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Lee Konitz: Konitz/Mehldau/Haden/Motian: Live at Birdland
By
Live at Birdland
ECM Records
2011
The tunes are familiar, Great American Songbook and jazz standards all. So for those unfamiliar with the names involved in this quartet outing, the old complaint of "same old same old" could surface. But with alto saxophonist

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020
Konitz, with over 60 years of professional experiencefrom the 1949 Birth of the Cool (Capitol Records, 1957) sessions with arranger

Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Paul Motian
drums1931 - 2011

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014
Even the youngster in the line-up, Mehldau, has more than two decades of recording and performing in the resume; so when a group like this gets together for an impromptu session at New York's Birdlandone of jazz's most productive live recording venuesmagic can happen, and it did this night. It's not a magic of the look at me, virtuosic, fireworks variety, but one of a melding of four different and very experienced perspectives on some of those jazz tunes that seemafter all these yearsto be coded in our DNA, the musicians becoming one on this outing, creating melodic mutations that give birth to new sonic entities, new species altogether, maybe even a new genus or two, recognizable, but very different from the original organisms while still exuding a quality of familiar beauty.
"Loverman," the opener, and

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
"Lullaby of Birdland" and "I Fall In Love Too Easily" don't stray so far from what might be called standard interpretations, though it seems Konitz is trying to do just that, leaving Melhdau more the keeper of the melody, a task the pianist takes on with uncommon aplomb and originality and, yes, freedom.
Miles Davis' "Solar" is a tune that has managed to sound timeless for more than 50 years. Konitz staggers in here, with a rather harsh and stentorian tone, like a blaring shower singer, until four crisp alto notes, followed post-haste by the piano rolling with the same riff, announce the tune, and draw in the masterful wandering of Motian and Haden.
It's the title of another of the set's American Songbook tunes, "You Stepped Out of a Dream," that describes the mood. In the hands of these seasoned musicians, this music has an often skewed and surreal, out of a dream quality. We've heard them before, but never quite like this, unfolding in a way that doesn't quite make logical sense; revealing new and unexpected angles of their beauty.
Tracks: Loverman; Lullaby of Birdland; Solar; I Fall in Love Too Easily; You Stepped Out of a Dream.
Personnel: Lee Konitz: alto saxophone; Brad Mehldau: piano; Charlie Haden: bass; Paul Motian: drums. ">
Track Listing
Loverman; Lullaby of Birdland; Solar; I Fall in Love Too Easily; You Stepped Out of a Dream.
Personnel
Lee Konitz: alto saxophone; Brad Mehldau: piano; Charlie Haden: bass; Paul Motian: drums.
Album information
Title: Konitz/Mehldau/Haden/Motian: Live at Birdland | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: ECM Records
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