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Paul Bley: When Will The Blues Leave
ByOrnette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Paul Bley
piano1932 - 2016

Steve Swallow
bassb.1940

Pete La Roca
drums1938 - 2012

Don Cherry
trumpet1936 - 1995

Don Payne
bass1933 - 2017

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001

Walter Norris
piano1931 - 2011
And that is what we get, in spades, with Bley's 1999 revisit to the song on When Will The Blues Leave (ECM), this time the pianist backed by longtime mates bassist

Gary Peacock
bass, acoustic1935 - 2020

Paul Motian
drums1931 - 2011
One of the rare, early appearances of Coleman with a pianist, Norris' presence on Something Else!!!! took place in the same year that Bley played with Coleman, as documented on Live At The Hilcrest Club (Inner City), with bassist

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014
Is it a question, or a statement? Coleman's release lists it as a question. The two Bley recordings make it a statement. TheFloater Syndrome take on the tune is a tad more nuanced, more ruminative compared to what is on Something Else!!!!; the alto saxophonist Coleman spawns a more

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
This 1999 recording rivals another of Bley's later outstanding trio releases, Memoirs, recorded a decade earlier, for Soul Note, in Italy. Perfect drummer Motian is also there, along with Haden, the perfect bassist. Both recordings point to Bley's magical charms at delivering piano-trio jazz like no one else has, before or since. Both When Will The Blues Leave and Memoirs stand as living documents of some of the finest trio jazz the idiom has ever produced.
Bley's comfort with tradition and what might be considered the avant-garde was one of the unpredictable enjoyments of listening to his music. He reveled in solo performanceskey among them Open, To Love (1973), Solo In Mondsee (2007) and Play Blue (2014), all for ECMbut his particular natural grace was within the trio format.
When Will The Blues Leave is a mix of originals with two covers, including the title track. The other cover, the one that closes out the program, is the Gershwin ballad from Porgy And Bess, "I Loves You, Porgy." Coleman's tune is the penultimate piece here, both selections suggesting a kind of looking back at set's end after members have played marvelous trio, duo and solo tunes, all but one Bley composition, Peacock's delicate "Moor" the lone exception. "Porgy" becomes a solo parlor piano excursion, drenched in feeling, with an airiness that both sings and laments, and with a patience and embrace of the song's exquisite melody that makes you wish for more. Alas, it was the set-closer.
Past and present, that seems to be what is to be gotten from listening to Paul Bley's music. A restless spirit, venturing into electronics during the 1970s, he may be the most important pianist when it comes to having an embrace of the past, present and future of jazz just because of his historic span across so many decades (he had played with

Lester Young
saxophone1909 - 1959
Indeed, listening to Bley with Motian, and Peacock in particular, on When Will The Blues Leave, can serve as a reminder of how important Peacock's contributions have also been over the decades. His work with Bley (as it was with

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942
To call the Bley material "ruminative" would be a lazy generalization. There is so much thought and reflection in the five selections here (out of a total of eight, "Dialogue Amour" being co-composed with Peacock). In a way, the five constitute a treatise before this audience in Switzerland, the band hot on the heels of a reunion trio album Not Two, Not One (ECM).
When Will The Blues Leave enjoys an intimate, lively production by Manfred Eicher. This date is a production, among thousands for the label, that only serves to enhance what, alongside Memoirs, will always remain a stunner of a jazz piano trio outing. ">
Track Listing
Mazatlan; Flame; Told You So; Moor; Longer; Dialogue Amour; When Will The Blues Leave; I Loves You, Porgy.
Personnel
Paul Bley
pianoPaul Bley: piano; Gary Peacock: double bass; Paul Motian: drums.
Album information
Title: When Will The Blues Leave | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: ECM Records
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