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Gerald Clayton at Trinity University

Beginning quietly, almost tentatively, he treated Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “Luiza” as a kind of prelude or fantasia, an opening dialogue with the composition, the piano, and the room.
Trinity University / Ruth Taylor Hall
San Antonio, TX
November 7, 2023
Trinity University's Ruth Taylor Hall, with its intimate seating and warm wood-paneled acoustics, is a welcoming spot for a solo piano concert. Addressing the audience as he entered the stage,

Gerald Clayton
piano
Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994
A musical composition is a curious thing in an improvisatory milieu. What exactly is it? A jazz player would have a kind of lead-sheet somewhere in mind (form, melody, chord changes, idea of rhythmic feel), and maybe a specific arrangement, but someone like Clayton is likely to have transcribed other versions, which have become part of the piece for him. In jazzespecially in a solo performanceto play the tune is to enter into this imaginary world where other realizations of itother possibilitieslive, and to somehow interact with them in real time. Yesterday's performance may seem like a wholly different composition than today's; there are no rules. The uncertainty of this can be liberating or daunting to the performer. For the audience, it's part of what makes the experience exciting. On this evening, Clayton's exploration of "Luiza" was redolent with the romantic ethos of the original but somehow gentler. He seemed haunted by Jobim's voice, piano, and a lyric that implores Luiza, a fictional character in the Brazilian novela Brilhante (1981), to come hear the song he has created in order to forget her. Throughout the program, Clayton approached his repertoire similarly, eschewing the typical head-solo-head format in favor of freewheeling exploratory improvisations that touched lightly on the written material at first, stating it more completely only toward the end.
Clayton's second offering was from his Piedmont Blues: A Search for Salvation, a multimedia performance piece for which he undertook two years of musicological and ethnographic research in the Piedmont region of the eastern US, conducted with acclaimed media artist Christopher McElroen under a grant from Duke University. As he described it, the work is both a concert piece and a history lesson on the lives and musical traditions of people in the region, which have been influenced by ragtime, stride, and old-time string band jazz, among other genres. In creating the music, Clayton transcribed and extracted rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic ideas from his research, then recombined them in new ways for his jazz nonet featuring singer

Rene Marie
vocalsThe set list this outing featured engaging renditions of several selections from his discography, including an intriguingly idiosyncratic version

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966

John Clayton
bassb.1952

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
As an encore, Clayton offered, aptly, his own powerful take on

Ray Bryant
piano1931 - 2011

Pete Seeger
banjo1919 - 2014
Tags
Live Review
Gerald Clayton
Katharine (Katchie) Cartwright
United States
Texas
San Antonio
Antonio Carlos Jobim
Rene Marie
Bud Powell
John Clayton
Thelonious Monk
Ray Bryant
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