Home
Pittsburgh
Barnes and Noble
Pittsburgh
Current price: $33.99
Barnes and Noble
Pittsburgh
Current price: $33.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Matthew Stevens
is a Toronto-born, New York-based jazz guitarist. He is known to jazz fans as both a stylist and canny soloist.
Stevens
has worked extensively with trumpeter
Christian Scott
and
Esperanza Spalding
and more recently with
Terri Lynne Carrington's Social Science
band. He also co-leads the group that released
In Common
offerings with saxophonist
Walter Smith III
.
has two previous leader dates --
Woodwork
Preverbal
Pittsburgh
has no referent in his discography. The guitarist spent part of the COVID-19 lockdown in his wife's hometown of Pittsburgh, practicing on a recently purchased small-body, mahogany Martin 00-17. He was cutting short "starts" -- ideas and sketches that could be refined and expanded later. With assistance from his drummer and producer
Eric Doob
, he made preliminary versions of some of this material for The Jazz Gallery's virtual "Lockdown Sessions" video series, and a vision began articulating itself. While riding his bike,
fell and broke his elbow. Encouraged by a physical therapist aunt to continue practicing immediately, no matter how difficult, his "starts," became fully realized compositions. Eleven of them appear on the 32-minute
recorded them in two live sessions with a pair of Neumann U89 mics.
Despite its brevity,
is an ambitious collection whose pieces often fall into groups. As evidenced by the investigative opener "Ambler" and later on in "Northern Touch,"
explores various tonal and timbral faculties across a warm field of scalar inquiry appended by occasional chord voicings. When contrasted with other material here, they can sound a bit outside yet are hardly inaccessible. There are also flashier, more athletic arpeggiated studies such as the glorious "Purpose of a Machine" and spiky "Can Am" that showcase
' exquisite lyricism, while a reworking of the pastoral "Cocoon" (an earlier, more abstract, electric trio version appeared on 2017's
) juxtaposes open-tuned strummed chords and drones. Other pieces, including "Buckets," "Broke," and especially closer "Miserere," are hymn-like in tempo, cadence, and resonant harmonic assonance. Still others, such as the lilting "Foreign Ghosts," offer a melodic resonance that emerges like a tranquil pop ballad, while "Blue Blues" is a dramatic exercise in percussively arpeggiated acoustic wizardry and "Ending Is Beginning" explores circular single- and triple-note figures that evolve into more intimately detailed explorations of subtle color and texture. While some might disparage
's brief run time, it's actually optimal. Had these compositions been longer, they may not have sounded as intensely focused or bracing; if there were more of them, the album's impact might have been blunted. As it stands,
is warm and undeniably sharp. Each tune is distinct, cleverly written, and dazzlingly played. This is not only a fine entry in
' catalog but a stellar addition to the jazz guitar canon. ~ Thom Jurek
is a Toronto-born, New York-based jazz guitarist. He is known to jazz fans as both a stylist and canny soloist.
Stevens
has worked extensively with trumpeter
Christian Scott
and
Esperanza Spalding
and more recently with
Terri Lynne Carrington's Social Science
band. He also co-leads the group that released
In Common
offerings with saxophonist
Walter Smith III
.
has two previous leader dates --
Woodwork
Preverbal
Pittsburgh
has no referent in his discography. The guitarist spent part of the COVID-19 lockdown in his wife's hometown of Pittsburgh, practicing on a recently purchased small-body, mahogany Martin 00-17. He was cutting short "starts" -- ideas and sketches that could be refined and expanded later. With assistance from his drummer and producer
Eric Doob
, he made preliminary versions of some of this material for The Jazz Gallery's virtual "Lockdown Sessions" video series, and a vision began articulating itself. While riding his bike,
fell and broke his elbow. Encouraged by a physical therapist aunt to continue practicing immediately, no matter how difficult, his "starts," became fully realized compositions. Eleven of them appear on the 32-minute
recorded them in two live sessions with a pair of Neumann U89 mics.
Despite its brevity,
is an ambitious collection whose pieces often fall into groups. As evidenced by the investigative opener "Ambler" and later on in "Northern Touch,"
explores various tonal and timbral faculties across a warm field of scalar inquiry appended by occasional chord voicings. When contrasted with other material here, they can sound a bit outside yet are hardly inaccessible. There are also flashier, more athletic arpeggiated studies such as the glorious "Purpose of a Machine" and spiky "Can Am" that showcase
' exquisite lyricism, while a reworking of the pastoral "Cocoon" (an earlier, more abstract, electric trio version appeared on 2017's
) juxtaposes open-tuned strummed chords and drones. Other pieces, including "Buckets," "Broke," and especially closer "Miserere," are hymn-like in tempo, cadence, and resonant harmonic assonance. Still others, such as the lilting "Foreign Ghosts," offer a melodic resonance that emerges like a tranquil pop ballad, while "Blue Blues" is a dramatic exercise in percussively arpeggiated acoustic wizardry and "Ending Is Beginning" explores circular single- and triple-note figures that evolve into more intimately detailed explorations of subtle color and texture. While some might disparage
's brief run time, it's actually optimal. Had these compositions been longer, they may not have sounded as intensely focused or bracing; if there were more of them, the album's impact might have been blunted. As it stands,
is warm and undeniably sharp. Each tune is distinct, cleverly written, and dazzlingly played. This is not only a fine entry in
' catalog but a stellar addition to the jazz guitar canon. ~ Thom Jurek