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Bobby Broom Plays for Monk
Barnes and Noble
Bobby Broom Plays for Monk
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
Bobby Broom Plays for Monk
Current price: $18.99
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How to play the compositions of
Thelonious Monk
is always a slightly awkward question, even -- maybe especially -- for those musicians who love and admire him the most. His apparently awkward piano style was so much a part of his strangely convoluted and rhythmically challenging compositions that to play his music in what seems like a faithful and respectful style is to run the risk of sounding like a parodic imitator. Guitarist
Bobby Broom
is at less of a disadvantage than his piano-playing colleagues in this regard, because of the distance automatically granted him by his instrument. He makes sly reference to this fact on the cover of this delightful album, which is designed to mimic the cover art of
Monk
's classic album
Monk's Music
-- except instead of
himself sitting in the little red wagon, it's
Broom
's guitar. That allusiveness and gentle wit are everywhere present in his arrangements, and his playing as well: particularly in the elegant, almost offhandedly precise way he dances through
"Work,"
one of
's knottiest compositions, and on his proud and stately rendition of
"Ruby, My Dear,"
which is one of
's sweetest and loveliest.
"Ask Me Now"
starts off sounding just a bit awkward but then quickly falls into place;
's take on
"Evidence"
is one of the most powerful on the album, a tense and rigid head followed by a resolutely swinging solo. Bassist
Dennis Carroll
and drummer
Kobie Watkins
give
both the support and the space he needs to create a warm and wonderful tribute to one of America's finest composers. ~ Rick Anderson
Thelonious Monk
is always a slightly awkward question, even -- maybe especially -- for those musicians who love and admire him the most. His apparently awkward piano style was so much a part of his strangely convoluted and rhythmically challenging compositions that to play his music in what seems like a faithful and respectful style is to run the risk of sounding like a parodic imitator. Guitarist
Bobby Broom
is at less of a disadvantage than his piano-playing colleagues in this regard, because of the distance automatically granted him by his instrument. He makes sly reference to this fact on the cover of this delightful album, which is designed to mimic the cover art of
Monk
's classic album
Monk's Music
-- except instead of
himself sitting in the little red wagon, it's
Broom
's guitar. That allusiveness and gentle wit are everywhere present in his arrangements, and his playing as well: particularly in the elegant, almost offhandedly precise way he dances through
"Work,"
one of
's knottiest compositions, and on his proud and stately rendition of
"Ruby, My Dear,"
which is one of
's sweetest and loveliest.
"Ask Me Now"
starts off sounding just a bit awkward but then quickly falls into place;
's take on
"Evidence"
is one of the most powerful on the album, a tense and rigid head followed by a resolutely swinging solo. Bassist
Dennis Carroll
and drummer
Kobie Watkins
give
both the support and the space he needs to create a warm and wonderful tribute to one of America's finest composers. ~ Rick Anderson