, searching music that underscores how Fauré’s work anticipated jazz.

There’s also a link between Jelly Roll Morton and J.S. Bach, which Mehldau has long embraced and celebrated. The new Bach album features graceful, persuasive interpretations of familiar material, including five pieces from Book I of The Well-Tempered Clavier. Mehldau describes the Fugue in A minor as an exploration of Bach’s funkiness, and it unspools as freely as a jazz solo, while the familiar melody of the Prelude in E major breaks out like sunshine.

Bach was an acclaimed keyboard improviser, so it’s fitting his Goldberg Variations are treated to Mehldau’s improvised variations. The seven include two in a 5/8 time signature and one in 7/4, creating a weird and wild flow that is very 21st century.

Mehldau’s variations are bracing and daring, breathtaking and beautiful, spiritual and psychedelic. Blue notes emerge from the contrapuntal complexity as he tests the limits of Bach’s music, showing there are none. https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory/music-review-brad-mehldau-connects-bach-faur-jazz-109958966

Après Fauré

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Charlie Haden & Brad Mehldau - Long Ago And Far Away

Styles: Post Bop, Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:52
Size: 165,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:55)  1. Au Privave
( 9:13)  2. My Old Flame
(12:00)  3. What'll I Do
(15:05)  4. Long Ago And Far Away
(12:59)  5. My Love And I
(12:37)  6. Everything Happens To Me

It starts with a few irreverent tickles. Just three minutes into Bird’s “Au Privave,” Brad Mehldau gives his muse the green light, messes around with a spray of notes, and we’re off into a chatty conversation where blithe trills are grounded by buoyant thumps meaning informality has just as much bearing on this entertaining exchange as decorum does. Perhaps that’s predictable. Impulse!’s last three Haden duet discs (with Jim Hall and Gonzalo Rubalcaba, respectively) make hay with a parallel dynamic. One of the bassist’s strengths was splitting the diff between the formidable and the folksy, and as these six performances from a 2007 German show illustrate, Mehldau has little problem turning to his colloquial side when the mood strikes. The cozy context gives the pianist’s whimsy more wiggle room than usual. Though the book is ballad-heavy and the tempos measured, both participants skip through a handful of passages with a mischievous air. Mehldau’s right hand dodges opaque excursions and lets light-hearted flurries carry the day on “What’ll I Do.” Because the two decide on a bouncy gait for “Long Ago and Far Away,” it too is a romp that trusts mercurial solos to control its temperament. 

Both players love a moody digression, however, and “My Love and I” turns bluesy and brooding while still dropping a string of surprises. The pianist’s urbane essence is no longer on the back burner, and the duo’s pulsing interplay renders yet another bit of sage advice: Caprice is an ally, dismiss it at your peril. ~ Jim Macnie https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/charlie-haden-brad-mehldau-long-ago-far-away/

Personnel: Charlie Haden – bass; Brad Mehldau – piano

Long Ago And Far Away

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Chris Potter - Eagle's Point

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 40:56
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 94,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:39) 1. Dream of Home
(7:05) 2. Cloud Message
(7:18) 3. Indigo Ildikó
(7:36) 4. Eagle's Point
(6:15) 5. Aria for Anna
(7:40) 6. Other Plans
(8:28) 7. Málaga Moon
(6:39) 8. Horizon Dance

The question that comes to mind after listening to Eagle's Point is this: why have the four musicians, who have known each other since the 1990s, never recorded together before? For the combination of Chris Potter, Brad Mehldau, John Patitucci and Brian Blade is a real meeting of minds; the stars are in perfect alignment.

Potter's previous release, Got The Keys To The Kingdom (Edition, 2023), was a live set, recorded at New York's Village Vanguard, and consisted entirely of covers. Eagle's Point is a studio recording and all the tunes are originals written for the occasion by Potter.

There is no bling to be heard here, no b.s., just gutsy substance. Across the album, Potter's writing and performance has an emphasis on exuberance but from time-to-time touches on the kind of gentle delicacy associated with pianist Bill Evans or composer Erik Satie; within every track, and indeed within most of the solos, the atmosphere moves between outgoing and intense to introspective and softly spoken (hear opener "Dream Of Home" on the YouTube below).

The quartet, each member listening hard to whoever is center stage, moves through these changes in perfect symmetry, like a small murmuration of starlings wheeling over a landscape. It is all gloriously consonant; the only suggestion of dissonance comes from Potter's broken notes in the final few seconds of the closing "Horizon Dance," a Sonny Rollins-esque romp which promises to break into a straight Saturday night calypso at any moment, but never quite does so.

Like all Potter's albums, Eagle's Point is something which will reward multiple replays, revealing new facets with every spin. By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/eagles-point-chris-potter-edition-records

Personnel: Chris Potter - Tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet; Brad Mehldau - Piano; John Patitucci - Double Bass; Brian Blade - Drums

Eagle's Point

Thursday, June 1, 2023

Brad Mehldau & Rossy Trio - When I Fall In Love

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:53
Size: 155,3 MB
Art: Front

( 8:48)  1. Anthropology
( 6:34)  2. At A Loss
(14:39)  3. When I Fall In Love
( 8:15)  4. Countdown
( 8:32)  5. Convalescent
(10:24)  6. I Fall In Love Too Easily
( 9:38)  7. I Didn't Know What Time It Was

Recorded way back in 1993 in Barcelona, pianist Brad Meldau was a kid just beginning to explore the deep science of the jazz piano trio with Mario and Jordi Rossy. He was also commencing his stint with Josh Redman and backing cats like Johnny Griffin, Jimmy Cobb, and others. His working with this trio reveals a young musician (Meldau was born in 1970) in solid command of the language he is attempting to simultaneously master and deepen. This is a club date and kicks off with an ambitious and wholly successful read of Charlie Parker's "Anthropology." The steaming rhythm leaves Meldau no choice but to careen through the melody as recklessly as a saxophonist.

