Archive for the ‘Steve Kuhn’ Category
Steve Kuhn Trio: Mostly Coltrane (2009 – ECM)
Mostly Coltrane is pianist Steve Kuhn’s venerable ode to his onetime employer, John Coltrane, with whom he played for eight weeks in early 1960 at New York City’s Jazz Gallery. Kuhn revisits those seminal days without ignoring Coltrane’s later period advancements, extrapolating his controversial innovations with rare lyricism and tenderness—a uniquely beautiful tribute unencumbered by nostalgic sentimentality.
Mirroring the instrumentation of Coltrane’s Classic Quartet, (which featured pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones), Kuhn is joined by his regular associate, bassist David Finck, veteran tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano, and in-demand drummer Joey Baron.
Expanding on the Classic Quartet’s advancements in modal harmony and rhythmic displacement, Kuhn, Lovano, Finck and Baron balance individual expression with focused group interaction. Digging into these sonorous themes with simmering intensity, they expound on the original Quartet’s collective spiritual fervor with restrained dynamics.
One of Coltrane’s most elegant compositions, “Welcome” from Kulu Se Mama (Impulse!, 1965), opens the album, followed by an inspired version of “Song of Praise,” setting a stately tone for the majority of the session. Kuhn also returns to the standard tunes he played with Coltrane—”Central Park West,” “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes” and “I Want To Talk About You,” highlighting the quartet’s congenial rapport and effervescent lyricism.
Surveying the untapped potential of Coltrane’s late period, the quartet covers a number of recently discovered tunes. “Configuration” and “Jimmy’s Mode” made their premier on Stellar Regions (Impulse!, 1967), posthumously released in 1994, while “Living Space” was recorded in 1965—with the album of the same name unreleased until 1998. Although the majority of this date elicits a serene, ruminative view of Coltrane’s legacy, there are moments of unfettered bliss that acknowledge the master’s move towards abstraction. “Configuration” is the most visceral—a bristling excursion fraught with Baron’s pneumatic salvos, the leader’s quicksilver cadences and Lovano’s intervallic torrents.
Interestingly, Kuhn shares none of the stylistic traits of Coltrane’s primary pianists, sounding unlike Tyner or Alice Coltrane. Kuhn’s feathery touch and delicate, dancing filigrees amplify the melodious lyricism at the core of Coltrane’s most impassioned work with a harmonic density that maintains crystalline clarity, even in the most frenetic passages. Kuhn’s original contributions, “With Gratitude” and “Trance”—introspective solo piano meditations that ebb with timeless beauty—reveal the master’s influence without resorting to imitation.
A heartfelt, regal homage to one of the idiom’s most celebrated artists, Mostly Coltrane is a superlative tribute album, breathing new life into acknowledged masterworks.
Troy Collins (All About Jazz)
Original Release Date: July 7, 2009 – Label: ECM
Written by crossrhythm
March 21, 2010 at 7:45 pm
Posted in David Finck, Joe Lovano, Joey Baron, Steve Kuhn, Uncategorized