Tim Whalen’s “Trio Volume 1” is as good as Wisconsin jazz piano trios get

What starts off with the accidental-sounding title “Uh Oh” rises as a knowing “bouncing with Bud” type groove, angular but shapely, harmonical lithe. This reminds me to note Whalen’s last album was Oblivion: The Music of Bud Powell, an ambitious and insightful absorption of the great bop pianist’s oeuvre, a giant who remains in the shadows of others. Another of Whalen’s primary sources is Chick Corea, whose music he performs, though mostly it’s originals.

This album secures the Milwaukee native in my mind as perhaps the root of a triad of the very best straight-ahead Wisconsin jazz pianists currently working. Moreover, it’s probably the best jazz piano trio album I’ve heard from a Badger.

Jazz pianist-composer Tim Whalen. Courtesy allevents.in

The Corea he evokes most is the early phenom of the seminal trio album Now He Sings, Now He Sobs, far more than the popular “Spanish Heart” mode of later years. Whalen wields that sort of burning facility, though not like the somewhat jamming “Now He Sings.” Here he adjusts his flame to a rich range of temperaments and ideas. “For Chick” is pensive with understated dramatics. And akin to the aforementioned album, drummer Hannah Johnson evokes the great Roy Haynes, especially on a tune like “January Beginning” with a propulsive snap and crackle of cymbals and snare. It’s actually a minorish theme that seems to honor the month’s atmospheric weight but with a conscious sense of pursuing elusive New Year’s resolutions.

Corea’s “Home Universe – Eternal Child” is a fascinating, deftly assembled diptych of grace notes and deeply felt accents reminiscent of the minimalist album cover of three curving strokes of paint, signifying the trio. This also sounds like a child reaching out tentatively, discovering something on her fingertips, which she’ll grow to know. Yet this ain’t the sound of innocence, she’s already an old soul. Some of Whelan’s deep chords hoist a child to the sky. It’s sonic poetry.

Cole Porter’s “So in Love” isn’t wimpy romantic brooding, rather the sound here of a bursting heart of heady passion, with Corea-esque blazing. Bassist John Christensen’s swift walking bass drives it while Johnson’s drums flare crystalline. Elsewhere, Christensen’s solos are always quietly lyrical and intelligent.

There’s more, but it resolves with the closer “Second-Hand Caffeine,” effortless pianistic sprinting over a Latin-esque tempo and a back beat creating a buoyant tension from perhaps the most joyously bounteous local drummer we’ve heard in a long time.

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Tim Whalen’s album release party is tonight, Friday, Nov. 21 at The Estate. Sets are at 7 and 9:30

The trio will also play at the North Street Cabaret, 610 North Street, in Madison, at 8 on Dec. 6.

Purchase Trio Vol. 1 here.

This review was originally published in The Shepherd Express, here: https://shepherdexpress.com/music/album-reviews/trio-vol-1-by-tim-whalen/

“The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell” on Friday tops off a big week for jazz in Milwaukee

The Waukesha nighclub Let it Be architecturally evokes the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where the Beatles first made their name. Photos courtesy GMToday.com

A Chair in the Sky: The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell

Let it Be, 716 Clinton Street, Waukesha

Friday, October 24. Doors open 4pm; Event is from 7:00 to 9:00PM
$15 Online | $20 at the door.

Website: Chair in the Sky

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“Oh, I wish I had a river/ I could skate away on…I made my baby cry…I’m so hard to handle/ I’m selfish and I’m sad/ Now I’ve gone and lost the best baby I ever had.”

Yes, that’s vintage Joni Mitchell, her wistfully melancholy “River” from the classic album Blue, among the songs Herbie Hancock commemorated musically on his extraordinary 2007 album River: The Joni Letters, which won both album of the year and best jazz album Grammies.

And coincidentally Hancock was the big-ticket jazz show in Milwaukee this week, and he’s earned his high prices over the decades though they’re now too steep for me, a freelance writer even with a career-long specialty in jazz. So it goes.

Still, those in my riverboat (ice-encumbered) — or on my unsteady skates – might keep pressing on to Friday night — an alternative jazz experience that’s far less expensive, being a round-the-fire gathering of gifted Milwaukee-area musicians, with an ingeniously ambitious concert concept, titled A Chair in the Sky: The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell.