He inks it note for note and then begins to move through the lower register for sevenths and ninths, playing 16th and even 32nd notes to corral the rhythm section as he moves the scale over first a half, then a whole, and then two and a half steps. A ballad follows, Meldau's own "At a Loss," a bit of melodramatic glissando playing that nonetheless has at its heart an interesting harmonic series of shifts in timbre, moving from a light blue to a darker, richer chromatic that digs into the blues for a stuttering turn at swing before re-entering a balladic frame. The most exciting track on the set is Coltrane's "Countdown," with its rhythmic and mode changes occurring just before the end of each interval, blurring them somewhat and making the solos belled through. This may not be as great as some of Meldau's later trio work, but it is very impressive for such an early date.By Thom Jurek
http://www.allmusic.com/album/when-i-fall-in-love-mw0000046447

Personnel: Piano – Brad Mehldau; Bass – Mario Rossy; Drums – Jordi Rossy

When I Fall In Love

Thursday, October 6, 2022

Joshua Redman, Brian Blade, Christian McBride, Brad Mehldau - LongGone

Styles: Saxophone, Piano Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:16
Size: 144,6 MB
Art: Front

( 7:21) 1. Long Gone
( 6:21) 2. Disco Ears
( 8:18) 3. Statuesque
( 6:00) 4. Kite Song
( 6:31) 5. Ship to Shore
(12:42) 6. Rejoice

The second album from Joshua Redman's reunited '90s quartet, 2022's LongGone is another warmly relaxed affair showcasing the group's seasoned sophistication. When they first debuted on 1994's Moodswing, they were a cadre of up-and-coming young lions. Almost 30 years later, the lineup of saxophonist Redman, pianist Brad Mehldau, bassist Christian McBride, and drummer Brian Blade is essentially a supergroup of four of the most acclaimed and recognizable jazz musicians of their generation. It's not just that each of them are uber-talented improvisers, which is certainly true. It's that they've grown into four solo artists, primarily for their work as leaders, each with a distinctive and influential style of their own. All of which makes their decision to reunite (as they first did on 2020's RoundAgain) such a delightfully democratic surprise.

As with RoundAgain, there's a sense of jovial familiarity about LongGone, as if the quartet just picked up where they left off with MoodSwing. It's a vibe that's particularly apparent on "Kite Song," a rambling composition with a spindly Paul Desmond-esque melody that nicely evokes the title as Redman and Mehldau tumble as if through clouds, dipping into jaunty swing, folky asides, flourishes of atonal classicism. Also engaging, the opening title track is a tough midtempo swinger in which Redman dances with lithe athleticism over McBride and Blade's fat trampoline groove. We also get "Disco Ears," a wicked modal swinger in the late-'60s hard bop style, while the classical-inflected ballad "Statuesque" moves with spare, stentorian reverence as if the band are playing to a black-and-white slideshow of images from their past. Most of LongGone feels deeply organic, with Redman and his bandmates feeding off each other and working to build something cohesive and bigger than their individual contributions.By Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/longgone-mw0003772896

Personnel: Joshua Redman (saxophone), Brad Mehldau (piano), Christian McBride (bass), and Brian Blade (drums)

LongGone

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Lee Konitz, Brad Mehldau & Charlie Haden - Alone Together

Styles: Saxophone, Piano Jazz, Bop
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:39
Size: 168,7 MB
Art: Front

(13:45) 1. Alone Together
(12:55) 2. The Song Is You
(10:59) 3. Cherokee
(11:32) 4. What Is This Thing Called Love ?
(12:49) 5. Round Midnight
(11:36) 6. You Stepped Out Of A Dream

Alone Together, Lee Konitz's first recording for Blue Note, is a special event. The saxophonist teamed up with legendary bassist Charlie Haden and young lion pianist Brad Mehldau, and the trio's interaction on this set of relaxed bop is astonishing. On paper, the music on Alone Together a collection of standards should just be straightahead cool bop, but all three musicians are restless and inventive, making even the simplest numbers on the disc vibrant, lively and adventurous. It's a wonderful record, one that makes a convincing argument that Konitz remains a vital force even as he reached his seventieth year.~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/alone-together-mw0000596268

Personnel: Lee Konitz – alto sax; Brad Mehldau – piano; Charlie Haden – bass

Alone Together

Friday, January 21, 2022

Brad Mehldau - New York-Barcelona Crossing, Volumen 1, Volumen 2

Album: New York-Barcelona Crossing, Volumen 1
Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 72:13
Size: 66,2 MB
Art: Front

(13:55) 1. "Wonderful"
(11:58) 2. Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most
(10:01) 3. "Old Folks"
( 7:41) 4. "Sushi"
( 8:16) 5. "Bodi"
( 8:49) 6. "Começar de Novo"
( 9:32) 7. "Just One of Those Things"
( 1:58) 8. "No Blues"

The album was recorded in concert at the Jamboree Club in Barcelona on May 10, 1993. The material is mostly jazz standards and pieces from the Great American Songbook. It was released by Fresh Sound New Talent, after the Mehldau–Rossy album When I Fall in Love. The Penguin Guide to Jazz commented that Mehldau's "introduction and improvisation on 'Old Folks' are quite breathtaking and it's clear that the pristine touch of the later discs was already in place." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York-Barcelona_Crossing,_Volumen_1

Personnel: Brad Mehldau – piano; Perico Sambeat – alto sax; Mario Rossy – bass; Jorge Rossy – drums


Album: New York-Barcelona Crossing, Volumen 2
Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 60:11
Size: 55,8 MB
Art: Front

( 8:56) 1. "I've Told Every Little Star"
(12:25) 2. Un Poco Loco
( 7:54) 3. Easy to Remember
( 7:35) 4. Played Twice
(11:20) 5. Dat Dere
( 8:22) 6. Cousin Mary
( 3:36) 7. No Blues

The album was recorded in concert at the Jamboree Club in Barcelona on May 10, 1993. The material is mostly jazz standards and pieces from the Great American Songbook. The Penguin Guide to Jazz commented that this album was not as good as New York-Barcelona Crossing, Volumen 1, but that "It's Easy to Remember" is "another gorgeous ballad performance, at a dangerously slow tempo". The AllMusic reviewer wrote that "What is engrossing about the disc is the utter fluidity with which these four young musicians from varying backgrounds are able to communicate using the common language of standard songs." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York-Barcelona_Crossing,_Volumen_2

Personnel: Brad Mehldau – piano; Perico Sambeat – alto sax; Mario Rossy – bass; Jorge Rossy – drums

New York-Barcelona Crossing, Volumen 1, Volumen 2

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

Peter Bernstein - Heart's Content

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 57:20
Size: 105,6 MB
Art: Front

(7:42) 1. Little Green Men
(7:09) 2. Heart's Content
(8:41) 3. Relativity
(8:12) 4. Consant Conversation
(7:12) 5. Dedicated To You
(8:32) 6. Simple As That
(6:59) 7. Public Domain
(2:50) 8. Blood Count

