The Musician (Concord)
Chick Corea
Released April 2017
AllMusic Favorite Jazz Albums 2017
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About:
Chick Corea first laid eyes on New York’s Greenwich Village in 1959, fresh from high school, with a head full of music that only he could have imagined. With this new release The Musician, recorded in the epicenter of Chick’s original NYC haunts and more than 50 years later, Corea finally brings all that music together at once.
The new live 3-CD and Blu-ray set captures Corea’s 70th birthday celebration at the famed Blue Note Jazz Club in 2011, where he assembled a staggering lineup of musical friends and fellow-travelers – among them Herbie Hancock, Bobby McFerrin, Wynton Marsalis, John McLaughlin and Stanley Clarke – for a month-long residency featuring 10 different bands, including triumphal sets by his own Chick Corea Elektric Band and Return to Forever. All of it is captured brilliantly in the first feature-length documentary on Corea’s life, music and genius musical partners. The film takes you inside the heads and “hangs” of some of the greatest artists of our time – backstage and personal – and the CDs capture almost four hours of live recordings of every band.
The deluxe hardcover edition, including the film on Blu-ray, in addition to the 3 CDs, an essay by Robin D. G. Kelley and exclusive photos, will be available from Concord Jazz on April 21, 2017, as well as a 3-CD edition. A 3-LP edition on 180-gram vinyl is planned for June 2.
Return to Forever Unplugged, with Clarke (bass), Lenny White (drums) and Frank Gambale(guitar), opens the set like a thundercrack. Lyrical explorations in a trio with Gary Peacock(bass) and Brian Blade (drums) follow, cutting a path for even more fireworks from fan-favorite Five Peace Band, co-led with McLaughlin (guitar), featuring Kenny Garrett (sax), John Patitucci (bass) and Blade. A duet with McFerrin (vocals) is pure improvisational magic from two masters of the form. Corea and his most frequent collaborator, Gary Burton (vibraphone) add the Harlem String Quartet for a virtuosic chamber jazz set.
From Miles, with Wallace Roney (trumpet), Gary Bartz (sax), Eddie Gomez (bass) and Jack DeJohnette (drums) is a Davis tribute like no other: vibrant and swinging with the spirit of Miles himself. Flamenco Heart is a classic late-night Madrid party, featuring Concha Buika(vocals), Jorge Pardo (sax and flute), Carles Benavent (bass), Niño Josele (guitar), and Jeff Ballard (drums). Piano duets with Hancock and Marcus Roberts are brilliantly alive with emotion and virtuosity. The Elektric Band – Dave Weckl (drums), Patitucci, Eric Marienthal(sax) and Gambale – closes the album with a jolt of musical energy. Nobody who saw these shows will ever forget it.
The CDs capture the music with Corea’s characteristic thrilling live sound, and the documentary goes even further: with total access to Chick’s creative process, the film features live footage, but also rehearsals, backstage hangs and candid interviews with the musicians. Everything that goes into making music at this level – the hours of practice, rehearsals, gear moving in and out – is in full view.
The Musician is one of the great portraits of a true genius in his prime, at work. In every musical setting, Corea’s long history of creative adventurism made for the ultimate present-tense music. The title of the set followed naturally.
“That’s what the story’s about. It’s about musicians, being musicians,” Corea says. “When people ask me, ‘What did you learn from Miles?’ – that’s the salient thing that I took from my experience. Miles just let his musicians be themselves. He let them be musicians.”
The Musician is a look at Corea’s ongoing creative journey, one that never rests for long. His constant innovation as a composer, piano player and bandleader have earned him just about every award available to jazz musicians, including his status as a Downbeat Magazine Hall of Famer and NEA Jazz Master. He sits at #4 on the list of artists with the most Grammy nominations of all time. From straight-ahead to avant-garde, bebop to jazz-rock fusion, children’s songs to chamber works – all of which are embraced on The Musician – Corea has touched an astonishing number of musical bases in his career.
“One question I’m asked all the time is what setting do I like best – trios or full bands – or which musician do I like best to work with? Do I like to play the piano more than the Rhodes? The answer to any of those questions is the same, really – it’s all so less in importance to the act of creating, and the act of collaborating with another musician.” The Musician shows Corea welcoming his 70th year with friends and thousands of fans. Now, five years later, he shows no sign of slowing down. He continues to look forward to more tours, more gigs, and more sessions. Looking back on the month-long celebration that is now remembered on The Musician, Corea calls it motivation “to keep on experimenting and researching and putting new bands together and playing music. It’s that simple.”
