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Shining A Light On Pianist Ron Thomas
ByRon Thomas
pianob.1942
The Marilyn Monroe / Rachmaninoff epiphany led, eventually, to studies at the Manhattan School of Music, then with classical / electronic music pioneer Karlheinz Stockhausen, then The University of Illinois, and studies with pianist

Roland Hanna
piano1932 - 2002

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Pat Martino
guitar1944 - 2021
Thomas held back on recording under his own name. With the exception of Wings Of The Morning (Vectordisc, 2008)recorded in 1978, and released originally on vinyl, and as a 2008 re-release on CDhe didn't present a recording of his own until 2001's Scenes From A Voyage To Arcturus (Vectordisc). He had come to the conclusion that the hassle and hustle required to achieve fame and fortune was incompatible with the pursuit of his art on the level that it needed to be pursued. The arrival of Scenes From A Voyage To Arcturus, and a bunch of subsequent new millennium releases, say he decided well.
This is a partial listing from the discography of genius.

Vectordisc
2001
A majestically surreal and unclassifiable work blending electronic music, jazz and classical styling, this is Thomas' soundtrack of sorts to Scottish writer David Lindsay's 1920 novel, Voyage To Arcturus. These sometimes sweeping, sometimes stark musical landscapes exude a profound depth drawn from Thomas' lifelong immersion into mysteries of art and the universe.

Vectordisc
2002
This is Thomas in a quartet settingthe rhythm section and John Swana's trumpet. It's all Thomas originals, but the influence of

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Tony Marino
bass
Art Of Life Records
2006
This is where the genius of Ron Thomas became undeniable, on a piano trio affair of the highest order. The type of fluid interplay between Thomas, drummer " data-original-title="" title="">Joe Mullen and bassist

Paul Klinefelter
bassb.1950

Art Of Life Records
2006
Another piano trio released shortly after Music In Three Parts, Thomas' Doloroso represents part two of the finest pair of piano trio releases since Bill Evans' gave us Sunday At The Village Vanguard (1961) and Waltz For Debby (1962), both on Riverside Records. Though Evans is an obvious influence for Thomas, this musicerudite, free, mysteriously and elusively beautiful, full of a fluid trio interplay of the highest orderwon't remind anyone of Evans' perfect explorations of the Great American Songbook and some

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961

Vectordisc
2011
This is Thomas' solo outing, something of a celebration of the spirit of Bill Evans. Three of the tunes included are Evans' originals. It also nods, in Thomas' words: [to] Jazz [that] like the best of all art, celebrates the timeless things of the human experience. Things ultimately beyond the constructs of new and old." A serene, inward-looking beauty is the result,not unlike that found on any of Evan's solo outingsa pensive and compelling jazz neo-classicism.

Art Of Life Records
2008
This duo outing finds Thomas in the simpatico company of bassist

Paul Klinefelter
bassb.1950

Vectordisc
2014
Another terrific trio set, a perfect example of the whole rising to a level above the sum of the parts. Included: one Bill Evans tune, three from the pen of Thomas, two more from the set's drummer Chris Loser, Legrand's "You Must Believe In Spring," centerpieced by the resplendent and uplifting sacred tune, "Ave Maria" (Bach-Gounod).
Tags
Building a Jazz Library
Ron Thomas
Dan McClenaghan
Karlheinz Stockhausen
Roland Hanna
Miles Davis
Bill Evans
Pat Martino
Joe Mullen
Tony Marino
Paul Klinefelter
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