Jazz guitarist Peter Bernstein was born September 3, 1967, in New York City. He got his first break while attending the New School when he met Jim Hall, who recruited him for a concert of guitarists as part of the 1990 JVC Jazz Festival in New York. The show was recorded by MusicMasters and issued as Live at Town Hall, Vol. 2. Bernstein quickly began playing with other jazz musicians, notably appearing on albums by Lou Donaldson, Michael Hashim, Larry Goldings, Mel Rhyne, Jesse Davis, and Geoff Keezer. He recorded his first album as a leader, Somethin's Burnin', for Criss Cross on December 22, 1992, as part of quartet with Brad Mehldau (piano), John Webber (bass), and Jimmy Cobb (drums). After working with such artists as Patti Page, Walt Weiskopf, Brian Lynch, Laverne Butler, Eric Alexander, and Hendrik Meurkens in 1993-1994, he issued his second solo album, Signs of Life, on May 2, 1995, working again with Mehldau, along with Christian McBride (bass) and Gregory Hutchinson (drums). Further work as a sideman with Ghetto Philharmonic, Trudy Desmond, Teodross Avery, Joshua Redman, Kevin Mahogany, Grant Stewart, and Mike LeDonne preceded the release of his third album, Brain Dance, on June 24, 1997. This time, he led a quintet also containing Goldings (organ), Eric Alexander (tenor saxophone), Steve Davis (trombone), and Billy Drummond (drums). Prior to his fourth album, Earth Tones, Bernstein recorded with Ralph Lalama and Eric Comstock, among others. Earth Tones, issued August 25, 1998, found him fronting a trio with Goldings and Bill Stewart (drums).

Five years elapsed before the release of Heart's Content, Bernstein's fifth album as a leader, and he occupied the time working with a wide variety of musicians including Tom Aalfs, Group 15, Jimmy Cobb's Mob, David Bubba Brooks, Doug Lawrence, Sam Yahel, David Morgan, Jon Gordon, Michael Karn, Spike Wilner, Anna Lauvergnac, Harry Allen, Paula West, Nicholas Payton, Etta Jones, Béla Szakcsi Lakatos, Lee Konitz, Klaus Doldinger, and Ralph Bowen. Heart's Content, which was released May 27, 2003, was credited to "Peter Bernstein + 3," and the three were Mehldau, Bill Stewart, and Larry Grenadier (bass). The same year the album appeared, Bernstein could be heard on albums by Ryan Kisor, Wycliffe Gordon, Janis Siegel, and Martin Sasse, among others. Stranger in Paradise, Bernstein's sixth album, was released June 8, 2004, by the Japanese Tokuma label, and employed the same lineup as that on Heart's Content. In addition to musicians with whom he had recorded before, Bernstein appeared on albums by Jim Rotondi and Dr. Lonnie Smith in 2004 and Kathy Kosins in 2005. On August 23, 2005, Mel Bay released the DVD Peter Bernstein Trio Live at Smoke, taped at a jazz club on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Monk Among his many sideman sessions in the mid-2000s, Bernstein added dates with Joe Magnarelli, Alvin Queen, Planet Jazz, Anton Schwartz, John Pisano, David "Fathead" Newman, Don Friedman, Cory Weeds, and Andrew Suvalsky to the list of his credits, along with repeat appearances with others. On January 13, 2009, the newly reactivated Xanadu label released Bernstein's seventh album, Monk, a tribute to Thelonious Monk featuring all Monk compositions. Although Monk was a pianist, of course, the Bernstein recording was made with a pianoless trio consisting of himself, Doug Weiss (bass), and Bill Stewart.

Personnel: Peter Bernstein (G); Brad Mehldau (P); Larry Grenadier (B); Bill Stewart (D)

Heart's Content

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Brad Mehldau Trio - Brad Mehldau Trio Live

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 156:08
Size: 358,2 MB
Art: Front

( 0:15) 1. Introduction
( 8:44) 2. Wonderwall
(13:07) 3. Ruby's Rub
(10:38) 4. O Que Será
( 9:10) 5. B Flat Waltz
(23:30) 6. Black Hole Sun
(13:03) 7. The Very Thought Of You
(12:00) 8. Buddha Realm
(10:40) 9. Fit Cat
(11:35) 10. Secret Beach
(16:16) 11. C.T.A.
(12:08) 12. More Than You Know
(14:57) 13. Countdown

Brad Mehldau Trio Live is a live album by American pianist and composer Brad Mehldau's Trio released on the Nonesuch label in 2008. The album received universally favourable reviews. AllMusic awarded the album 4 stars and in its review by Thom Jurek, states "Those new or curious about the trio will be astonished by what's here, pure and simple. For seasoned jazz fans and those of the pianist in particular, this is nothing short of total delight". The Guardian's John Fordham observed "Since the mid-1990s, the prodigiously gifted pianist Brad Mehldau has been turning out one disc a year. Yet every Mehldau venture offers a new mix of standard songs and deconstructed pop themes; a new level of understanding within his group; a new twist on old piano-trio rules; and a startling new freedom in the way the pianist's left hand cajoles, threatens and encourages his right".

On All About Jazz, John Kelman noted "Ballard has lit an unmistakable fire under this group, but it's the trio's increasing open-mindedness that distinguishes Live from its previous live outings. Refined simplicity contrasts with sophisticated complexity while spare economy coexists alongside busier dynamics, making Live another exceptional milestone in a career defined by gradual but unrelenting growth and exploration". PopMatters reviewer Ron Hart said "On Brad Mehldau Trio Live, he provides yet another impressive showcase from his favorite NYC stage across a massive two-disc set that features his latest trio, which includes longtime bassist Larry Grenadier and daring new drummer Jeff Ballard." JazzTimes reviewer, Thomas Conrad commented "Mehldau plays here with a daring abandon that sweeps all of the 12 performances far from where they began. Yet he is not reckless; every piece sustains one large idea. Grenadier and Ballard never crowd the musical space, yet their indispensable, defining roles occur in the foreground". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brad_Mehldau_Trio_Live

Personnel: Brad Mehldau - Piano; Larry Grenadier - Bass; Jeff Ballard - Drums

Brad Mehldau Trio Live

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Peter Bernstein - Somethin's Burnin'

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:03
Size: 137,7 MB
Art: Front

( 9:08)  1. This Could Be The Start Of Something Big
( 5:08)  2. Afterglow
(10:01)  3. Booker's Little Blues
( 7:18)  4. Mr. Kenyatta
( 7:02)  5. On A Misty Night
( 6:38)  6. Isn't This A Lovely Day
( 6:31)  7. Love For Sale
( 8:13)  8. Sideburns

Guitarist Peter Bernstein, who was 25 at the time, made his recording debut as a leader on this CD. He plays quite well, as does his friend, the up-and-coming pianist Brad Mehldau. Teamed with bassist John Webber and drummer Jimmy Cobb, Bernstein and Mehldau (who was almost recognizable at this early point) play three of the guitarist's originals, four jazz standards, and Lee Morgan's "Mr. Kenyatta," all in the modern hard bop style. Although Bernstein (who often sounds a bit like Wes Montgomery) and Mehldau would grow quite a bit from where they were in 1992, this was a fine start for their careers. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/somethins-burnin-mw0000110257

Peter Bernstein Quartet: Peter Bernstein (guitar); Brad Mehldau (piano); John Webber (bass); Jimmy Cobb (drums).               