Track Listing:
Disc 1
Return to Forever Unplugged
1. Captain Marvel (Chick Corea) 08:15
2. Light as a Feather (Stanley Clarke / Flora Purim) 14:16
Chick Corea Trio with Gary Peacock & Brian Blade
3. I Hear a Rhapsody (Jack Baker / George Fragos / Dick Gasparre) 09:25
Five Peace Band
4. Spirit Rides (Chick Corea) 13:00
5. Special Beings (John McLaughlin) 16:43
Chick Corea & Bobby McFerrin Duet
6. I’ve Got the World on a String (Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler) 05:54
7. Spain (Chick Corea) 09:34
Disc 2
Chick Corea & Gary Burton with The Harlem String Quartet
1. Overture (Chick Corea) featuring Gary Burton 07:57
2. Your Eyes Speak to Me (Gayle Moran Corea) feat. Gary Burton 04:32
From Miles
3. If I Were a Bell (Frank Loesser) 22:09
4. Nefertiti (Wayne Shorter) 10:54
Flamenco Heart
5. Zyryab (Altisent Juan Alberto Amargos / Ramon Sanchez Gomez / Francisco Sánchez Gómez) 16:38
6. Mi Nina Lola (José Torres Garzón / Luis Rivas Gómez / Andrés Molina Moles) 09:22
Disc 3
Chick Corea & Marcus Roberts Duet
1. CC’s Birthday Blues (Chick Corea) 09:26
2. Caravan (Duke Ellington / Irving Mills / Juan Tizol) 08:29
Chick Corea & Herbie Hancock Duet
3. Hot House (Tadd Dameron) 05:00
4. Dolphin Dance (Herbie Hancock) 09:10
5. Cantaloupe Island (Herbie Hancock) 06:38
The Chick Corea Elektric Band
6. Ritual (Chick Corea) 13:39
7. Silver Temple (Chick Corea) 15:35
Personnel:
Chick Corea: piano, keyboards
Stanley Clarke: bass (CD1, 1-2)
Lenny White: drums (CD1, 1-2)
Frank Gambale: guitar (CD1, 1-2, CD3, 6-7)
Gary Peacock: bass (CD1, 3)
Brian Blade: drums (CD1, 3-5)
John McLaughlin: guitar (CD1, 4-5)
Kenny Garrett: saxophone (CD1, 4-5)
John Patitucci: bass (CD1, 4-5, CD3, 6-7)
Bobby McFerrin: vocals (CD1, 6-7)
Gary Burton: vibraphone (CD2, 1-2)
Ilmar Gavilán: violin (CD2, 1-2)
Melissa White: violin (CD2, 1-2)
Juan Miguel Hernandez: viola (CD2, 1-2)
Gayle Moran Corea: vocals (CD2, 2)
Paul Wiancko: cello (CD2, 1-2)
Wallace Roney: trumpet (CD2, 3-4)
Gary Bartz: saxophone (CD2, 3-4)
Eddie Gomez: bass (CD2, 3-4)
Jack DeJohnette: drums (CD2, 3-4)
Concha Buika: vocals (CD2, 5-6)
Carles Benavent: bass (CD2, 5-6)
Jorge Pardo: saxophone and flute (CD2, 5-6)
Niño Josele: guitar (CD2, 5-6)
Jeff Ballard: drums (CD2, 5-6)
Marcus Roberts: piano (CD3, 1-2)
Wynton Marsalis: trumpet (CD3, 1)
Herbie Hancock: piano (CD3, 3-5)
Dave Weckl: drums (CD3, 6-7)
Eric Marienthal: saxophone (CD3, 6-7)
Producer: Chick Corea
Engineer: Bernie Kirsh
Mixing: Brian Vibberts
Mastering: Bernie Grundman
Photography: Ernest Gregory
Design: Marc Bessant
Executive Producer: Bill Rooney
Review:
As people age, it’s not uncommon to commemorate
birthday milestones—specifically, those marking the passing of decades—with
special celebrations, ranging from parties to vacations. In most cases,
however, these festivities are private events, restricted to family and friends.
Not Chick Corea.
When this renowned pianist/keyboardist, composer, bandleader and guest
participant in countless projects since emerging on the scene in the early
’60s—Cab Calloway was his first professional hire, but was quickly
eclipsed by gigging and recording with Blue Mitchell, Herbie Mann,
and Latin musicians Mongo Santamaria and Willie Bobo—turned 60
in 2001, this living legend of Italian and Spanish descent chose to make his
birthday celebration a public one by booking three weeks at New York City’s
heralded Blue Note club.
With a roster that included nine groups ranging from intimate duos to
full-blown sextets featuring a total of twenty invited musical friends, Corea
delivered a career-spanning series of shows that ranged from the trio responsible
for an early classic, Now He Sings, Now He Sobs (Solid State, 1968),
to the pianist’s then-more recent groups: the quintet responsible
for Remembering Bud Powell (Stretch, 1998); and his Origin sextet,
which prolifically released two albums and a six-CD box set between 1998 and
1999. Highlights from the performances were collected on the
two-CD Rendezvous in New York (Stretch, 2003) set, but a more
satisfying document was to come two years later, when Corea released a ten-DVD
box, also called Rendezvous in New York (Image Entertainment, 2005),
that, in addition to hour-long concert videos from each of the event’s nine
groups, also included Rendezvous in New York: The Movie, a 100-minute
documentary about the event and Corea’s career, narrated by actor Jeff
Goldblum.
