| Andy Milne, John Hébert, and Kush Abady at 1905 Jazz Club |
On Wednesday November 12, 2025, at Portland's premium jazz club 1905, the Juno award winning Canadian pianist Andy Milne brought his trio Unison in support of a tour featuring the music of his latest Sunnyside album Time Will Tell. On this West Coast tour, Milne's Unison trio included the superb bassist John Hébert, who was on the album, and the colorist drummer Kush Abady, who ably replaced the percussion work of Clarence Penn, who was the original drummer on the album.
| Andy Milne and Unison-Time Will Tell-Sunnyside records |
I first saw Milne perform as the pianist with the eclectic trumpeter Ralph Alessi's quartet when they played 1905 back in June of 2023. For those of interest you can read my review of Alessi's group performance here. After seeing the impressive Milne in action with Alessi, I made it my business to do some research and listen to more of this pianist's work. After listening to his Juno award winning album The re Mission, a emotionally moving album that traced Milne's experience with his own personal diagnosis of cancer, his following treatment and eventually his full remission from the condition, I became an enthusiastic fan. When Milne released Time Will Tell, his Sunnyside release from April of 2024, I had a listen and reviewed this fine album which you can read here. When I heard Milne and his trio was going to come to play in my favorite venue in my area I couldn't resist.
Hearing this group play 'live' and experience the dynamic interaction and intuitive comradery these three guys can generate while playing some of today's most modern and exciting music is like being a kid in an ice cream store. A real treat!
Part of Milne's imprimatur is his distinctive pork-pie style hat, a flat-toped felt or straw fedora that resembles a pork pie and thus the name. The artist facially reminds me a little of the actor Jeff Goldbum.
| Andy Milne at 1905 Jazz Club |
The group opened the early set I attended with a composition from Milne, "Purity of Heart," which was from the latest album Time Will Tell. The album is partially inspired by his personal search as an adopted child for his birth mother and his roots. Milne opens with a beautiful, classically influenced piano entre. The music is propelled by an syncopated, ostinato-based flow, brilliantly maintained by Hébert and Abady. In the original album version, the music has Ingrid Laubroch's tenor saxophone as the key foil to Milne's piano work. On this live set, the trio, and specifically, the counterpoint of Hébert's fluid bass work, was key to the alluring interactivity. The music had its own heartbeat, an organic drive that flows like a dynamic life-force. Milne's keyboard work is emotive and inventive, lively yet melodic, tense yet beautiful. The threesome find joy and excitement in their magical bond and it shows. The audience loved it.
The second song was bassist Hébert's gorgeously reflective "Broken Landscape," which was also from the current album. Milne's piano work explores while maintaining sensitivity to the composition's intent. Beauty flows seamlessly from this man's mind to his hands. Hébert's arco work resonates with feeling through the room. Abady's expanded palette includes subtle colors urged by timely rim shots, deft use of sticks, brushes or hands, and using the abrasion of the surface of cymbals to great effect. His percussive ingenuity was a highlight of the evening.
| John Hébert |
"Kumoi Joshi" is another composition of Milne from the latest album. Milne has been intrigued by Japanese string music as played on the Koto, a thirteen string, zither-like instrument that is plucked. This piece was played on the Koto on the album by Yoko Reikano Kimura and had some saxophone work by Laubroch.
Kumoi Joshi is translated as Cloud Scale and refers to a scale used by Koto players that is characterized by an interval structure that gives music a bright and exotic quality. On this night, the music opened with a repeating piano line from Milne that is countered by Hébert's bass and some tom work by Abady. Hébert's arco enters the picture where the Koto would have been played in the album. Milne's piano lines ascend and descend and seem to by following a path that has no particular destination. The trio seem to find common ground in executing this odd scale-based music.
Milne reprised his "Drive by-The Fall" from his album The re Mission. This composition was written by the pianist as an appreciation of nature. When diagnosed with his cancer, Milne had to acknowledge the fact that sometimes nature can confront you with challenges. What Milne had to face, upon receiving his diagnosis, was like being in a drive-by accident- confusion, unbelief, despair and eventually acceptance. The only positive way to deal with such challenges is to resolve yourself to being resolute, to embracing confidence in yourself and in your ability to rise above what is before you. The music opens with a roiling drum solo that has a disrupting, staccato-like jaggedness to it. The piano and bass enter the ascending and descending lines that seem to emulate a person who is trying to gain their bearings after being disoriented. Abady and Hébert create the landscape upon which Milne's piano work seems to be searching for stability. The trio brings the music to an apex of excitement before Hébert takes out his bow to beautifully punctuate the coda and then Abady creates his own vortex of percussive excitement.
| Kush Abady |
The trio gives the audience a treat with the standard, Billy Strayhorn's "Isfahan." Milne's ability to expand on the theme with aplomb is on display. A lyrical musician of great depth, his piano sings the immediately recognizable theme. Hébert plays the foil with his astute walking that always seems to be adding some timely counterpoint ideas simultaneously. He keeps the ear from being able to predict the next move. Hébert's pizzicato fluidity is impressive and Abady adds his own fertile percussive ideas. These three working together is like a testament to the making of creative music and the appreciative audience members are the grateful recipients.
Milne closes this set with McCoy Tyner's "Passion Dance" which was the opening tune from The re Mission. The repeating melodic line is identifiable and sets the stage for Milne's pianistic exploration. Hébert and Abady maintain the initial pace before the three move it up a level. This allows Milne's piano power to let loose in the modal mode. This trio continually urge each other on to new heights.
The set was a resounding success, even charming those in the audience who were new to Milne's music. This is a special trio and if you can catch them before the end this tour at some of the future locations like Scottsdale, AZ or Santa Fe , NM than don't hesitate. You will not be disappointed.
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