Orrin Evans, Eric Revis, Nasheet Waits & Guests, Tarbaby: The End of Fear (Posi-tone). Pianist Evans, bassist Revis and drummer Waits comprise a leaderless or cooperative trio who live up to the album's subtitle. They are not afraid to go wacky, nearly unhinged, in two free pieces, "Heads"—featuring trumpeter Nicholas Payton at his most liberated and chancy—and "Tails," with the avant garde alto saxophonist Oliver Lake sitting in. Payton and Lake rein in their wildness for the melody choruses in a quintet interpretation of Sam Rivers' "Unity" but hold back little in their solos and simultaneous improvisation.
Tarbaby is not afraid to plumb the romance and lyricism of Fats Waller's 1932 ballad "Lonesome Me," with a touching reading of the melody by tenor saxophonist J.D. Allen. In "Brews" Evans is not afraid to skew the good old B-flat blues toward the lamented, half-forgotten pianist Herbie Nichols and a couple of chromatic runs straight out of Teddy Wilson. Nor in his "Jena 6" is he afraid to demonstrate the harmonic individualism that makes him one of the most interesting jazz pianists under 40 (he's 34).
Complete on >> http://www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/2010/11/recent_listening_tarbaby.html
Live clip of TARBABY.
www.imani-records.com
www.tarbabymusic.com
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Recent Listening: Tarbaby
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 Comments:
Post a Comment