Somethin's Burnin'

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Eli Degibri - Israeli Song

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:51
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:51)  1. Unrequited
(6:26)  2. Mr. R.C.
(5:23)  3. Judy the Dog
(5:46)  4. Jealous Eyes
(6:26)  5. Manic Depressive
(4:24)  6. Bebop
(3:51)  7. Liora
(4:18)  8. Look What You Do to Me
(4:19)  9. Third Plane
(4:21) 10. Somewhere over the Rainbow
(4:40) 11. Israeli Song

Saxophonist Eli Degibri's name may be the least familiar one on the cover of Israeli Song. His quartet mates on this superb disc are of the highest level; it would be hard to find higher profile or finer accompanists. With that lineup two legendary stars in drummer Al Foster and bassist Ron Carter and, in pianist Brad Mehldau, a newer huge talent who keeps gathering momentum it becomes a matter, for the leader, of holding his own. He does so with high energy, aplomb and originality, with both his playing and composing. Degibri penned six of the eleven tunes in the set, but the quartet kicks off with Mehldau's "Unrequited," offered originally on the pianist's Art of the Trio, Volume 3: Songs (Warner Brothers, 1998). Degibri, on soprano saxophone, gives the tune a yearning mood in front of Mehldau's adroit accompaniment and extraordinary solo, evolving from pensive sadness and peaking with anguish, before settling, perhaps, into wistful acceptance. Full of smooth flowing jauntiness, Degibri's "Mr. R.C." features the saxophonist on tenor. Another Degibri-penned gem, "Judy the Dog," rushes full speed ahead, with the leader's tenor sending out flurries of notes in a well-told story, beginning with a smolder and gathering into high flames. The saxophonist covers Dizzy Gillespie's classic "Bebop" in a duet with Foster. The pair seems to push each other into new territories two eloquent musicians arguing a point, batting ideas and back and forth, and coming to a tentative agreement in the end. "Manic Depressive," written by Degibri and Barak Mori, wends its way through the bluesy wee hours, on a tune that sounds like something Ben Webster would have dug into a delivery by the leader and his cohorts full of feeling and deep down soul. Foster and Carter each contribute a tune to the set: the drummer's funky and upbeat "Look What You Do To Me," and bassist's quirky and tight-grooved "Third Plane," which gives the leader another chance to stretch out on tenor. Degibri explores the ever-familiar "Somewhere Over the Rainbow," played straight in simple, beautiful glory, with just a hard-blowing tenor horn and Carter's big, solid bass lines. Degibri then wraps things up with the title tune, an inward piece featuring the leader's tenor and Meldau's lovely, near-classical piano explorations. Degibri, with four previous CDs as a leader to his name, has crafted his breakout set with Israeli Song. ~ Dan McClenaghan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/israeli-song-eli-degibri-anzic-records-review-by-dan-mcclenaghan.php

Personnel: Eli Degibri: tenor and soprano saxophones; Brad Mehldau: piano; Ron Carter: bass; Al Foster: drums.

Israeli Song

Saturday, September 14, 2019

Brad Mehldau - Finding Gabriel

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:38
Size: 130,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:18)  1. The Garden
(4:01)  2. Born to Trouble
(4:38)  3. Striving After Wind
(5:21)  4. O Ephraim
(6:20)  5. St. Mark Is Howling in the City of Night
(6:47)  6. The Prophet Is a Fool
(4:32)  7. Make It All Go Away
(5:13)  8. Deep Water
(4:17)  9. Proverb of Ashes
(7:06) 10. Finding Gabriel

Brad Mehldau fans should be used to his shapeshifting ways by now. Rightfully acclaimed for his jazz trio recordings, it is the balance of his catalog that delivers a rounded portrait of the musician, from Largo and The Highway Rider to Mehliana: Taming the Dragon, and more. But Finding Gabriel marks his most idiosyncratically expansive release yet. Its thematically linked compositions were inspired by a close reading of Old Testament sources  Daniel, Hosea, Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and Job while considering our current sociopolitical era. He also experimented with the Oberheim OB-6 analog synth while composing, an instrument whose possibilities were new to him. It's used alongside acoustic and electric pianos, organ, xylophone, mores synths, and voice. His celebrated cast of guests includes trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire, violinist Sara Caswell, saxophonist Joel Frahm, drummer Mark Guiliana, vocalists Becca Stevens, Kurt Elling, and Gabriel Kahane, and small string and horns sections. In addition to ensemble pieces, three tunes are performed by Mehldau as a one-man band. A repetitive melody on grand piano and analog synth introduces overture "The Garden," with Giuliana's kick drum offering an urgent pulse underneath. Next, Mehldau's, Stevens', and Kahane's voices sing wordlessly, like instruments, before Giuliana executes furious breakbeats and cymbal crashes. Akinmusire's smeared post-bop trumpet bleats are (like Gabriel's horn at the end of time) countered by contrapuntal reeds and winds. "Striving After Wind" is a fusion tune akin to something by Flying Lotus, with sweeping synths, electric pianos, and synthetic drums ballasted by entwined wordless vocals. 

On the solo "O Ephraim," synths, pianos, and Mehldau's (lovely) wordless singing juxtapose prog rock and jazz. Chiming keyboards introduce "St. Mark Is Howling in the City of Night" with Caswell's violin, funky breaks, and other strings ushering in a rockist frame that morphs into a minimalist piano theme accented by beats and classical strings. "The Prophet Is a Fool" is introduced by the crowd chanting "Build that wall!" in a jarring freeze frame of this historical moment; it's followed by a dialogue that underscores just who the subject is. Frahm delivers a fire-breathing tenor solo, followed by Akinmusire's as junglist rhythms underscore the tune's urgency. "Make It All Go Away" is a pillowy, near-pop melody with Stevens and Elling hovering alongside keys and drums. "Deep Water" is darker, a piece of neo-classical prog with violin and string trio and Mehldau's elliptical piano. Elling takes a killer sonically treated scat vocal on "Proverb of Ashes," with its backing track wedding EDM futurism to post-punk. Mehldau closes the set solo with the title track, a spoken prayer surrounded by angelic voices, shimmering pianism, mellotrons, synths, and percussion instruments concluding with a quote from the prophet Daniel. It will take several listens to appreciate all that takes place on Finding Gabriel, but that's as it should be. Mehldau is scratching an itch; whatever bothers him is provoking action that leads to a strange, ethereal space where the questions and answers of both history and mystery are not only provocative, but interchangeable. 
~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/finding-gabriel-mw0003269321

