1 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of GabrielSunday, August 01, 2004
One of a handful of truly great living jazz pianists, Kenny Barron has never sounded better to me on record. After listening to him in this setting, I'm beginning to understand why so many musicians lamented the passing of Bradley's, the Manhattan night spot that featured a grand piano handpicked and donated by Paul Desmond. If there's one performance on this recording that testifies to Barron's gifts, it's his exquisite and daring reading of Rodgers and Hart's "Blue Moon." He repeats and draws out the melody to the point where it practically becomes reductive if not boring. Then when he has you indoctrinated in the skeletal structure of the tune, waiting for it to end, he re-opens it with bursts and fountains of melodic colors--elongated, spinning note-streams that rise and fall and rise again, transporting this listener, at least, on a heady film of captivating lyrical moon dust.
But the real genius of this performance (unless memory deceives me) is Barron's incorporation not merely of the Rodgers' influence but of Freddie Hubbard's recording of the tune with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers (in turn inspired by Clifford Brown's rich if straightforward interpretation of the tune on the Strings album). Instead of the single-note melodic phrase (Bb) for the words "Blue Moon," Barron goes with the Hubbard three-note phrase (CGBb), turning it into a motif. And not only do Barron's alternate chord changes match those of the Messengers' chart but he captures the identical voicings and passing tones as well. Finally, the dazzling, rocket-like melodic excursions of the trumpet solo are matched here by Kenny's fluid right-handed melodic sallies but at an entirely different dynamic level. It's as if the quiet beauty of Barron's touch serves less to replicate Hubbard's performance than to resonate with it, providing an enchanting echo of the performances that occurred 35 and 45 years prior to it.
In short, this performance of "Blue Moon" is a tribute equally to Rodgers & Hart, Clifford Brown, Freddie Hubbard, and Kenny Barron. It's enough to make you believe that once a beautiful melody has been released into the dynamic energy field we call human consciousness, it can never die.
5 out of 6 people found the following review helpful:
A Masterpiece! Don't Miss It!Thursday, April 17, 2003
Barron's fingers are like deft little waterbugs on the keyboard, and this trio swings with great subtlety and sophistication. Smooth, smooth, smooth. Wonderful choice of tunes. Impeccable musicianship, exquisite taste. This is the joy of mastery.
If you love and value jazz artistry, you MUST have this CD. It is easily one of the best jazz piano albums to appear in the last 20 years. Superlative.
4 out of 15 people found the following review helpful:
Soothing smooth Jazz only like Kenny Barron can do.Tuesday, October 15, 2002
A masterpiece of contemporary Jazz. Smooth and relaxing.