This is G o o g l e's cache of http://www.allaboutjazz.com/reviews/r0603_083.htm.
G o o g l e's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web.
The page may have changed since that time. Click here for the current page without highlighting.
To link to or bookmark this page, use the following url: http://www.google.com/search?q=cache%3A-XBXBi1PMCoJ%3Awww.allaboutjazz.com/reviews/r0603_083.htm&hl=en&ie=UTF-8


Google is not affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its content.

Martial Solal - NY1: Live at the Village Vanguard
SEARCH
..
MONTHLY NEWSLETTER
..
Bookmark Us! - Contact Us - Comments - Help Wanted - Advertise - Media Awards - Submit Your Link - Tell A Friend - For Contributors  

MONTHLY GREETING
Pack Light


GETTING STARTED
Welcome to AAJ!
New to Jazz?
Building a Jazz Library
History of Jazz
Jazz Humor





Show All Titles
About AAJ Showcase



Azalea
LM Pagano


Word of Mouth Revisited
Jaco Pastorius Big Band


Smoky Dawn
Lynette Washington


Three Guitars
Coryell, Assad & Abercrombie


The Bandwagon
Jason Moran


Live!
Lynette Washington & Dennis Bell


Resonance
Taylor Eigsti



Jon Mayer


.
NY1: Live at the Village Vanguard
Martial Solal | Blue Note
I hadn't heard of the Algiers-born, Paris-based pianist Martial Solal, and my review copy of this disc came in a bare bones state: just a cardboard sleeve, a listing of the tunes and musicians. No cover art, no liner notes.

A blind listen told me "Modernistic," a young lion full of the creative drive and fire.

Then I read more.

Martial Solal is 74 years old, having played with Sidney Bechet and recorded with Django Reinhart and Lee Konitz, among others. He has been recording for the French Dreyfus label of late. NY1: Live at the Village Vanguard was recorded a week after 9/11, and the disc opens with the Solal-penned "NY1," the name of the New York news channel in which the pianist was immersed prior to these performances. The song is edgy, stop-start, tempo-shifting... a great lead-in to the rest of the set.

Four of the tunes on the disc are originals--odd, angular, almost Cecil Taylorish compositions, anchored by Bill Stewart's shuffling drum work and Francois Moutin's solid bass lines. But the set alternates classics with the originals, creating an effective listening balance. "What Is This Thing Called Love?" rambles for fourteen facinating minutes, Solal and company exploring every permutation of the melody, every nook and cranny. "Body and Soul" and "Softly as in a Morning Sunrise" are rendered in like fashion; these extended takes-- beautifully off-kilter renditions of familiar classics alternating with the pianist's edgy originals--make the package.

For a piano trio to work, all the parts have to fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle: song selection and order, judicious and empathic support, the piano man out front prancing along that line between freedom and constraint--here leaning toward the freedom side. That's exactly what happens on NY1: Live at the Vilage Vanguard.

Visit Blue Note Records on the web.

~ Dan McClenaghan

Track Listing: NY1, What Is This Thing Called Love?, Suspect Rhythm, Body and Soul, Zig Zag, Softly As In A Morning Sunrise, Lombardy

Personnel: Martial Solal, piano; Francois Moutin, bass; Bill Stewart, drums



Search For Another CD Review...


Search by Artist Name, Record Label or Review Author

Contact Us   -   Help Wanted   -   Suggestion Box   -   Advertise   -   Submit Your Link   -   For Contributors
All material copyright © 1996-2003 All About Jazz and contributing writers. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy