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EMA | Past Life Martyred Saints
CD Reviews
Andrew Hill
TIME LINES | Blue Note
By
JON GARELICK
|
February 22, 2006
ANDREW HILL, TIME LINES
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3.5
Stars
Here’s the lyricism, the swing, the group interplay, and most of all the tension between form and freedom that’s made Hill a major figure for more than four decades. When he isn’t in free tempos, he likes odd meters. (The title tune is in 11/8.) His piano solos rarely progress with the fluid, silken lines of bebop, instead favoring broken staccato phrases with plenty of rests, letting the silence draw one note into the next. He pushes this free style about as far as it can go but never loses the groove (props to bassist John Hebert and drummer Eric McPherson) or the sense of narrative expectancy. Forms are articulated with perfectly balanced arrangements and textural variety. So “For Emilio” begins in ballad tempo with saxophonist Greg Tardy “doubling” on bass clarinet over free bass before the keening unison theme with trumpet (Charles Tolliver) enters. “Smooth” begins with a fast bass walk (a gallop really) over swing ride cymbal, then overlapping clarinet and trumpet lines. There’s even a tune in rondo form. “Malachi” (for the late bassist Malachi Favors) opens the album as a band piece and ends it as an elegiac piano solo. You could argue there’s nothing new here, but so what?
Related
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Moving fast and standing still
,
Midwestern master
,
Making it right
,
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Moving fast and standing still
Every melody was a rhythm, every rhythm a melody, and the pieces developed slowly, big, cloud-like shapes building up to thunderheads, only occasionally breaking into thunder.
Midwestern master
I was going to say Roscoe Mitchell laughs like Mutley. But that’s not it exactly.
Making it right
Whatever increments of recovery New Orleans has made since Hurricane Katrina, in many ways the city never changes. The only shocker was a lower-left-hand piece, "Crime is down sharply in N.O."
2009: The year in jazz
Here, in no particular order, are some of my favorite things from among the people, CDs, and concerts I wrote about in 2009.
Flashbacks: June 16, 2006
These selections, culled from our back files, were compiled by Hannah Van-Susteren, Doug Fleischer and Sam MacLaughlin.
Autumn leaves
One of the great harbingers of fall jazz for the past seven years has been the Beantown Jazz Festival.
Netsky notes
Hankus Netsky founded the Klezmer Conservatory Band 30 years ago at New England Conservatory and sparked an American klezmer revival that continues to this day.
Coming home
Terri Lyne Carrington gives the BeanTown Jazz Fest the blues
Live and kicking
Yes, we suffer from an embarrassment of riches when it come to live music here in the Boston area.
Trane, Joyce Dee Dee, Sco, and more
The official kickoff to the season begins with the week of activities celebrating the 30th anniversary of the John Coltrane Memorial Concert.
Blink. | The Epidemic Of Ideas
Aside from the general aggressive, post-rock, post-jazz underground feel, there’s pretty tunes here.
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:
CD Reviews
,
Charles Tolliver
,
Greg Tardy
,
Malachi Favors
,
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,
Charles Tolliver
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Greg Tardy
,
Malachi Favors
,
Andrew Hill
,
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ARTICLES BY JON GARELICK
MARY HALVORSON'S ENCHANTED WOOD; PLUS, BEN POWELL'S NEW CD
| May 31, 2012
When guitarist Mary Halvorson began taking lessons with Joe Morris as an undergraduate at Wesleyan University, she was excited about the prospect of playing duos with one of her guitar heroes.
THE FRINGE AT 40
| May 15, 2012
"I'm feeling a little light-headed," George Garzone told the audience last Saturday at the Boston Conservatory Theater, closing his eyes and bringing a hand to his brow.
THE 2012 NEW ORLEANS JAZZ & HERITAGE FESTIVAL
| May 04, 2012
New Orleans Notes
ESPERANZA SPALDING’S “SOCIETY”
| April 18, 2012
The first time I was knocked out by Esperanza Spalding, she wasn't even playing — she was talking.
WALT WHITMAN VIA FRED HERSCH
| April 19, 2012
The pianist and composer Fred Hersch first encountered the poetry of Walt Whitman as a student at New England Conservatory in 1976.
See all articles by:
JON GARELICK
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