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Borah Bergman Trio: Luminescence
By
Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Herbie Nichols
piano1919 - 1963

Andrew Hill
piano1931 - 2007
Bergman has technique to spare but it's to his credit that he's not in the business of applying it to the maximum all the time. Truth is, one of the elements that contribute greatly to the individuality of the music is the fact that he uses it so sparingly. The opening "Quantum" is a case in point. Bergman invests his lines with a slightly faltering quality that's an antidote to surface finesse. The bass and drums of Greg Cohen
bass, acousticKenny Wollesen
drums
The similarly dark hues of the following "Candela" are leavened somewhat by Wollesen's cymbal washes, although he deploys them in such a way that they're more than the stuff of mere coloration. Instead they contribute to the music's momentum and at around the two and a half minute mark, the group coalesces in a manner that's a subtle joy to hear. Again Bergman uses veiled repetition as a means of expression and the effect of momentum beneath a surface of suspended time is achieved with aplomb.
Producer John Zorn
saxophone, alto
b.1953
The exquisite ennui of much of the program is replicated in the closingand indeed tellingly titled"Opacity" where the momentum generated by Wollesen is flagrantly subverted by his band mates. Cohen's bass comes as close as anything to something melodic, but again the underlying impression is of disparate shards of music, as encapsulated by each player in turn, coalescing in a manner that can only be described as greater than the sum of the parts, especially in view of the music's cumulative effect.
">Track Listing
Quantum; Candela; Parallax; Scattering; Luma; Opacity.
Personnel
Borah Bergman
pianoBorah Bergman: piano; Greg Cohen: bass; Kenny Wollesen: drums; John Zorn: alto sax (5).
Album information
Title: Luminescence | Year Released: 2009 | Record Label: Tzadik
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