|
"Day and Age" is the new release
from the Twin Cities' premiere progressive
'chamber jazz' trio Triplicate. This is the second
release from this band. Triplicate is composed of top Twin
Cities' musicians Joel Shapira on electric
guitar, Bruce "Pooch" Heine on acoustic & electric
bass, and David Stanoch on drums. This CD
satisfies the listener with a variety of tunes with passages evoking
emotions from broody contemplation to giddy
exuberance.
All members of this band display their
compositional skills on this recording. It opens with "Hit on
Twelve" penned by Joel Shapira. This tune
has a haunting middle-eastern melody that rides over an
infectious groove that evokes the exotic and sets the stage
for the rest of the album by preparing us to listen to something new,
even in the familiar. This CD is thinking man's music that doesn't
leave out the body or soul and engages the listener on different
levels. Like the oft-recorded standard "On Green Dolphin Street"
which is presented with a fresh approach. Beginning with gentle
chords and a light Latin treatment on the
drums, the bass is mainly petal point during Joel's guitar solo then
suddenly Pooch changes to a walking bass line and the drum work is
more swinging and the tune just opens up like an orchid
revealing it's delicate beauty. .
This is followed by the bebop standard
"Move", which is true to its name and really moves with Stanoch
pushing the tempo. This tune also features Stanoch
on a wonderfully musical drum solo. The pace is taken down
several notches on the next tune, Miles Davis' (or Bill Evans')
beautiful ballad "Blue and Green" from the the 1959 "Kind
of Blue". Another from Joel Shapira, "Fowl Language" uses the
the musical language of Charlie Parker, aka Bird. This is followed by
a reverent but edgy treatment of Monk's
"Epistory".
The ten tracks on this CD are evenly
divided between originals and original takes on standards -
if you consider John Mclaughlin's "Dance of the Maya" from the
Mahavishnu Orchestra's seminal fusion album
"Inner Mounting Flame" a standard. Throughout it all this band
never loses cohesion. The musicians function as a single unit
intertwining their individual strands of
sound into a delightful aural tapestry.
I highly recommend this CD.
Catch the CD release
celebration at the Dakota, 1010 Nicolett Mall in Minneapolis on
February 17th |