Three of the musicians are known for singing: Father Sky (a.k.a. Anthony Deutsch) and Faith Hatch, both who also play keyboards, and guitarist Garrett Waite. A fourth vocalist, drummer Hannah Johnson, will likely add more harmony for some potentially rich vocal interpretations of jazz-oriented music of the sui generis singer-songwriter Mitchell. I’d argue Mitchell’s music has had some jazzical kinship going back to that album Blue, drenched in the blues, of sorts, as only Joni could.

And the “Chair” is a song title from Mitchell’s much later self-consciously jazzy album Mingus, so it’s fair to surmise that the herculean jazz bassist-composer Charles Mingus resides in the celestial chair, though her song only references long-lost “beautiful lovers” (including musical, no doubt) and the iconic bebop-and-beyond jazz club Birdland. She had collaborated with Mingus before he died in 1979. That song’s lyrics tell a striking idiosyncratic tale, which suits the peculiarly shapely sense of harmonic charges which was fairly unique to her music and a challenge, even for many jazz musicians.

So, this event could be revelatory or memory-refreshing for many listeners, unless you’re recently immersed in the music of Mingus and comparable Mitchell work. They’ll also draw from Hancock’s River: The Joni Letters album to bring the week to an ice-sparked, pirouetting full circle, of sorts.

I haven’t yet mentioned much of the musicianship involved, or the fact this will be held in one of the Milwaukee area’s most notable new music venues, now featuring a goodly amount of  jazz and related musics, Let it Be, in Waukesha, not exactly a suburb known for jazz. *

Yet the place’s name defies jazz esoterica: as Let it Be is, of course, among the most celebrated of late-era Beatles albums. At the same time, the space itself harkens to the fab four’s earliest days, with physical layout somewhat mimicking the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where the (pre-Ringo) “moptops” played a lunchtime gig in 1961 and earned five whole pounds.

 

Here’s some of the Beatles motif in Let It Be.

The brainchild of owner Dave Meister, Let it Be’s walls include photos documenting the Beatles’ extraordinary saga, along with a huge Union Jack flag. The club’s witty physical stylings begin with a silhouetted blackbird perched atop the outdoor overhanging sign adorned with the club’s name.

Let It Be opens tonight in Waukesha | Waukesha Co. Business News | gmtoday.com

The entrance to Let It Be, at 716 Clinton Street, Wakesha. 

Among the vocalists of the “Chair” concept group, Father Sky sings with a depth as substantial as his epic beard’s length, having developed a broodingly echoey folk-jazz vocal style most influenced by Nina Simone. He most recerntly collaborated with the hip-hop-jazz band KASE on a live album. Further he’s one of the most ingenious pianists to emerge in the region in quite some time, with a quirky, sophisticated harmonic sense, sonic adventurousness and rhythmic attack that seem perfectly suited to do Mitchell’s work justice. (And hmm —  Father Sky, did the event’s nominal concept arise from this fellow?)

Call & Response: Father Sky — Lab Notes

Father Sky (Anthony Deutsch) will sing and play keyboards for “A Chair in the Sky: The Jazz Side of Joni Mitchell.” Courtesy bloglicense.com

In other words, he’s a soulful singer, in his way, as is Hatch in hers, so the songs’ emotional weight should carry plenty of requisite power. Guitarist-singer Waite is in the straight-ahead jazz tradition but with enough fusion overtones to capture that aspect of Mitchell’s later work.

Then there’s saxophonist Aaron van Oudenallen (a.k.a. Aaron Gardner), of the group The Erotic Adventures of the Static Chicken, who can deliver fusion jazz with a deep background in post Coltrane jazz tradition. Bassist John Christensen is among the region’s most versatile and in-demand bassists, who released a fusion album last year, Soft Rock, which received a thumbs up review from Down Beat magazine.

Music + Media — Hannah Johnson

Hannah Johnson. Courtesy Philip Engsberg.

