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Fred Hersch: Live In Europe
By
Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994
In much of his music, Hersch has explored a range of profound emotions. It's as if he has been looking introspectively to express the human condition in his music. This album is different. Here he is happy and content, a master toying with musical ideas. He has good reason to be happy. He has miraculously survived medical Armageddon, is in a long term satisfying gay marriage, relatively free of medical concerns, and travelling worldwide with his trio cohorts

John Hébert
bass
Eric McPherson
drumsThus, the tracks on this recording, which include several Hersch originals in addition to tunes by

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
To begin with, it's always interesting to see what Hersch does with a

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
The name of the tune "Snape Maltings" is from one of the locations of the Aldeburgh, England music festival that Benjamin Britten and his lover Peter Pears founded. The tune tells a free-floating story without specific content, maybe an imagined conversation between Britten and Pears. It serves as a kind of "ballade interruptus" where the melody is disrupted by short staccato bursts of notes. The rhythmic shifts are speech-like, like someone talking. Hébert and McPherson each encounter Hersch in an interesting exchange. It's almost a literal exemplification of Bill Evans's "conversational" use of the piano trio. As the piece concludes, the musicians are "talking" to one another in a rich interplay of notes rather than words.
"Scuttlers" starts with drum rappings whch Hersch in the liner notes says was suggested by the sound of crabs moving about. Taking over from the drums, he experiments with short bursts of notes which avoid a key signature. The piece segues without interruption into the next piece, "Skipping," where the rhythm picks up and Hersch starts to land some hard bop melodic lines and a pleasant swing rhythm. He refuses to quote a whole tune, but seems to play around with hints of the standards of Rogers and Hart and others of that ilk. The shift to a more straight ahead approach is beginning to take place and comes into full form with a piano-bass duet entitled "Bristol Fog," a ballad with a touch of French impressionist feeling. The piece could be understood as a tribute to pianist

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
"Newklypso" (the name comes from

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
Wayne Shorter can wake up any jazz fan from his slumber, including Hersch himself. Shorter's "Miyako" is a sweet ballad, but as it moves along, Hersch startles us with brilliantly conceived Bach-like interludes. He maintains the energy by shifting directly into another Shorter tune, one of the latter's incomparable standards, "Black Nile." Hersch takes it straight ahead and then breaks out into a brilliantly executed hard bop solo.
The album concludes by returning to Monk. In "Blue Monk," Hersch mixes it up with some stride syncopation, counterpoint, even a touch of vaudeville, eventually playing the melody almost like a player piano. The last two tracks show Hersch at his best, brilliantly inventive with masterful use of traditional structures. ">
Track Listing
Wee See; Snape Maltings; Scuttlers; Skipping; Bristol Fog; Newklypso; The Big Easy; Miyako; Black Nile; Blue Monk.
Personnel
Fred Hersch
pianoFred Hersch: piano; John Hebert: bass; Eric McPherson: drums.
Album information
Title: Live In Europe | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: Palmetto Records
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