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Dan Weiss Trio at Bop Stop

Courtesy John Chacona
Bop Stop at the Music Settlement
Cleveland, OH
December 11, 2022
Are we living in a golden age of the piano trio? The recorded evidence from 2022 would suggest that we are. Piano trio recordings by

John Escreet
pianob.1984

Fred Hersch
pianob.1955

Aaron Parks
drumsb.1983

Gonzalo Rubalcaba
pianob.1963

Marta Sanchez
piano
Matthew Shipp
pianob.1960

Eri Yamamoto
pianoYet the two most notable piano trio records were led by drummers,

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980

Dan Weiss
drumsDoes a drummer-led trio approach the music differently than one lead by a pianist? With bassist

Thomas Morgan
bass, acoustic
Jacob Sacks
pianoHis single, 67-minute set at Cleveland's Bop Stop, the first leg of a short tour around North America's Great Lakes region, had a surging yet finely controlled sense of flow and momentum that served as a projection of his voice behind the kit.
Midwinter on the shores of Lake Erie brings dark days and leaden skies, and Weiss' "For Andrei Tarkovsky," one of the album's nine dedications, caught the spirit of the season. The looping, minor-key arpeggios with which Sacks began the piece and Morgan's brooding bass solo set a Nordic-ECM-y mood. But Weiss gave the music a sudden push, smoothly downshifting into a more linear rhythm.
Without a break, piano and drums fell quiet for a statement by Morgan, accompanied only by a loud conversation from the club's kitchen. Weiss, an accomplished tabla player, quietly rocked a slow, 4/4 rhythm playing the kit with his hands. Switching to sticks, he laid a subtle but stately backbeat behind "For Bacharach" that melted into the knotty labyrinth of "For Nancarrow," dedicated to the American composer of fiendishly difficult, devil's clockworks piano music.
If there's a halfway point between

Burt Bacharach
composer / conductor1928 - 2023

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
Another bass solo, this time, genuinely unaccompanied, introduced "For Vivienne," dedicated to Weiss' daughter. Morgan's singing, expressive bass sound was the perfect vehicle for the song's warm harmonies and tender melody, right up to the power-ballad climax. Once again, Weiss' cymbals cued the next piece.
"For Grandma May" continued the pensive mood with a haunting, scalar unison figure for Morgan and Sacks, a moon obscured then revealed by passing clouds over the aurora borealis of Weiss' mallets shimmers. Building up into a grand, almost rockish processional, the music just stopped.
Weiss cued the next piece with a high-velocity drum solo full of precise stickwork and cross-handed wizardry in which you could hear the drummer's great admiration for

Philly Joe Jones
drums1923 - 1985
It was a virtuoso gesture with just a drop of showmanship; the drummer had the last word.
Except that he didn't, exactly. After back-introducing the songs and catching his breath (Weiss admitted some fatigue after receiving a COVID booster shot two days earlier), he and the trio charged into "For Jacob Sacks," a particularly apt dedication since the pianists' parents had driven from Ann Arbor, Michigan for the show. They were seated in the front row, but not on their son's side of the stage. Their table was right in front of Weiss.
Tags
Live Review
Dan Weiss
John Chacona
Braithwaite & Katz Communications
United States
Ohio
Cleveland
John Escreet
Fred Hersch
Aaron Parks
Gonzalo Rubalcaba
Marta Sanchez
Matthew Shipp
Tyshawn Sorey
Jacob Sacks
Bop Stop
Bert Bacharach
Conlon Nancarrow
Thelonious Monk
Philly Joe Jones
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