Finally, drummer Hannah Johnson (above, best known with the group Heirloom) plays across the area jazz scene much as any drummer these days because she’s also so versatile and drives a group with such rhythmic elan and swinging verve as to virtually “lift the bandstand” as Thelonious Monk memorably put it, a dictum that his group achieve something that “levitates” the music.

So, this adds up to a boatload of talent which prompted this preview as much as the concert concept.

So, I’d hardly presume to suggest “be there or be square,” but you could richly round out your recent musical experiences by finding a chair in this sky-seeking affair.

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* Thanks to my old friend, jazz pianist-composer Frank Stemper, who played at Let It Be a while ago, and alerted me to its special qualities.

 

Heirloom’s debut album initiates a legacy of lyricism, hard swing, and probing form

Album cover for Heirloom’s debut album “Familar Beginnings.” Courtesy Shifting Paradigm Records

With a jazz band’s name so lyrically titled, Milwaukee’s Heirloom shouldn’t have surprised us that their first recorded artifact is a musical objet de art. Of course, many musicians strive for art, but Familar Beginnings is the real thing. Chops-laden bandleader-guitarist Ben Dameron’s classical training helps underscore that a potent  lyricism deeply informs his calling.

The lyrical bent blooms in titles like “Eucalyptus Breeze” and the rustic “Indigo Tears,” a deep-dish slice of Bill Frisell-ish Americana. If the latter title also suggests a famous Ellington “mood,” it’s no coincidence as Heirloom digs elsewhere into the Strayhorn bounty chest with “Isfahan.” This interpretation gives a jaunty boost to saxophonist Johnny Hodges’ languid classic. Dameron’s melodic sense is fully woven into his structural form.

Heirloom (l-r: Ben Dameron, Tim Ipsen, Sam Taylor, Hannah Johnson) performs at an album release event recently at the Jazz Estate. Photo by Kevin Lynch

As for form, “Message from the Deep” appears almost “through composed” but probes depths that bring light to one’s fire. So, don’t worry about the album’s backbone. The penultimate tune drives the band around the final curve with full-throttle swinging. The piece, “Fake Block”” cagily suggests football, to me. Here drummer Hannah Johnson absolutely crackles spitfire, astride her apparent quest to become one of the upper Midwest’s best jazz drummers. Hardly undone, tenor saxophonist Sam Taylor doesn’t spare the horses he reins masterfully elsewhere.

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This review was orignally published in The Shepherd Express: https://shepherdexpress.com/music/album-reviews/familiar-beginnings-by-heirloom/

 

Heirloom passes the modern jazz tradition down and forward

(L-R) Saxophonist Jeanne Marie Farinelli, drummer Hannah Jonson and guitarist-composer Ben Dameron are the core members of Heirloom.

Heirloom will perform at 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 15 at Bar Centro, 804 E. Center Street, Milwaukee. For information: https://centrocaferiverwest.com/bar-centro/

One of the brightest and most auspicious recent manifestations of the Milwaukee jazz scene is a band called Heirloom. Their name seems well considered, as one senses how two distinctive talents, a man and a woman, have begat at jazz group with a firm sense of modern jazz tradition—the valuable object, in effect—and the skill and imaginative vision for how to cultivate their sense of it in beautiful and stimulating form.

The group is the byproduct of the confluence of guitarist-composer Ben Dameron and drummer Hannah Johnson, both rather unique musicians who add up to something greater than their parts. Dameron has developed into an electric jazz guitarist of distinct authority after becoming an accomplished classical guitarist. But the jazz bug bit him at some point and the first time I saw him perform was playing jazz solo on his classical guitar, at a house concert he shared with singer-pianist Anthony Deutsch a few years ago.

I first saw the couple sit in for one Thelonious Monk tune at Bar Centro in Milwaukee a few months ago. This one tune signaled the couple’s ease with the jazz tradition. Dameron was fleet and harmonically astute, as excellent as I anticipated on electric guitar. Johnson was an immediate revelation on this tune. I’d heard of her leading her own jazz group and good things about her. But she stunned me with her effortless mastery of modern jazz swing, in the propulsive style that makes the music a stimulating, sparkling conversation. Frankly, Johnson outplayed the drummer in the band she briefly sat in with and, I dare say, after seeing her now twice with Heirloom, she’s as good a jazz drummer as any in the region. I think of one who’s comparable with straight-ahead, yet more versatile, but damn, she swings like a windblown willow tree.

