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“Perhaps the leading
pianist of his generation.” –Boston Globe
Last October I was fortunately in New
York during pianist Fred Hersch’s residency at Jazz Standard.
During his week-long engagement, Hersch appeared with a different
guest artist each night, allowing for a lot of varied exploration,
great music, and fun. Now Mulgrew Miller, hot off the release of
highly successful, back-to-back trio recordings (Live at Yoshi’s
1& 2, MaxJazz), settles in for a celebratory week of his own
(August 16-21). Marking his 50th birthday, this monster
pianist will perform in diverse settings, with his trio and guests
(including vibist Steve Nelson and sax legend Joe Lovano), in duo
with Kenny Barron, and with his sextet Wingspan.
Mulgrew Miller has enjoyed a
thirty-year career atop the pool of pianists influenced by legendary
Oscar Peterson and the great but under-rated Phineas Newborn. Growing
up in Greenwood, Mississippi, young Miller was immersed in gospel and
blues, playing gospel at church and blues and R&B for dance
bands. He also studied classical piano and formed a trio while in
high school, but did not really appreciate jazz until he saw Oscar
Peterson perform on television. Said Miller in an interview with All
About Jazz, “When I saw him, I realized there was a way to do
something with music -- and do it with integrity and in a way that
demanded virtuosity but wasn't classically oriented.” Pivotal to
Miller’s transition to jazz was his studies at Memphis State
University with Donald Brown and James Williams, pianists who would
later work with Miller in the late 80s-early 90s as part of the
Contemporary Piano Ensemble (along with a very young Geoff Keezer and
Harold Mabern), dedicated to the music of Memphis’ native son
Phineas Newborn. With Williams and Brown, Miller often caught
Newborn’s sets at the Gemini in Memphis. “So that's where I
really began to seriously learn jazz,” he notes.
AC.jpg) Derrick Hodge, Photo by Andrea Canter
One of Mulgrew Miller’s earliest jobs
was as pianist for the Mercer Ellington Orchestra. Then Cedar Walton
introduced Miller to Betty Carter, and he moved to New York, spending
the next 8 months with the great vocalist/educator. Following his
tenure with Carter, Miller performed with Woody Shaw, Johnny Griffin,
Art Blakey, and 7 years with Tony Williams. “From the Ellington
band through Tony Williams, I was literally in a band every single
day for 16 years.” Miller also was a frequent collaborator with Joe
Lovano in the late 80s, turning his priorities to his own trio and
other ensembles in the 90s while still performing or recording with
such artists as Diane Reeves, Rene Marie, Steve Turre, Kenny Garrett,
Joe Lovano, and Gary Burton. He also collaborated with the late Niels
Henning Orstad Pedersen on a recording and series of performances in
tribute to the great piano/bass duos of Ellington and Blanton.
But Miller’s
focus lately has been his trio with Derrick Hodge and Rodney Holmes,
as well as the quintet Wingspan. When asked how his approach to his
small ensembles differs from his soloing, Miller noted, “In a trio
or quintet, I sometimes tend to become more focused on melodic
improvising. And especially in a quintet, I'll have a more concise
approach to playing. But as a solo performer, I try to be more
orchestral and use more of the entire instrument. After all, it's
just you, so you need to come up with different things to make the
music more interesting. In essence, I do things that are more
pianistic.”
Miller has released a number of
recordings as leader for Landmark, Criss Cross, Verve and most
recently, the two trio volumes, Live at Yoshi’s on MaxJazz.
Noted Time Out New York, “True to his blues-tinged
upbringing, he's a bop intellectual with an unabashed gift for
populism. That explains both the thundering jabs in his
sparkling runs and the sleekness in his writing and arranging."
Miller’s
bassist on both Live at Yoshi’s volumes, and for the Jazz
Standard gig, is young Derrick Hodge, who has also
worked with Terrell Stafford, Clark Terry and Terence Blanchard. A
graduate of Temple University in Philadelphia, he was named
outstanding soloist for Temple’s top-rated collegiate big band at
the 2001 Villanova Jazz Festival. Rounding out the core trio is
multi-Grammy award-winner, drummer Rodney Holmes.
Behind the trapset since his 4th grade junior band in
Westchester, NY, Holmes has worked with Clyde Criner, Special EFX,
the Zawinul Syndicate, Carlos Santana (including the 1993 tour with
Bob Dylan), the Brecker Brothers, Wayne Shorter, Larry Coryell, and
more.
