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Ron Carter and Russell Malone at the Museum of Modern Art

Courtesy Paul Reynolds
Carter provided as reliable a musical foundation as ever, with his warm fat tone and talent for engaging, sometimes extended, solos wonderfully intact.
Museum of Modern Art
New York, NY
May 28, 2024
"This is really something. I thought maybe 15 people would show up,"

Ron Carter
bassb.1937
Carter was an inspired choice for the occasiona members-only event to mark the launch of MoMA's new podcast on the history of jazz shows in this iconic outdoor space, with its serene detachment from the buzz of midtown Manhattan. .
Jazz has had a presencealbeit an intermittent onein the garden for more than six and half decades. Carter, who turned 87 in May, 2024, first performed in the space in 1965, and returned in 1995.
For the newest installment in his unofficial 30-year cycle of MoMA shows, Carter went smallin the form of a duo with guitarist

Russell Malone
guitar1963 - 2024

Jim Hall
guitar1930 - 2013
These renditions were anything but clones of the recorded performances. Compared with Hall, Malone swings more emphatically and is less inclined to lyricism and harmonic complexity. Malone made the pieces his own, then, and yet at times skillfully evoked Hall's subtle style. The best exampleand Malone's best performancewas on "Candlelight," the gorgeous Carter original that the bassist recorded with Hall on their 1985 live duo album, Telephone (Concord). Malone built the piece masterfully, using rapid alternations and slower reflective asides to provide variety and sustain interest.
Much of the rest of the one-hour set comprised standards, also drawn from the Hall-Carter recordings. The selections included "St. Thomas," with a nod to

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
Carter provided as reliable a musical foundation as ever, with his warm fat tone and talent for engaging, sometimes extended, solos wonderfully intact.
This was quiet music that the closely packed audience received with respectful attentionthat is, until about 40 minutes into the hour. The volume of talking then rose to nearly drown out Carter and Maloneincluding, disappointingly, from a huddle that included a chatty young woman who sported a MoMA staff badge. Let's hope her indifference to the music was an outlier, and that the museum's leadership considers restarting a program of jazz performances in this superlative space.
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