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Noah Haidu: Standards III
By
Steve Wilson
saxophoneb.1961
To be fair, there are a liberal number of standards on all three recordings. This one, for example, includes Haidu and the trio's takes on Jerome Kern's "Yesterdays," Rodgers and Hart's "Lover," Willis Robison's "Old Folks" and Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz's "Alone Together," all standards by any measure.

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
Be that as it may, it is the music itself that singles out every album, and that is where any appraisal must start. Haidu and his comrades (bassist

Gervis Myles
bass
Charles Goold
drums
Buster Williams
bass, acousticb.1942

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940

Peter Washington
bassb.1964

Lewis Nash
drumsb.1958
Having noted Haidu's proficiency and that of his trios, a word must be said about tempo, a basic component, as Haidu must know, in any song. Armed with that knowledge, he has chosen to play "Yesterdays" far too rapidly, "Teach Me Tonight" much too slowly. Nothing pivotal, but it does make a difference to those who believe that tempo matters. Haidu has been widely praised, and rightly so, as he is an excellent jazz pianist. Standards III, however, does not quite reach that standard. ">
Track Listing
Yesterdays; Lover; Things Ain't What They Used To Be; A Child Is Born; Alone Together; Slipstream; Casual; Old Folks; Stevie W.; Tonight... Teach... Me; Teach Me Tonight.
Personnel
Noah Haidu
pianoCharles Goold
drumsGervis Myles
bassBuster Williams
bass, acousticBilly Hart
drumsLewis Nash
drumsPeter Washington
bassSteve Wilson
saxophoneAlbum information
Title: Standards III | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Infinite Distances
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