Personnel:  Brad Mehldau – synthesizers (1–10), piano (1, 2, 5–10), Fender Rhodes (3, 4), Hammond B-3 organ (10), Musser Ampli-Celeste (4), Morfbeats gamelan strips (4), xylophone (6), Mellotron (10), drums (2, 4, 10), percussion (10), vocals (1, 2, 4, 5, 9, 10); Ambrose Akinmusire – trumpet (1, 6); Chris Cheek – baritone sax and tenor sax (1); Charles Pillow – baritone sax (6), alto sax and bass clarinet (1), soprano sax (1, 6); Joel Frahm – tenor sax (1, 6); Michael Thomas – alto sax and flute (1, 6); Sara Caswell – violin (5, 8); Lois Martin – viola (5, 8); Noah Hoffeld – cello (5, 8); Mark Guiliana – drums (1, 3, 5–9); Aaron Nevezie – effects (9); Kurt Elling – vocals (7, 9); Gabriel Kahane – vocals (1, 3, 5, 8); Becca Stevens – vocals (1, 3, 5, 7, 8); "Snorts" Malibu – vocals (9)

Finding Gabriel

Monday, August 26, 2019

Mark Turner - In This World

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:26
Size: 139,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:33)  1. Mesa
(7:18)  2. Lennie Groove
(8:02)  3. You Know I Care
(6:48)  4. The Long Road
(6:45)  5. Barcelona
(7:56)  6. In This World
(5:02)  7. Days of Wine and Roses
(4:45)  8. Bo Brussels
(6:13)  9. She Said, She Said

A horde of promising young sax players has emerged in the 1990s, but only a few players have begun to find their voices. Mark Turner is one young saxman whose Muse has kept pace with his talent. The 33-year-old tenor saxophonist leads a band of clever young musicians on this thoughtful release, his second for Warner Brothers. Turner has developed a unique style inspired by John Coltrane's modal flights and Warne Marsh's unpredictable chordal experiments. This time Turner delivers six originals and three covers, and each track is energized by the incredibly powerful presence of Brad Mehldau on piano. In This World offers complicated music, a point that's reinforced by Mehdlau's pedantic liner notes. Take the pianist's description of the opening track, entitled "Mesa:" "Opting for mediant relationships instead of dominant-tonic, and casting a mixolydian blur on the dominant seventh chord with the added fourth, he (Turner) conjures a world of half-lights and shadows, filled with achy, suffused longing." Translation: "Mesa" is an ethereal piece that evokes a desert. Complex as these songs are, there is also something inherently tranquil about them. Unlike the majority of young reed players, Turner is not so intent on dazzling us with technique. He's smart enough to be subtle, and his vision takes in the total ensemble. Most of his solos sound like conversations rather than monologues, and most are played at the high end of the tenor sax register. Like Coltrane, Turner started out on alto before he switched to tenor. The young saxman has a very warm tone and an almost spiritual feel for his instrument, qualities that have earned him great respect among his peers. It's telling that Joshua Redman played on his debut ( Mark Turner ) released earlier this year, and that the great James Moody teamed with him on the excellent Warner Jams, Volume Two in 1997. 

Now he's landed Mehldau, the hottest young pianist in jazz. Perhaps owing to the time the two spent together in the TanaReid band, the rapport between Mehldau and Turner seems almost telepathic. They snake their way through this Trane-like terrain with inspired synergy. Dexterous support is provided by Larry Grenadier on bass and New Orleans native Brian Blade on drums. The latter is an intense musician who contributes ambience as well as rhythms. Drummer Jorge Rossy also plays on two cuts, while inventive guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel appears on three. Besides "Mesa," highlights among the nine tracks include "You Know I Care," a beautiful ballad written by Duke Pearson; "Days of Wine and Roses," which is given a fast-paced treatment; "The Long Road," a multi-hued piece and one of three cuts that feature Mehldau on electric piano; and "Bo Brussels," a wild free-form improvisation. "Lennie Groove" is derived from Lennie Tristano's "Lennie's Pennies," and it showcases some incredibly complex interplay between Turner and Mehldau and intriguing solos by each. My favorite track is "Barcelona," a Turner original that swings in noble fashion. The title track includes a gorgeous serpentine duet between Turner and Rosenwinkel. A cover of the Beatles' "He Said, She Said" even has a Ringo-like back beat. Mark Turner stands with James Carter, Joshua Redman and Chris Potter as one of the most talented  and focused  post-bop saxophonists to emerge in the 1990s. While casual jazz fans might find In This World a difficult listen, anybody who's into Coltrane, Tristano, or Marsh should really dig it. ~ Ed Kopp https://www.allaboutjazz.com/in-this-world-mark-turner-warner-bros-review-by-ed-kopp.php

Personnel:  Mark Turner – tenor saxophone; Brad Mehldau – piano, electric piano; Kurt Rosenwinkel – guitar; Larry Grenadier – bass; Brian Blade – drums; Jorge Rossy – drums

In This World

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Brad Mehldau - Highway Rider Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Highway Rider Disc 1

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:17
Size: 95,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. John Boy
(8:40)  2. Don't Be Sad
(1:07)  3. At the Tollbooth
(7:45)  4. Highway Rider
(8:21)  5. The Falcon Will Fly Again
(4:05)  6. Now You Must Climb Alone
(8:00)  7. Walking the Peak


Album: Highway Rider Disc 2

Time: 62:52
Size: 144,5 MB

(12:28)  1. We'll Cross the River Together
( 5:20)  2. Capriccio
( 6:24)  3. Sky Turning Grey (For Elliott Smith)
( 7:36)  4. Into the City
( 8:28)  5. Old West
( 6:19)  6. Come with Me
( 6:20)  7. Always Departing
( 9:52)  8. Always Returning

