Home » Jazz Articles » Interview » Cava Menzies and Nick Phillips: Their Moment
Cava Menzies and Nick Phillips: Their Moment


Cava Menzies
piano
Nick Phillips
trumpetb.1965
"From that gig, Nick and I totally hit it off and really enjoyed playing together," says the pianist. "We both brought out something in the other's playing that only happens when the two of us play together. It's a very conversational way of playing." Phillips is quick to agree. "We noticed that we really had a lot in common in terms of our approach to music and jazz, with more of a focus on lyricism and willingness to leave space to let the music breathe."
The two have documented their telepathic teamwork on Moment to Moment (Nick Phillips Music, 2014), joined by bassist

Jeff Chambers
bass, acoustic1955 - 2021

Jaz Sawyer
drumsBoth Menzies and Phillips have broadly diverse musical backgrounds. Menzies' biography reflects a rich musical inheritance; her father, the trumpeter

Eddie Henderson
trumpetb.1940

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940
Phillips has been steeped in the world of jazz for nearly three decades. He studied trumpet at the University of the Pacific in the 1980s with

Mike Vax
trumpet
Stan Kenton
piano1911 - 1979

Nnenna Freelon
vocalsb.1954

Poncho Sanchez
bongosb.1951

Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945

Karrin Allyson
vocals
Phillips found himself in a very familiar setting at Fantasy Studios for the recording session with Menzies. "I have worked on other projects there over the years, so I was very familiar with the studio and just how good it was. The piano that Cava played on for this recording was the piano that

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
The repertoire covered in Moment to Moment is entirely ballads, but Menzies and Phillips didn't set out with that focus firmly in mind. "I don't think we knew we were going to do that," says the pianist. "It's not like we sat down and said 'let's do a ballads album.' But one of the things that we noticed was that we gravitated towards music that really spoke in a human way, that embodied aspects of the human voice and explored human emotions. You get all that in ballads. They give you more space, too. They give you time to ingest what you're hearing and take a moment of pause and reflection. They breathe a little better."
Menzies and Phillips gave a great deal of thought to the song selection for the album. "They had to be songs that both Cava and I were passionate about," says Phillips, "that had special meaning for us, and that we felt we could put our own personal spin on. For example, 'The Peacocks,' the

Jimmy Rowles
piano1918 - 1996
Another standout on the recording is "Phantoms," a tune that serves as the title track of an album by Menzies' father (Steeplechase, 1994). "Nick actually brought that tune in," says Menzies. "We were exploring my dad's music and, we were both assuming that it was my dad's original composition, but we later learned that

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943

The album also includes the standards "For All We Know," "You Don't Know What Love Is," and "Speak Low," as well as "Almost Blue," by

Elvis Costello
vocalsb.1954

Chet Baker
trumpet and vocals1929 - 1988

Joe Locke
vibraphoneb.1959
Menzies' original, "Mal's Moon," was inspired by the experience of seeing her nine-year-old son, Imalu, looking out his bedroom window during the June 2013 occurrence of the "supermoon," when the earth, moon, and sun are all in line and the moon is in its closest approach to the earth. "We pulled open his window blinds, and the silhouette of him against the flooding moonlight was just beautiful and profound, I thought. I sat down at the piano and tried to capture that in sound the sense of wonder and the time-stopping feeling that you get when you really look at nature and see something as beautiful as the moon. That's the first section of the tune, painting that nighttime glow musically, and then the second section goes into a subtle march feel, which is kind of a tribute to my son and childhood. The song plays on those two things, the innocence and wonder that a kid feels, and the incredible and profound beauty of nature."
In rounding out the ensemble for the recording, Menzies and Phillips sought out other musicians they felt could work well with their very collaborative approach to music. Phillips recommended bassist Jeff Chambers. "Jeff was the first person that came to mind. I've heard him play live and on recordings over many years, including on some Concord projects back in the day. He's an incredible musician and very creative, but he also really holds things down. His time is just rock solid, and he's very nuanced, responsive, and musical in his playing. He proved to be the perfect guy for this recording on bass."
Menzies brought in drummer Jaz Sawyer. "Jaz has been a good friend of mine for a couple of years. We've played together in the Bay area, and we've worked together at the Oakland School for the Arts, were he had been the percussion teacher. I always admired and loved his playingvery inventive and creative. I've rarely heard drummers with the intuition and sensitivity he showed playing ballads with us." Altogether, the four musicians really jelled. "When we started rehearsing with Jeff and Jaz," says Phillips, "it became a four-way conversation. They were really in tune with what Cava and I were doing."
An interesting bit of background that ties in with the ensemble's very conversational approach is that Menzies made a point of having the lyrics handy for all the tunes during the recording session. "Anytime there's a piece of music that has a lyric," says the pianist, "you just have so much more of a frame of reference for an instrumental interpretation. It really helps shape the mood of the piece. It all boils down to the story, and what's trying to be conveyed. Having the story there and digging into the words lets you really dive into each phrase. You're speaking without using words, putting the same feeling across. That's the ultimate challenge."

It's especially natural for Menzies to emphasize lyrics, considering her focus in teaching; she's the chair of the vocal department at the Oakland School for the Arts. "So much of what I promote and produce is vocal. Even in my immediate community, it's always a shocker that I play piano, and people ask me how I make that dichotomy work. I had to find a way to bridge those two things and make sure that they both speak to each other and that what I do by day can inform what I do by night. I also make it a big priority that the vocalists I teach aren't just vocalists. Singers sometimes get a bad rap for not knowing the theory behind the music. I really try to dismantle all of those ideas and make sure that everybody's a well-rounded musician. To see Oakland kids really being serious about their craft and making some great choices to become creative leadersit's exciting to be a part of that. I'm so proud of our school. It's really an incredible place. I feel fortunate to work somewhere that I love, that I'm passionate about."
Another noteworthy incidental connection to Moment to Momentboth its mood and titleis the fact that Phillips is a practicing Buddhist. He's been deeply influenced by the pianist

Kenny Werner
pianob.1951
Menzies shares the trumpeter's observations and sensibilities. "For anybody who dives into music, there is a meditative quality to it if you're really in tune with yourself and getting in touch with what's happening. The whole point of why we're doing music is to go inside of yourself and explore within, to try to draw out what you're feeling and what's going on inside of you and share that with other people. I always have a meditative experience while I'm playing as long as my mind is not getting in the way, which it sometimes does. That's part of the work as welljust fighting your mind and really trying to listen. A lot of the principles apply. I definitely can relate to that. Whether or not Nick and I are both practicing the same things religiously and personally, I think those are the things we love about each other's playing. Both of us strive to have a very sensitive touch, and we're both trying to really listen. That in and of itself is a great practice."
Photo credit:
Capriece Batchelor
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