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Perry Robinson, Ron Carter, Dave Liebman and Valery Ponomarev
ByThe University Of The Streets
August 30, 2011
Native New Yorker

Perry Robinson
clarinet1938 - 2018

Diane Moser
piano
Max Johnson
bassb.1990
These three possessed a strong sense of instant composition, masterfully evolving ideas in a gradually linear flow. It appeared that the small gathering who witnessed this session were gripped by the music's concentrated aura. Though the medium-length improvisations were mostly serene, this didn't impede a recurring mood of thoughtful, introverted tension. All three players were expert at alternating sudden emphatic clumps of notes with contrasting streams of calm flotation. This was particularly apparent as Johnson's bruising bass lines, fingered with hardness in a gloriously unamplified state, were regularly alternated with groaning, bowed stretches, establishing a sequence of percussive bullishness, entering into hovering sustain. Moser, too, initiated sections where she was hammering with gusto, building up rippling blocks. Robinson maintained a superbly articulate clarinet poise, dancing loquaciously, only becoming more fragmented and strident during the closing piece. All three players were completely immersed in the musicmuch like their audience. This set's quieter, introverted methods were all the more poignant when set beside its fleeting outbreaks of aggression.
The Ron Carter Big Band
Jazz Standard
September 1, 2011
This was an unusual setting for august bassman

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Wayne Escoffery
saxophone, tenorb.1975

Steve Wilson
saxophoneb.1961

Scott Robinson
saxophone, tenorb.1959

Mulgrew Miller
piano1955 - 2013

Russell Malone
guitar1963 - 2024
The Dave Liebman Big Band
Birdland
September 8, 2011

Dave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946
The week's run at Birdland was in celebration of Liebman's 65th birthday, and it was invigorating to witness this player in a state of restlessly investigative forward motion. Liebman was emphatically not interested in complacency. His body language revealed a man who was completely in control, but the actual promptings were being given by altoman and musical director Gunnar Mossblad, utilizing a vocabulary of complex finger-counting signals. So compulsive were these, that the distracted folks at the table in front of this reviewer were amusing themselves by mimicking the digit directions, setting up their own form of instantaneous communication. Well, at least they weren't breaking the quiet policy rules. This was fortunate indeed, once Liebman entered his most extreme passage, a virtually unaccompanied solo on the wooden flute. This had all the more force when followed by some massively dense horn section charges, brightly ornamented by keyboardist

Jim Ridl
piano
Vic Juris
guitar1953 - 2019

Gene Krupa
drums1909 - 1973
The Valery Ponomarev Big Band
Dizzy's Club
September 12, 2011
The

Valery Ponomarev
trumpetb.1943

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990
This was a one night stand, as part of the club's Generations In Jazz festival. The Russian-born Ponomarev calls his project Our Father Who Art Blakey, in keeping with his brashly good-humored attitude. He was a four-year member of Blakey's Jazz Messengers, and has dedicated himself to expanding their songbook into a big band existence. The arrangements are rooted in a conventional multi-ranked swing, but they're populated by enough surprises (and an abundance of vitality) to shine through the amber veil of nostalgia. They offered yet another reading of "Caravan," but a series of time changes, mood alterations and varied soloing approaches could almost make the listener forget which tune was in place for such an epic journey. The essence of the piece was never allowed to escape, but maintained a freshness that justified another visit.
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