Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » John Blum: Nine Rivers
John Blum: Nine Rivers
ByJohn Blum
pianob.1968
Blum, a regular on the New York avant-garde music scene, is a woefully under-recorded talent. He studied with

Bill Dixon
trumpet1925 - 2010

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Borah Bergman
piano1933 - 2012

Jackson Krall
drums
William Parker
bassb.1952

Cooper-Moore
pianob.1946

Sunny Murray
drums1937 - 2017
Blum's "Rivers" skip the trickle for the torrent and omit the calm for the cascade. He does not so much attack the piano as the piano transmogrifies into the pianist. His "First River" is born of thunder, with clenched fists pounding on keys before the right hand chases the left back and forth across the keyboard. By "Fifth River" one may imagine hearing French horns, harps, trombones, and a percussion section, but Blum has conjured an orchestral sound from this single instrument. "Sixth River" opens with rain-like sounds falling on Blum's tributary until the stream becomes a torrent. Each track is an athletic event without pause, except for the interstitial pause between each new "River." Blum has digested the history of the piano from classical to bebop and boogie- woogie and each of those styles is in a constant battle to take center stage in Blum's playing.
Each "River" has the flavor of the classic Steppenwolf lyric, "Take the world in a love embrace/Fire all of your guns at once/And explode into space." Blum is a true nature's child and Nine Rivers is proof he was born, born to be wild. ">
Track Listing
First River; Second River; Third River; Fourth River; Fifth River; Sixth River; Seventh River; Eighth River; Ninth River.
Personnel
John Blum
pianoAdditional Instrumentation
John Blum, piano Photo by Peter Gannushkin
Album information
Title: Nine Rivers | Year Released: 2023 | Record Label: ESP Disk
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
John Blum Concerts
Ingardens Festival
First Street Green Cultural ParkNew York, NY
Ingardens Festival
First Street Green Cultural ParkNew York, NY
Support All About Jazz
