Showing posts with label Tommy Flanagan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tommy Flanagan. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2025

The Elegant Piano of a Storyteller. Ted Rosenthal Trio- "High Standards"

 

Ted Rosenthal Trio: High Standards-TMR Music

New York based Ted Rosenthal is a lyrical pianist whose work is often admired for his facile skill, invention, and conversationalist qualities. The man has the rare  ability to elegantly transform the jazz canon into a storytelling experience, and I compare his style to the great Tommy Flanagan, whose playing comes to mind as an influence. 

Rosenthal studied classical piano and received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the Manhattan School of Music in performance. Rosenthal’s love of jazz never left his soul. He studied with pianists Jaki Byard and Lennie Tristano, besides playing with such luminaries as Gerry Mulligan, Phil Woods and Bill Brookmeyer amongst others.

I first got to hear Rosenthal with his working trio of Noriko Ueda on bass and Tim Horner on drums, in a small, unmemorable hideaway in Mamaroneck, NY sometime back in the nineteen-nineties. Or was it the early two-thousands? No matter, at the time I was impressed by just how effervescent, joyful and elegant this pianist's performance was. Time together had honed the trio to develop an uncanny sixth sense for where Rosenthal’s fertile mind might lead and the results were top notch.

Besides his trio, solo and session work, Rosenthal has spent many of his subsequent years educating the next pianistic generation as a faculty member at his alma mater, The Manhattan School of Music, at Julliard, and at The New School jazz programs.

His latest album, High Standards, released in March of this year, is a thoroughly enjoyable, just under sixty-five-minute, nine-selection recording of some memorable standards by such composers as Bernstein/Sondheim, Carmichael/Mercer, and Van Heusen/Burke to name a few.

Rosenthal opens with Leonard Bernstein's “Jet Song,” from the show West Side Story. Rosenthal is joined by the bassist Martin Wind and his long-time drummer Tim Horner. The trio offers a playful jaunt through this energized music that was linked to a splendid dance number in the musical. Rosenthal dances on his keyboard, Wind punctuates the bravado sentiment and provides some arco poignancy, and Horner cadences the steps on his trap set to the point that you can see the gang members dance in your mind's eye.

Carmichael’s “Skylark” has been a favorite of improvisers for over eighty years. Rosenthal’s piano intro is a miniature masterful melodic statement that radiates with splendor before the trio joins with an expansive, soft swing. Wind offers a plucky bass solo as Horner deftly adds complimentary brush work. Rosenthal’s piano, never predictable, finds multiple ways to explore the melody by using dynamics and rhythmic changes.

“Old Devil Moon” is a Burton Lane composition that finds Rosenthal with his long-time bassist Noriko Ueda and drummer Quincy Davis. The three use a staccato rhythmic approach here that features some impressive bass pizzicato work in synch with some syncopated trap work, along with piano accents. Rosenthal can swing with the best of them, or he can provide stunning ascending and descending lines that flow from his keyboard like warm butter on hot pancakes. The music is energized and joyful. There are some creative exchanges between Ueda’s bass and Rosenthal’s piano, a treat that reveals just how well these two bandmates know each other.

The music continues with “Everything That Happens to Me,” originally played by Tommy Dorsey’s Orchestra and sung by Frank Sinatra. The song also found versions popularized by voices like Billie Holiday and Chet Baker. Rosenthal expresses the thematic emotions of despair, loneliness, and the resolve of being on the wrong side of fate, with his own sensitive pianistic interpretation of this Matt Dennis composition.  A warm pizzicato solo by Wind is another feature.

Johnny Van Heusen’s “It Could Happen to You” offers hope, surprise, and romantic optimism in contrast to the previous composition.  Rosenthal cleverly changes the mood and treats this one with a more upbeat swing. Whatever the mood of the composition evokes, Rosenthal has the tools to explore these emotions. If the pianist feels joy in the music, he transmits that joy through to the listener using embellishment, tone and rhythmic variation. As a listener, the essence of the music is told to you aurally, but it is almost like the story is being conveyed visually. Erroll Garner was a master at this and so is Rosenthal.

The remainder of the album includes “To Life.” Marvin Hamlisch’s “One,” “Lover Man” made famous by Billie Holiday and Tom McIntosh’s “The Cup Bearer.”

The two trios were recorded on separate dates in July and August of 2024 and each offer their own special moments as they interact with the pianist. Ted Rosenthal’s playing has gotten even better over the years. His splendid command of the material and the bottomless depth of the man’s creative well from which he draws makes High Standards a delightful album that offers the listener hours of enjoyment.

Saturday, April 29, 2023

Benny Green Brings His Pianistic Excellence to Portland's 1905

Benny Green 

Last night, the superb pianist Benny Green played two solo piano shows at Portland's fantastic jazz club 1905. I was fortunate enough to get to see him play the first set. Green is a seasoned musician who paid his dues as a pianist with jazz greats like Betty Carter, Art Blakey, and Ray Brown. Along the way, Green found time to be a potent sideman for many notable others like Freddie Hubbard, Don Braden, Houston Person, and Ralph Moore to name just a few. He has been recording as a leader since his first record "Prelude" in 1988 and has twenty albums as a leader in his discography. One of my favorites was "Source" from 2010 with the astute rhythm section of Peter Washington on bass and Kenny Washington on drums, which he was nice enough to sign my copy of after the show.


On this night Green played the grand piano solo and treated the full and respectful crowd to a series of songs mined from some of jazz history's recognizable, but often forgotten pianist/composers treasure chest.

The set started out with Tadd Dameron's gorgeous "If You Could See Me Now" and followed with a who's who of piano legends' work -Horace Silver's "Come On Home," John Hicks' "Naima's Love Song, "Hank Jones "Minor Contention," Bobby Timmons "This Here." Let's not forget compositions from Barry Harris, Duke Pearson, or master Tommy Flanagan's "Minor Mishap." 




The man has an encyclopedic memory bank of songs that he can play like they are tattooed in his cerebral cortex. Green is a facile player who employed stunningly fast arpeggios on Kenny Barron's "NY Attitude." He chose one of McCoy Tyner's more beautiful ballads "Sunset"  to show his sensitivity and subtle touch, and ended with alto saxophonist Benny Carter's wonderful "When Lights Are Low."

I've heard Green's scorching piano work on Bud Powell's "Tempus Fugit" from his "Source" album- the man has chops- and he showed them judiciously here. He could stride with the best of them, peppers in some boogie-woogie, give some funk a la Silver, and his double-handed Shearing-like attack on a few songs was pure pleasure.
Despite his knowledge of the history and the influences that he has absorbed- Powell, Oscar Peterson, and Wynton Kelly have been mentioned-Green's playing is all his own and it was a delight to see, hear him on stage and engage with him after the show. Benny Green is a true pianistic treasure that should not be missed.

Benny's latest release will be titled Solo and release on May 12, 2023.