For a pianist who not only demonstrated remarkable promise, but actually began delivering on it at a very early stage in his career with what would ultimately become his five-part Art of the Trio (Warner Bros.) series, Brad Mehldau's side projects have with the exception of the solo Live in Tokyo (Nonesuch, 2004) met with mixed reactions. Perhaps it's because of his emergence as one of modern jazz's most distinctive and popular interpreters of both contemporary song and standard material in a trio setting, that placed unfair expectations on seemingly tangential projects like the concept-based Places (Warner Bros, 2000). The unexpected diversion of Largo (Warner Bros., 2002), in particular, was met with some curiosity as, for the first time, Mehldau expanded into larger musical environs electrified territories, even with acclaimed producer/multi-instrumentalist Jon Brion (Kanye West, Robyn Hitchcock, Aimee Mann). Highway Rider reunites Mehldau with Brion for an album that's even more ambitious than Largo and, despite their first collaboration's many strong points, a far more successful one. Mehldau's recent work writing for orchestra The Brady Bunch Variations for Orchestre Natonal D'Îsle-de-France, and the song-cycle Love Sublime (Nonesuch, 2006), with soprano René Fleming, amongst others has clearly given Mehldau the confidence to find, with Highway Rider, a nexus point where form-based improvisation and through-composition meet. Based around the preexisting chemistry of his regular trio with bassist FLY and drummer Jeff Ballard, but expanding to a quintet with longtime friend Joshua Redman on saxophones and, back from Largo, drummer Matt Chamberlain, Highway Rider is a double-disc suite that's as much a soundtrack to an imaginary film as anything Mehldau's ever done. It's also the most fully realized original music the pianist has written to date, as unequivocally American as Aaron Copland, Bill Frisell and Pat Metheny, despite citing the influence of European Romantics like Strauss, Brahms and Tchaikovsky, in addition to more eclectic sources. Mehldau's voice as a composer has been gradually emerging with original music contributed to trio recordings like Live (Nonesuch, 2008) and House on Hill (Nonesuch, 2006), but with Highway Rider, Mehldau the composer has clearly arrived. What distances Highway Rider from stereotypical (and often saccharine) "jazz with strings" projects with Dan Coleman leading a chamber orchestra on much of the disc is the sense of immediacy that Brion has achieved by recording the orchestra and jazz quintet together one of Mehldau's original goals for the project. This isn't a jazz quintet blowing and an orchestra then layered over top; this is fully integrated music, where the soloing is as spontaneous as it needs to be, even when the orchestra creates a firm and fixed foundation. Mehldau's solo on the first half of "We'll Cross the River Together" builds to an idiosyncratic, block chord-driven climax, but it's his orchestration which turns this relatively simple, repeating set of eight chords into a masterful tour de force that's not only one of Highway Rider's most dramatic moments, but one that then resolves into one of its most tender interludes. A second half, with gradually building tension from the strings and the turbulent double-drumming of Ballard and Chamberlain, leads to a second climax of equal strength, this time courtesy of Redman.

As lush as Mehldau's orchestration is throughout Highway Rider, he knows how to create a narrative arc through dynamics and breaking the ensemble down. "Capriccio" starts with nothing more than piano though, as ever, Mehldau's virtuosity leads to the belief that it's being played by two hands until an emergent melody makes it clear he's playing it with only one. Hand percussion quite literally, with clapping driving much of the tune and Redman's soprano develop the theme until Mehldau takes over for a brief but quirky solo, sounding not unlike Oregon in instrumentation, but absolutely unlike it in Mehldau's voicings, which turn another deceptively simple, descending four-chord structure into something else entirely. Similarly, "The Falcon Will Fly Again," a longer piece but, again, with drastically reduced instrumentation, leads from lengthy piano and saxophone solos to a theme sung by members of the group and The Fleurettes, and an ending that dissolves into some relaxed banter amongst the group that makes it clear that as serious as much of this music sounds, it's being made by a group of people who are having fun. Sonically, Highway Rider bears some resemblance to Largo, in particular Mehldau's use of pump organ, synth and orchestral bells on certain tracks, but it feels somehow more natural and better integrated this time around. Perhaps the more focused compositional approach of the album makes its expanded use of texture work more naturally. Despite breaks between songs, the music flows and feels like a continuous suite, and is certainly best experienced as such. The folkloric piano solo, "At the Tollbooth," acts as a brief interlude between the slower-tempo of "Don't Be Sad," with hints of gospel driving its form, and the title track, a more propulsive trio tune with subtle aural enhancements creating a soft cushion beneath Mehldau's extended solo. "Into the City" also narrows the focus down to Mehldau's trio, with Grenadier doubling, alternately, the pianist's left and right hands on a knotty, riff-based tune that may reduce the album's broader textural expanse, but demonstrates just how vibrant and progressive this working trio is, with Ballard almost literally on fire. As Mehldau combines in-the-moment playing with carefully structured form, and repeated chordal and melodic motifs that continue to resurface throughout Highway Rider's 100 minutes, the album builds to a climax on "Always Returning," before ending on a softer, tone-poem note that incorporates Mehldau's inherent classicism and somehow, on repeated listens, brings Highway Rider full circle. The music may bear no real resemblance to it, but in scope Highway Rider is Mehldau's Secret Story (Nonesuch, 1992), a fan favorite for Pat Metheny and a milestone in terms of ambition and scope until the guitarist reached a new level with The Way Up (Nonesuch, 2005) and, most recently, Orchestrion (Nonesuch, 2010). It's no coincidence, then, that Mehldau and his trio collaborated with Metheny on Metheny Mehldau (Nonesuch, 2006) and Quartet (Nonesuch, 2007). That the pianist's overall career choice focusing largely as he has on solo and trio works has been almost diametrically opposed to Metheny's greater compositional ambitions and orchestrations seems somehow less so now, with the release of Highway Rider. In its almost perfect mix of form and freedom, Highway Rider manages to be both Mehldau's most personal and most broad-scoped album to date, and surely one that will remain a classic amongst his discography, no matter what's to come. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/brad-mehldau-highway-rider-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Brad Mehldau (piano); Joshua Redman (tenor saxophone); Jeff Ballard , Matt Chamberlain (drums).


Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Brad Mehldau, Kevin Hays - Modern Music

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:48
Size: 109,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:21)  1. Crazy Quilt
(6:25)  2. Unrequited
(5:12)  3. Generatrix
(2:57)  4. Celtic Folk Melody
(5:18)  5. Excerpt From Music For 18 Musicians
(6:27)  6. Lonely Woman
(5:00)  7. Modern Music
(6:19)  8. Elegia
(3:46)  9. Excerpt From String Quartet No. 5

Modern Music, the collaborative recording between longtime colleagues and jazz pianists Brad Mehldau and Kevin Hays, and composer and arranger Patrick Zimmerli (a mutual friend of both) is startling for its deep reliance on modern classical technique and arrangements. Certainly, Mehldau is known for dabbling in all sorts of music, from pop to classical on his recordings and in live performance. Hays, too, has branched out in recent years, from his signature, intelligent, hard swinging post-bop approach to include compositions with modern classical touches, such as those found on Piano Works, Vol. III. Zimmerli, who wrote the charts for this session, played saxophone in his younger years. He composed and chose the lion's share of the material. Three pieces are by Zimmerli, while Mehldau and Hays contribute one each; there are also readings of Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman," an excerpt from Steve Reich's "Music for 18 Musicians," and one from Philip Glass' "String Quartet No. 5." Those seeking a jazz recording should look elsewhere; even Coleman's standard is overly formal, with Mehldau (right channel) playing the melody in various voicings as Hays creates pulsing rhythmic and harmonic patterns in the middle and high registers. The latter begins to swing a bit toward the middle of the tune as Mehldau takes the rhythm line, but even here, the counterpoint dialogue Hays creates moves it far from the beautiful, droning center of Coleman's work. The section from Reich's work, which attempts, in its way, to imitate the mallet instruments, isn't nearly as forceful or convincing. Those complaints aside, Zimmerli's compositions, sauch as "Crazy Quilt," "Modern Music," and "Generatrix," with their busy palettes, intricate cross-keyboard dialogues, and contrapuntal studies are all deeply satisfying. His sense of melody is found in rhythmic approaches; his stuttering half-steps and tonal shifts are especially notable for their ability to play off both pianist's technical and melodic gifts, for all their busy-ness. Hays' "Elegia," too, for its seeming moodiness is more pastoral than one would gather by its title. In sum, Modern Music totals what its title promises, it's not a jazz album, but one in which new considerations of harmonic composition and intra-instrument dialogue are readily apparent and delivered upon with discipline as well as verve. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/modern-music-mw0002184441

Personnel:  Brad Mehldau – piano;  Kevin Hays – piano.

