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Artist:
Frank Hewitt
Label: Smalls Records Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD UPC: 616892565925 EAN: 0616892565925 ASIN: B0001GF2BU Release Date: 2004-02-03 |
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Better late than never.......2004-06-18
This is quintessential insider's jazz: gorgeous wrong-way piano, with a stumbling-butterfly piano technique & follow-your-ear harmonic sensibility. In the best Powell tradition he favours dark lefthand chords that growl at the listener, but instead of tangly bebop righthand lines Hewitt likes long runs that shoot off into the top of the piano, the notes falling off the keyboard like drops of water. When Hewitt plays "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" it's genuinely eerie, like hearing Bud Powell's spirit sit down at the piano bench. The choice of tunes is a time-capsule in itself: "Polka Dots", "Ghost of a Chance", "That Ole Devil Called Love", "I Remember You".... But there's nothing timelocked about the playing, which is as rich & fertile as Nile mud. "Cherokee" is pure excitement, because rather than in spite of Hewitt's pushing his fingers to the limit. His on-the-fly reharmonizations of ballads are sometimes so startling I had to laugh--I mean, what can you say when someone seems determined to prove in every way he can that you _can_ play a B-flat over an A-major chord, for 8 bars? & then there's the deepset, lilting groove, which comes out best of all on midtempo swingers like "I Remember You" & Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird".
The album has a couple minor flaws. The first is the order of tracks: there are four ballads (of eight tracks), & for some reason three of them are placed right at the start, so listeners may find the shuffle-play option necessary. The bassist, Ari Roland, plays well, but some listeners may find his old-fashioned-sounding bowed-bass features (as scratchy & nasal as Paul Chambers) a bit annoying, though fortunately they're quite brief (often just half a chorus). But neither of these flaws detracts from the excitement of hearing Hewitt himself--it's clear even from just this album, recorded at the end of his life, that he was a master pianist.
Listeners who are looking for technically sussed, fully codified jazz piano will have little patience with _We Loved You_. But those who respond to the deep chordal voodoo & broken-spiderweb righthand lines of the classic bop pianists will find the disc meat & drink. Let's hope Kaven can dig some more Hewitt out of the archives--it would be a tragedy if this were all he left behind.
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