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Matthew Shipp Trio: Piano Song
By
Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018
It has become harder to identify gigantic stylistic leaps, but subtle innovations happen all the time. Recently, pianists like

Eri Yamamoto
piano
John Law
piano
Paula Shocron
pianob.1980

Marc Copland
pianob.1948
One of the most advanced pianists and musical thinkers today,

Matthew Shipp
pianob.1960

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Michael Bisio
bass, acoustic
Newman Taylor Baker
percussionListen to Shipp's records to hear how he morphs between different musical expressions, a multitude of sounds and yet he has a recognizable style. Back in 2009, he was a guest in Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz on NPR (1978-2011) and it was clear she was inspired and she made a beautiful sound portrait of him (see the link to the whole program at the end of this article). In the program, Shipp himself referred to his "sledgehammer," the hard attack on the keys that has become a part of his signature, but if the tangents sometimes sound like thunder and shattered glass, Shipp is so much more than an avant-garde pianist. It would be a mistake to put him in that box -just like it would be a mistake to put him in any box.
However, it would be appropriate to call Shipp a radical musical thinker and a sound explorer. He asks the question: "what is jazz?" and on his latest album with his trio with Michael Bisio and Newman Taylor Baker, he asks the question: "what is the piano?" To ask such a question, you need to be open-minded and aware of tradition and this is exactly what Shipp and his fellow musical travelers are.
Piano Song is a special album. It has been announced as his last on Peter Gordon's influential label, Thirty Ear. For a long time, Shipp has helped shaping the aesthetic profile of the label as a curator of the eminent "Blue Series" and he will continue as a curator, but Piano Song is planned as his last recorded musical statement on that particular label.
Piano Song is not just an exit, it is also a beginning. This is perhaps Shipp's most beautiful and accessible album, filled with swing and lyrical tenderness. In fact, bassist Michael Bisio's bass playing on "Cosmopolitan" echoes

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
His work with texture is also at its most delicate here. "Blue Desert" feels exactly like the title says. Newman Taylor Baker plays a lonely shaker while the strings of Bisio and Shipp merge into the dusty language of a rusty zither, but there is also the dwelling blue piano chords of Shipp.
"Silence of" is a taciturn ballad, with Newman Taylor Baker's delicate brushwork whispering in the background. It is a pretty melody in search of itself. The lack of an object in the title replaced by a preposition suggests a form that evolves like an arabesque, but it is also a sophisticated way of indicating the silence in the music where even the letters disappear.
The same syntactic construction emerges in the titles "Void of" and "Nature of," indicating a process that is not finished. The music both feels through-composed and open like a sketch.
Piano Song is an album of emotionally and intellectually engaging music and the title track is a stunning aural painting that finds Shipp in his most lyrical mood, avoiding the temptation of bombastic interruption. Perhaps, the greatest revelation on this album is how the trio convincingly invites melody and swing into their language, but still in a way that is tentative and curious. Piano Song feels like an entirely fresh take on the piano trio, a vibrant continuum of sounds that avoids the pitfalls of both mainstream and avant-garde music. ">
Track Listing
Links; Cosmopolitan; Blue Desert; Silence of; Flying Carpet; Scrambled Brain; Micro Wave; Mind Space; Void of; The Nature of; Gravity Point; Piano Song.
Personnel
Matthew Shipp
pianoMatthew Shipp: piano; Michael Bisio: bass; Newman Taylor Baker: drums.
Album information
Title: Piano Song | Year Released: 2016 | Record Label: Thirsty Ear Recordings
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