Modern Music

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Chris Thile, Brad Mehldau - Chris Thile & Brad Mehldau

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:54
Size: 144.0 MB
Styles: Progressove Bluegrass
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[6:23] 1. The Old Shade Tree
[5:53] 2. Tallahassee Junction
[6:02] 3. Scarlet Town
[6:59] 4. I Cover The Waterfront
[3:08] 5. Independence Day
[4:50] 6. Noise Machine
[5:26] 7. The Watcher
[8:59] 8. Daughter Of Eve
[4:49] 9. Marcie
[6:00] 10. Don't Think Twice It's Alright
[4:22] 11. Tabhair Dom Do Lámh

Other than the album's genre-crossing premise, there's nothing particularly gimmicky or flashy about bluegrass singer/songwriter Chris Thile and jazz pianist Brad Mehldau's 2017 Nonesuch collaboration, Chris Thile & Brad Mehldau. Simply put, Thile and Mehldau deliver a set of deeply engaging, organically realized songs that perfectly balance their respective jazz and bluegrass skills. Given that they seemingly come from polar ends of the musical spectrum, the collaboration may feel like an odd choice at first. However, after hearing this debut, one might be hard-pressed to imagine a more compatible duo to emerge from their generation than these two distinctive mavericks. The similarities have always been there; both musicians started out as purist arbiters of their prospective roots-based genres, but later transitioned into leading proponents of their own progressive, harmonically nuanced musical ideologies. Thile broke the mold when he started incorporating pop, folk, and traditional bluegrass with Nickel Creek, a permutable instinct later underlined with his nods to rock and fusion with the Punch Brothers. Similarly, while Mehldau is often justifiably compared to jazz icons like Keith Jarrett and Bill Evans, his reconceptualization of alt-rock hits by Radiohead and Nirvana, combined with his deft improvisational skill, long marked him as a gentle jazz radical. This inkling that both artists shared a philosophical and aesthetic sensibility is apparently exactly what motivated executive producer and label president Robert Hurwitz to introduce the two to each other after a Punch Brothers show several years prior to this album. Subsequently, Thile and Mehldau began playing together casually, purportedly developing a strong rapport. Based on the songs here, that rapport sounds effortless, as they warmly intertwine both their instruments and voices on covers like a rambling take on Bob Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" and an evocative reworking of Joni Mitchell's "Marcie." One minute, Mehldau is framing Thile's yearning vocals in soft, velvety chords and the next, Thile is comping with furious intensity on his mandolin as Mehldau launches into a cascading solo. The duo's original songs are also quite fascinating, particularly the Eric Clapton-esque "The Old Shade Tree" and the poetic, classically inflected "Noise Machine," inspired by the recent birth of Thile's first child. These are deeply hued, literate songs, as personal as anything either artist has done, yet delivered with an almost startlingly robust virtuosity. Even when they defy expectations, as when Thile sets down his mandolin for a piano-accompanied reading of the standard "I Cover the Waterfront," or when they eschew lyrics for an instrumental version of Elliott Smith's "Independence Day," there's a palpable sense of real listening, of generously shared creativity. Ultimately, it's that synergistic spark that makes Thile and Mehldau's collaboration sound less like a one-off experiment and more like the start of a lasting partnership. ~Matt Collar

Chris Thile & Brad Mehldau mc
Chris Thile & Brad Mehldau zippy

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Brad Mehldau Trio - Seymour Reads The Constitution!

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:20
Size: 152,1 MB
Art: Front

( 8:33)  1. Spiral
( 8:06)  2. Seymour Reads The Constitution
( 5:41)  3. Almost Like Being In Love
( 8:46)  4. De-Dah
( 8:15)  5. Friends
(10:07)  6. Ten Tune
( 5:55)  7. Great Day
( 8:55)  8. Beatrice

A straightforward acoustic jazz trio album, 2018's Seymour Reads the Constitution! nonetheless holds surprises for longtime Brad Mehldau fans. Moving away from his genre-bending collaboration with Chris Thile and his equally cross-pollinated exploration of J.S. Bach's classical pieces, After Bach, Mehldau settles into this warmly rendered set of originals and covers that fits nicely into his overall discography. Joining the pianist are his longtime associates bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jeff Ballard. Together, they've recorded often since the early 2000s, with Grenadier having worked regularly with Mehldau since the mid-'90s. Consequently, they play with an almost preternatural sensitivity, accenting each other's lines and swinging with an easy, mutative pulse. It's a sound that brings to mind Keith Jarrett, whose iconic trio is a clear touchstone for Mehldau here. The influence is especially felt on the aptly named Mehldau original "Spiral," in which the pianist lays down a descending circular theme in a roiling time signature that has the dreamy feel of riding on a train with your eyes closed. 

They conjure an equally Jarrett-esque vibe on their sophisticated reading of Sam Rivers' classic "Beatrice," with Mehldau moving in and out of tonality during his kinetic, serpentine solo. As intense as that track can be, it never gets out of hand. In fact, much of the album has a balmy, laid-back quality as if it were recorded during a sunny afternoon at home. That sunny atmosphere is also at the core of the title track, in which Mehldau and Grenadier often share the melody, bumping up against each other in a bluesy dance. Elsewhere, they launch into a sprightly rendition of the Lerner & Loewe standard "Almost Like Being in Love" and offer up a bright, waltz-like take on the Beach Boys' "Friends," the latter of which is so friendly you can almost sense Mehldau and his bandmates smiling at each other. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/album/seymour-reads-the-constitution%21-mw0003166661

Personnel:  Brad Mehldau, piano;  Larry Grenadier, bass;  Jeff Ballard, drums.

Seymour Reads The Constitution!

