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John Pizzarelli at Blues Alley

Blues Alley
Washington, DC
December 8, 2024
When you're part of a jazz dynastyson of guitar-great Bucky Pizzarelli, husband of chanteuse

Jessica Molaskey
vocals
Joe Pass
guitar1929 - 1994

Barney Kessel
guitar, electric1923 - 2004
Backed by effortlessly cool

Isaiah J. Thompson
piano
Mike Karn
bassNext up was a plaintive "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve,' the Frank Loesser ballad, rendered touchingly. John has a pleasant, warm vocal stylemore vintage chianti classico than gin and tonic or whiskey sour. He made light of his delivery, as well as several under-performing recordings, in patter that brought to mind a nice, handsome guy playing guitar in your living room: self-deprecation with a light touch.
The tempo picked up considerably with a snappy "Come Fly With Me." In a nod to the Hanukkah celebrants in the room, Pizzarelli proffered an original tune called "Little Miracle." As he explained, "If Irving Berlin can write 'White Christmas,' why can't an Italian guitarist return the favor?" Pizzarelli reached back to Rodgers and Hart's 1938 Broadway hit "The Boys From Syracuse" for "Falling in Love With Love," caressing his way thru the lyric. Switching to his Kremona nylon-string acoustic flat-top (again, seven-stringed), he returned to R&H for "Where or When" from "Babes in Arms," this time rendered with a soothing samba feel. It wasn't a stretch to segue into

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994

Rosemary Clooney
vocals1928 - 2002
Next up: a medley of Johnny Mercer lyrics, including "Jeepers Creepers," "I'm Old Fashioned" and "I Thought About You." Pizzarelli, Thompson and Karn all blazed thru their solos on this one, which John followed with a solo outing on the Kremona, covering a rather unorthodox composition:

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954
All of these holiday tunes and standards set us up for another Pizzarelli original, which he delivered with perhaps the most eye-popping fretwork of the evening. This composition "MJQ" segued into

Vince Guaraldi
piano1928 - 1976
The descriptor "debonair" may have fallen out of fashion, but I can't think of a better encomium to offer up in praise of John Pizzarelli's Blues Alley gig. Suave, sartorially resplendent without overdoing it, brilliant at his craft and easy with an anecdote, he's an elegant performer in the great tradition of

Bobby Short
piano1926 - 2005
Tags
Live Review
John Pizzarelli
Mark Edelman
Theater League
United States
District Of Columbia
Washington
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