Go Back   Jazzcorner's Speakeasy > LIVE MUSIC REVIEWS
Connect with Facebook

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old July-22nd-2006, 08:16 PM   #1
Lois Gilbert
Administrator
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: NYC
Posts: 5,899
Bill Charlap Remembers Thelonious Monk, a Revolutionary Who Knew How to Swing

Bill Charlap Remembers Thelonious Monk, a Revolutionary Who Knew How to Swing
By NATE CHINEN
Early in the course of “Brilliant Corners,” the 92nd Street Y’s concert of Thelonious Monk’s music on Thursday night, the pianist Bill Charlap offered a succinct appreciation of Monk’s singular place in jazz. “He was a revolutionary within a revolution,” Mr. Charlap said. The revolution, he went on to explain, was bebop, which Monk helped foment but never fully embraced.

Mr. Charlap’s point was well taken. He had just maneuvered his trio through “Green Chimneys,” one of Monk’s more obscure tunes. With its jaunty sense of swing and repetitive, nearly obsessive melody, the song was characteristic of its composer. But it didn’t sound much like bebop, even when a pair of guest soloists, Wynton Marsalis on trumpet and Jimmy Greene on tenor saxophone, took their turns with the theme.

Of course the notion of Monk as a revolutionary is hardly a fresh idea. It was already hoary in the late 1960’s, when an album cover famously depicted him as a French resistance fighter with a cellar stockpile of munitions. What Thursday’s concert illustrated, a bit less sensationally, was the durability of Monk’s inventions. Mr. Charlap, in his second season as artistic director of the Y’s generally conservative jazz series, took pains to show how fully Monk had fed the mainstream.

Mr. Charlap was successful in this mission, perhaps exceedingly so. The concert was well played throughout, but roughly half of it felt undistinguished and too polite; in other words, not very Monklike. Occasionally this was a result of misdirection, as on the breezy tempo Mr. Charlap chose for “Well You Needn’t,” overstimulating the song. Elsewhere it was a result of mismatched musical temperaments, as on a handful of songs performed by the guest pianist Cedar Walton in the concert’s second half.

Mr. Walton, a literate and sophisticated musician, has a mature perspective on Monk’s music, and he admirably resisted the lure of imitation. But his mini-set, with the concert’s excellent house rhythm section of Peter Washington on bass and Lewis Nash on drums, never gathered steam. “Evidence” was duly syncopated but strangely inert, and “Ruby My Dear” came across as merely pretty. An arrangement of “Off Minor” with a light funk vamp fell flat.

Rather unexpectedly, Mr. Charlap offered the more compelling synthesis of Monk-inspired pianism, especially on a meticulous solo rendition of “Monk’s Mood.” He ended another ballad, “Crepuscule With Nellie,” with three dissonant chimes, a flagrantly Monkish touch. His immersion in character was an obvious act of artifice, but it also naturally suited the music.

A similar sense of rightness touched the concert’s best moments, like a bright “Four in One.” Mr. Marsalis shared the tune’s tricky, tumbling line with another trumpeter, Jeremy Pelt, in a close harmony. Then Mr. Pelt improvised, rather carefully, and Mr. Marsalis followed suit, more loose and relaxed. Finally there was an extended back-and-forth, as the trumpeters traded eight- and four-bar phrases. What could have been a study in competitive bluster turned out to be a genuine conversation, inquisitive as well as responsive, and true to the song.

Separately, each trumpeter produced another highlight. Mr. Pelt brought a comfortable bravado to “Bye-Ya,” starting with some ping-ponging intervals and moving on to a flowing eighth-note cadence. Mr. Marsalis played a hushed and soulful “ ’Round Midnight,” accompanied only by Mr. Charlap; refraining from excess embellishment, or even much vibrato, he exposed the vulnerability inherent in the song.

That somber, self-effacing performance led into the concert’s finale, a romp through “Rhythm-a-Ning” that put all the evening’s musicians into rotation in what resembled a pedestrian jam session. In a way, this was appropriate: a reminder that any successful revolution becomes part of the orthodoxy, in due time.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/22/ar...gewanted=print
Lois Gilbert is offline   Reply With Quote
Old July-30th-2006, 04:48 PM   #2
Lois Gilbert
Administrator
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: NYC
Posts: 5,899
Twelve Hands, Two Pianos, One Night

Jazz in July -- Twelve Hands, Two Pianos, One Night

(92nd Street Y; 932 seats; $50)

A presentation of the 92nd Street Y Tisch Center for the Arts. Produced by Joel Moss. Reviewed July 20, 2006.

Host and artistic director, Bill Charlap.

By ROBERT L. DANIELS


During the sixth Jazz in July concert series at the 92nd Street Y, an eclectic gathering of prominent pianists graced the concert stage in what turned out to be a modestly reverent testimony to the ivories. Offerings ranged from jazz standards by Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk to silver-screen highlights from the Frank Sinatra songbook. Cedar Walton christened the evening with Vincent Youmans' "Without a Song," delivering a richly layered reading fueled by a bold rhythmic flow.

Often regarded as the most beautiful song ever written, Jerome Kern's "All the Things You Are" was given a poetically stringent interpretation by Walton and concert host Bill Charlap. It was boosted by a bright bounce that seemed to frame the old tune with a refreshing new coat of black-and-white paint.

Charlap dug up "If You Were the Only Girl in the World," written in 1925. The pretty antique was penned by Nat Ayer and Clifford Grey and introduced in "The Vagabond Lover," a 1929 Rudy Vallee film. Charlap put it in a romantic setting that was most appealing.

Geoffrey Keezer paired with Renee Rosnes for an expansive take on "You and the Night and the Music" by Arthur Schwartz. The duo offered a racing tempo laced by quickly shifting patterns.

Introduced by a.d. Charlap as "the spirit of bebop," Barry Harris took the stage to become the concert's crowning jewel. Structured on airy chords that led to a driving mix of colorful imagination, "Tea for Two" was clearly the turning point in the politely mannered concert.

From Ellington's "Prelude to a Kiss" and his own composition "To Duke With Love," to Sinatra classic "I Should Care" (a duet with Richard Wyands), the pianist and educator brought distinctive glory and a continuous flow of ideas to the art of jazz piano.

Perhaps one of the most underrated pianists of his generation, Wyands capped the evening with cunning artistry on some tunes by Jerome Kern and Cole Porter. And Ol' Blues Eyes left another mark as Charlap and Rosnes gave an amusing fountain-of-youth demonstration with four hands on one piano performing "You Make Me Feel So Young."

While the evening lacked fire, the six pianists took rotating spins on Walton's "Cedar Blues" that clearly demonstrated the guys were having a good time.

Bassist Peter Washington and drummer Kenny Washington punctuated the concert with well-balanced muscle and grace.

http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117...ryid=1266&cs=1
Lois Gilbert is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Lower Navigation
Go Back   Jazzcorner's Speakeasy > LIVE MUSIC REVIEWS

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:06 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All material copyright 2009 jazzcorner.com