Feeling the Music

She flips out rimshots, tom-tom thumps, triplets, and paradiddles with the accenting flair of a master linguist. The language is jazz but you feel it sooner than you comprehend it, which is the way it should play. 1

Out front is tenor saxophonist Jeanne Marie Farinelli, another superb player. I heard a pensive, lyrical quality in her tone which reminds me of Wayne Shorter, as does her resourceful use of her horn’s full range, with occasional bottom notes for powerful punctuation.

The band opened the set with Miles Davis’s “Nardis” which resembles a Shorter piece in its epigrammatic spaciousness, so I momentarily mistook it for a Shorter tune even though I’ve played it many times on piano and it was actually made famous by pianist Bill Evans. That seamless stylistic commingling, intentional or not, seems one nominal quality of Heirloom’s style.

Similarly, their rendition of Thelonious Monk’s “Let’s Cool One” blended sensibilities: graced with lyricism like a garland of smoke curving around a line that typically rises like a cubist sculpture.

Although Johnson handled band introductions and naming the tunes, Dameron seems to be the conceptual leader. He typically polished the thematic statements to a gleaming sheen by harmonizing his guitar tightly with Farinelli’s sax. That, and his frequent use of a “chorus” pedal, recalled the “bright sized life” of Pat Metheny’s popular quartet.

Impressive originals

Plus, he filled out the two sets with his ambitious, impressive originals. The first one, “Messages from the Deep” was a drink of water you might drown in if your mind can’t swim. When I asked him if it was 64 bars through-composed, he just laughed and said “Yes, it’s pretty long. That came out of me one day when I was really feeling something deep way down inside.”

He explained that he’s a fan of sci-fi, like Dune (another Dameron tune, “Spice Trance,” specifically honors a scene in that book), and enjoys writing with a feel for metaphysical atmosphere, though his tunes are far more substantial than, say, typical New Age music, which often trivializes science fiction and metaphysical sensibilities.

Watching Dameron is revealing and sometimes amusing. He spent most of the gig with his right foot on the “chorus” pedal (though not overdoing the device), but the posture seems ingrained—classical guitarists always use a right-foot stand, which the pedal resembles. Then, while soloing in fast grooves, his left foot swung back and forth like a slightly overwound clock pendulum.

The current bassist is John Christensen, the band’s elder statesman, who lends vibrance, musicality and gravitas to any band. Plus, he’s the living pulse, a crucial quality.

By contrast was a guest pianist. Heirloom has worked as a quartet, which they did when I heard them play a few weeks earlier, at the Brady Street Festival. And outdoors, they cranked the volume and sounded like a great fusion band. At Bar Centro, dynamics and the repertoire were more tempered.

 

Heirloom as a quintet at Bar Centro recently, with pianist Lucas LeBeau (far left) and bassist John Christensen background). 

But Dameron had described the pianist sitting in as “a 17-year-old wunderkind.” Check that box. Slender, dark-haired Lucas LeBeau might resemble a young Jackson Browne, but even more boyish. Yet he has the extraordinary facility of someone deeply trained, if not innately gifted.

LeBeau seemed to ride the sustain pedal a bit much, perhaps striving to approximate the leader’s spiritual atmospherics. But he sounds like a keeper and Dameron hopes he remains one.

The guitarist is an imaginative thinker. But make no mistake, this is a serious but buoyant band. Both leaders, especially Johnson, brim with joy as the group percolates, and you hear their smiles in the music.

This band is a vine-fresh, living heirloom of jazz, something I’d buy as readily as anything in an antique shop, because you always feel their bass pulse and musical arteries, not just redolence of past glory.

Yet, like the most timeless jazz, Heirloom’s improvs reveal the mining and molding of artistic thought in real time.

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This article was first published in Shepherd Express, here: https://shepherdexpress.com/music/local-music/heirloom-at-ease-in-the-jazz-tradition/
1. Hannah Johnson earned a degree in jazz studies at Indiana University’s prestigious jazz studies program.