|
|
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A fascinating debut, June 6, 2004
Tom Lawton is a Philadelphia pianist who's been working hard on developing a formidable, twohanded playing style that draws on a wide spectrum of jazz (from mainstream piano to the avantgarde) & has slowly put together on a very ambitious body of compositions. His interest is in the long form--some of these pieces are as long & involved as Mingus's "Sue's Changes" or "Open Letter to Duke". Sometimes the results do seem a bit unwieldy--"Islands" for instance is very pretty but it left me often wondering where it was headed, & almost all these tracks are very, very long--but mostly the results are genuinely fresh & thought-provoking. "Waxing Schachterian" for instance does something with Monk's legacy utterly different than anyone else has got out of Monk, & "Dig the Chartreuse" does something similarly original with familiar hard-bop idioms. There are also three pieces which push out into freely improvised territory--best of all on "The Norman D Invasion" & "Archetypal Archives", which will take unawares any listeners who haven't been listening closely & haven't noticed how much freedom Lawton works into even the more orthodox tracks. He's got an excellent, all-Philadelphia band with him (Ben Schachter on saxophones, John Swana on trumpet, Lee Smith on bass, Jim Miller on drums; on "The Norman D Invasion" Schachter sits out in favour of clarinettist Norman David, whom actually I would have liked to hear more of); but though sometimes Lawton simply plays in a fairly uncontroversial mainstream jazz piano style, he's always capable of doing something genuinely startling, & tends to hold my attention the most.Besides the free pieces, my favourites here are the two solo performances, the only standards on the date: a breathtaking dash through "Donna Lee" (lightning-fast yet without a note out of place) & the extraordinary Impressionist meditation on Wayne Shorter's "Juju". Let's put it this way: if you've ever found yourself collecting Concord's Maybeck Recital Hall series of solo piano discs, you'll find these tracks utterly fascinating. I'll give this four stars simply as a warning: though it's not "difficult" music exactly, you still do need to work at it a bit. I could wish DreamBox Media had put together a more inviting package--the title & cover art aren't exactly inspiring, & listeners unfamiliar with Lawton's name may baulk at purchasing a double-CD by a largely unknown musician with (except for Swana) largely unknown sidemen. Perhaps it would have been worth boiling down these two hours of music to a single 80-music CD. But I shouldn't complain too much: this release is well worth the trouble if you're looking for something a little different--this isn't as obviously "innovative" as, say, a Greg Osby or Don Byron disc, but deep down Lawton's just as explorary a musician. Let's hope Lawton returns to the studio agian soon--in which case I have my fingers crossed that he does a solo disc or a duet disc, because he's a player who gets better & better the more open space he's given. The solo pieces, the free pieces, & the trumpet-piano duet "Grey Matter Doesn't" are the highlights for me on this set. & do dig around on the web for the excellent interview with Lawton done in the 1990s by Vic Schermer--it's a good read & gives you a real sense of the man & his thoughtful, disciplined approach to musicmaking.
|