The
full line-up for Mulgrew Miller’s birthday week:
August
16, Trio with Steve Nelson. Veteran vibes master Steve
Nelson played with Grant Green as a teenager and went on to earn
undergraduate and graduate degrees at Rutgers. He has performed
and/or recorded with many top jazz artists, including Kenny Barron,
Bobby Watson, David Fathead Newman, Johnny Griffin, and Jackie
McLean; current collaborations include Dave Holland (Quintet and Big
Band), Mulgrew Miller's Wingspan, and the Lewis Nash Trio. The
Pittsburgh native is also a noted composer and educator.  Kenny Barron
August
17-18, Duets with Kenny Barron. Early in his career,
Phildelphian Kenny Barron played at New York’s Five Spot with James
Moody. In the 1960s, Barron toured with Gillespie, Stanley
Turrentine, and Freddie
Hubbard, then with with Yusef Lateef, Buddy Rich,
and Ron Carter in the 1970s. In the early 1980s he founded Sphere
with Charlie Rouse before developing his own trio and quintet. He
also served as Stan Getz’ last pianist. Currently working with his
newest ensemble, Canta Brasil, Barron also has been devoted to
teaching, serving on the Rutgers faculty from 1973-2000. Going strong
through the 1990s and into the new century, the Los Angeles Times
named him "one of the top jazz pianists in the world" and
Jazz Weekly called him "The most
lyrical piano player of our time." The recipient of 9 Grammy
nominations since 1992 on Verve, Barron was named Best Pianist by the
Jazz Journalists Association for four consecutive years and runner up
for 2001 Jazzpar International Jazz Prize. Zan Stewart (Newark
Star-Ledger) noted, “Melodically gifted, he offers
sumptuous thoughts as well as those that are stark. He delivers
alternately open and dense harmonies that buoy his music; his
sure-footed rippling rhythms make everything flow.”  Joe Lovano, Photo by Andrea Canter
August 19-20, Trio with Steve
Nelson and Joe Lovano. Joining the Mulgrew Miller Trio and
vibist Steve Nelson is one of the foremost tenor saxophonists of our
time. Growing up in Cleveland, Joe Lovano studied with
his father (tenor saxophonist Tony “Big T” Lovano) and absorbed
the influences of Sonny Stitt, James Moody, Gene Ammons, Rashaan
Roland Kirk, Dizzy Gillespie, and later the experimental work of John
Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, and Jimmy Giuffre. After attending the
Berklee College of Music in Boston, Lovano made his recording debut
with organ master Lonnie Smith and worked with Jack McDuff before
joining Woody Herman’s Thundering Herd. He went on to perform with
top big bands and touring artists, releasing a series of acclaimed
recordings that garnered many Grammy nominations, winning the 2000
award for Best Large Ensemble recording, 52nd Street Themes.
He heads the Caramoor Jazz Festival in upstate New York and holds the
first Gary Burton Chair for Jazz Performance at Berklee.
 5-05.jpg) Steve WIlson, Photo by Andrea Canter
August 21, Mulgrew Miller and
Wingspan. Miller closes out his birthday week with his
acclaimed sextet, Wingspan. The core trio of Miller, Hodge and Holmes
is augmented by Steve Nelson, alto saxman Steve Wilson, and trumpeter
Duane Eubanks. The ensemble’s 2002 recording The Sequel
(MaxJazz) topped the radio charts shortly after its release, and
prompted C. Michael Bailey (All About Jazz) to write, “The
music swings with a wholesome, well-behaved lilt. The solos are all
informative and the band composition perfect. Duane Eubanks (brother
of Kevin and Robin) provides an absolutely beautiful open-bell
trumpet tone, while Steve Wilson’s reeds are sensitive and
rhythmic. Steve Nelson provides the vibe for the band, performing
with an anti-Milt Jackson tone that is entirely his own.” Miller
formed Wingspan in the late 1980s, but only Steve Nelson returns from
the original group; and since the 2002 recording, Holmes has replaced
Karreim Riggins on drums and Hodge has replaced Richie Goods on bass.
Wingspan will feature original compositions from Mulgrew Miller and
dynamic interplay among the six musicians.
Mulgrew Miller is one of the most
acclaimed pianists on this or any other planet, and his 50th
birthday celebration at Jazz Standard will give New York audiences a
chance to see this monster performer in outstanding company, from duo
to sextet. Fifty never sounded better.
“…No pianist of Miller’s
generation brings such a wide a stylistic palette to the table.”
–Down Beat
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