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Barnes and Noble

Something to Live For

Current price: $22.99
Something to Live For
Something to Live For

Barnes and Noble

Something to Live For

Current price: $22.99

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Ran Blake
's tonal universe is a rich and varied one. Given his mastery of pianistic technique, his composer's sense of drama and timing, and the improviser's trust of his instincts when playing in unusual textural contexts, he has created a body work that, while outside the mainstream, shouldn't be. Only
Bill Evans
,
Paul Bley
, and
Keith Jarrett
could be said to have as wide a range of musical interests as
Blake
, but even these men --
Bley
an exception -- reigned themselves in improvisation ally.
's vast expanse is governed by a barely hidden tenderness always. Whether the music approaches silence or the battlefields of warring gods, his hands firmly play -- and sometimes err -- on the side of the human heart. On this set, where the artist is featured solo and in duet, either with the guitar (
David Fabris
) or clarinet (
Guillermo Gregorio
),
uses the different tonalities these instruments bring to create more of an exposition of his own. There are the beautiful patterns of dueling guitar and piano chords that wind each other into a Moebius strip on
Duke Ellington
's tune which names this album. Then, there is the brief, almost whispered restraint of microtones explored between
and
Gregorio
on
"Enigma Suite: Part 1"
which gives way to
"Memphis,"
a
souled
-out impressionistic (meaning
Debussy
) read of both
Motown
Stax
/
Volt
soul
. With falling ninths moving into augmented sevenths and a shift into an off, minor key, the piece may come from the land of
, but travels toward the village of the Pharoahs. Similarly, in his reading of
Al Green
's little-known gem
"Judy,"
Fabris
plays the melody through a series of seventh chords and
's harmony comes from inside the tune's bassline -- and it's transformed by being played in the middle and upper registers on the piano.
's own
"Impresario of Death"
begins with a series of chords used by both
Beethoven
Erik Satie
! After the initial bravissimo opening,
moves to ppp for a few moments, ghosting out a melodic structure until
slides his own ghost dance into the mix, becoming the title's subject. He squeaks and squawks through
's gorgeous, ambiguous harmonies until four minutes and some odd seconds later, we are father away from an understanding of the "impresario" than ever before -- though we know we've been visited by it. If you balance these highly experimental works -- which would number all four parts of the
"Enigma Suite"
and the
"Elijah Rock"
's I and II, all understated and played from inside -- with well known
jazz
stalwarts such as
"Night in Tunisia,"
"Mood Indigo,"
Mingus
'
"Eclipse"
you get a microscopic view of
's sound world, how truly vast and complex it is. And yet, it is always available, ready to reveal itself in all its totality, for virtually anyone who cares enough to approach it. This is what makes a genius: big vision and an accessible manner of offering it. But then,
, if nothing else by the evidence of this single album, is a musical genius. ~ Thom Jurek

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