Saturday, March 17, 2018

Brad Mehldau - After Bach

Styles: Piano, Classical
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:22
Size: 164,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:25)  1. Before Bach Benediction
( 1:21)  2. The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 848 Prelude No. 3 in C# Major
( 8:21)  3. After Bach Rondo
( 2:36)  4. The Well-Tempered Clavier Book II, BWV 870 Prelude No. 1 in C Major
( 3:46)  5. After Bach Pastorale
( 2:16)  6. The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 855 Prelude No. 10 in E Minor
( 5:05)  7. After Bach Flux
( 6:10)  8. The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 857 Prelude and Fugue No. 12 in F Minor
( 7:49)  9. After Bach Dream
( 3:04) 10. The Well-Tempered Clavier Book II, BWV 885 Fugue No. 16 in G Minor
(12:19) 11. After Bach Ostinato
(11:06) 12. Prayer for Healing

It seems that classical composer J.S. Bach has provided a surge of inspiration for some recent releases by artists on the Nonesuch label, starting with the Bach Trios led by an unusual yet explosive combination of musicians such as cellist Yo-Yo Ma, mandolinist Chris Thile, and bassist Edgar Meyer. Now we have another Bach-inspired release, this one by the highly acclaimed pianist Brad Mehldau, with works consisting of selection of the composer's compositions, along with several originals inspired by Bach's music. Mehldau is one of the most distinctive and influential jazz pianists today. He is renowned for stretching the forms and boundaries of jazz music through his ambitious and exploratory projects and bands. Over the course of almost three decades, he has charted his own course through this challenging area of arts. One of the most recognizable features of Mehldau's oeuvre is the unusual sources of inspiration and interpretation combined with his compositional prowess. He is one of those vanguard musicians who freely use every source available, be it classic jazz, European classical music or indie and alternative rock as inspiration for his art. The dust of history often makes people forget that most of the greatest composers in classical music were also superb improvisers. These days when the aspect of improvisation is mentioned in relation to classical music it is easy to assume that a mistake has been made. Jazz or folk music are probably the first things that come to mind when people mention improvising. But great composers such as Mozart, Beethoven, List or Bach were renowned for their improvisations skills that they displayed in performances of classical music in the pre 20th centuries. Composing "on the spot" was considered a standard in classical music that was highly entertaining and well-respected as a precious skill. Bach amazed audiences with his improvisational keyboard skills. Classical music and jazz have always had a long and interesting relationship, so it is no wonder why there are so many "jazzed up" versions of works by classical composers, Bach included.

But Mehldau's work After Bach is not a "jazzed-up" approach to Bach's music. It's a straightforward interpretation of a selection of his compositions and improvisations on aspects of his works. Co-commissioned in 2015 by Carnegie Hall, Wigmore Hall and organizations in Canada, Switzerland, and Ireland, After Bach consists of performances of four preludes and one fugue from J.S. Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier, each followed by an "After Bach" interpretation by Mehldau. By his own admission, during his formative years classical music ran parallel to jazz and pop music. Indeed, it is difficult to find any top level jazz musician today who hasn't been enchanted by Bach's oeuvre. Even though many jazz pianists can play classical music well, the real question has always been whether their performances can stand shoulder to shoulder with those of world-class classical pianists. In the case of these performances with Brad Mehldau, the answer is undoubtedly yes. Regardless whether it's jazz or classical or his own composition, it seems that Mehldau pursues a mission to explore the place where beauty and sorrow meet. He immerses himself deep into these works and yet manages to convey his incredible personal pianistic magnetism. On After Bach , the enormous breadth of Mehldau's talent stands revealed. His passagework has a distinct feeling, and as a result he gives the music an improvisatory atmosphere. Regarding the interpretation of Bach's compositions, Mehldau's perceptive keyboard workmanship attests to a natural affinity for this composer's idiom, as numerous details bear out. He is a sensitive performer with a profound sense for nuances and shading, but his virtuosity brings the music across with considerable inner excitement. The program opens with the prologue "Before Bach: Benediction." His touch is sublime throughout this work and he weights carefully every phrase which in turn imbues the music with various subtle details that aren't often heard at piano recitals.

The "After Bach" works are characterized by lyrical, expressive playing which takes Bach's ideas and leads them in entirely new directions. He seizes on an aspect of the original Bach compositions and then he builds something astonishing that quickly leaves Bach's approach behind. In the piece titled "Rondo," he takes the 6 note pattern of Bach's prelude and he infuses a totally different tone to it by removing one note. The set closes with the majestic and evocative "Prayer for Healing" which has a sense of a poetic design that oddly evokes Claude Debussy's impressionistic tones. Even though it stands out compared to what preceded it, the meditative character makes it a perfect ending. There are very informative liner notes by Timo Andres who provides a detailed analysis and background on Mehldau's playing and the chances he is taking, serving as an illumination of the overall complexity and brilliance of the whole endeavor. Brad Mehldau is a giant of contemporary jazz piano whose musical language has always been difficult to define due to his healthy lack of respect for musical boundaries. This music, which is well suited to his refined artistry, reveals another aspect to his sonic persona that hasn't surfaced fully until now. With it, Mehldau celebrates Bach on his own terms on this consistently intriguing album. ~ Nenad Georgievski https://www.allaboutjazz.com/after-bach-brad-mehldau-nonesuch-records-review-by-nenad-georgievski.php

Personnel: Brad Mehldau: piano.

After Bach

Friday, October 27, 2017

Joshua Redman Quartet - MoodSwing

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:58
Size: 160,7 MB
Art: Front

( 8:43)  1. Sweet Sorrow
( 7:43)  2. Chill
(11:12)  3. Rejoice
( 4:33)  4. Faith
( 5:05)  5. Alone In The Morning
( 5:50)  6. Mischief
( 5:43)  7. Dialogue
( 5:12)  8. The Oneness Of Two (In Three)
( 4:53)  9. Past In The Present
( 6:54) 10. Obsession
( 4:05) 11. Headin' Home

In the extensive liner notes of this CD, tenor saxophonist Joshua Redman writes that the main problem with jazz at the time was not the music but the public perception of it as forbidding and overly intellectual; that in reality jazz is quite fun and emotional. Those descriptions can certainly be applied to Redman's music, which, while pulling at the boundaries of modern hard bop, is also fairly easy to grab on to. Joined by his regular bandmembers of the period (pianist Brad Mehldau, bassist Christian McBride and drummer Brian Blade), Redman performs a full set of originals which, although not derivative, do fit into the straight-ahead tradition. At this point in time, Redman was growing from album to album, having already started at a high level. A fine outing. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/moodswing-mw0000117047

Joshua Redman Quartet: Joshua Redman (tenor & soprano saxophone); Brad Mehldau (piano); Christian McBride (acoustic bass); Brian Blade (drums).   

MoodSwing