If there was any complaint about Rendezvous in New York, in all its
iterations, it was that this momentous 60th birthday celebration focused
exclusively on Corea’s work in the acoustic arena. Any who’ve followed his
career know that he’s been an equally active contributor to more electrified
jazz, and that any true career-spanning event would also have to include at
least some references to that aspect of his life’s work.
First, there were his various incarnations of Return to Forever: beginning as
the lighter, Latin-infused quintet responsible for Return to
Forever (ECM, 1972) and Light as a Feather (Polydor, 1973);
morphing into the high-octane, high-volume guitar-driven fusion quartet that
released four albums from Hymn to the Seventh Galaxy (Polydor, 1973)
through Romantic Warrior (Columbia, 1976); and, finally, ending its
’70s tenure as the horn-infused ten-piece which contributed the studio
outing Musicmagic and far more satisfying but still too-short
single-LP Live, both released by Columbia in 1977, followed the next year
with the even more impressive (and welcome) Return to Forever Live: The
Complete Concert (Columbia, 1978).
Not unlike fellow pianist Herbie Hancock—with whom Corea played in a duo
in the late ’70s, releasing the double-LP An Evening with Herbie Hancock
and Chick Corea: In Concert (Columbia, 1978)—Corea’s subsequent career has
been a mixture of acoustic and electric projects. In the ’80s/’90s he formed a
new Elektric Band (which featured a number of talented up-and-coming musicians
including guitarist Frank Gambale, saxophonist Eric Marienthal,
bassist John Patitucci and drummer Dave Weckl) while, at the
same time, releasing acoustic projects including, amongst others, the
reunited Now He Sings, Now He Sobs trio with bassist Miroslav
Vitous and drummer Roy Haynes; his Akoustic Trio with Patitucci and
Weckl; a duo record with singer Bobby McFerrin; and, while touring every
year since their inception as a duo in 1972 and 1973 ECM debut, Crystal Silence,
releasing his first album with vibraphonist Gary Burton in 15
years, Native Sense—The New Duets (Concord, 1997).
Truly one of jazz’s most prolific—and, with rare
exception, most consistently impressive—artists, Corea continued into the 21st
century with a combination of reunions, ongoing collaborations and new
projects.
In addition to reuniting his Elektric Band for To the Stars, two different
Return to Forever tours brought Corea some of his largest audiences in years:
the first, with the “classic” Al Di Meola/Stanley Clarke/Lenny
White lineup, releasing both Returns (Eagle Records, 2009) and
the video document Returns—Live at Montreux 2008 (Eagle Eye, 2009);
and the next, bringing Corea, Clarke and White back together, but this time
with Gambale and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty in tow, as the even more
enjoyable RTF IV, which delivered the audio/video set The Mothership
Returns (Eagle Rock, 2012).
Duets with Burton continued on the Grammy Award-winning The New
Crystal Silence (Concord, 2008), while new parings with banjo master Bela
Fleck and pianists Stefano Bollani and Hiromi all bore
new and intriguing fruit. Corea continued his love affair with the
Flamenco/Spanish music, first explored most decidedly on My Spanish
Heart (Polydor, 1976), with renowned Spanish musicians including
bassist Carles Benavent and saxophonist/flautist Jorge
Pardo on Rhumba Flamenco—Live in Europe (Stretch, 2005) and
continued to mine the familiar terrain of the piano trio with a series of new
groups both acoustic and electric, some collected in his Japan-only Five
Trios (Stretch, 2007) box, others documented on the similarly
Japan-only Super Trio (Stretch, 2006), and, most recently, the
worldwide Trilogy (Concord, 2014). And, not to forget new electric
explorations, Corea also released the conceptually driven Ultimate
Adventure (Stretch, 2006); his first post-Miles Davis) group collaboration
with guitarist John McLaughlin as Five Peace Band,
releasing Five Peace Band Live (Stretch, 2009); and forming a new,
high energy quintet named after its debut release, The
Vigil (Stretch, 2013).
So, with his 70th birthday on the horizon, Corea
decided to throw another musical party at the Blue Note, but this time with a
full month-long program that balanced acoustic and electric projects: two fully
plugged-in bands (Five Peace Band and Elektric Band); two groups straddling
electric and acoustic (Return to Forever Unplugged, featuring Clarke, White and
Gambale; and Flamenco Heart, reuniting the pianist with Benavent and Pardo,
alongside guitarist Nino Josele, drummer Jeff Ballard and
singer Concha Buika); two wholly acoustic and newly minted groups (a new
trio with bassist Gary Peacock and Five Peace Band drummer Brian
Blade; and the For Miles quintet, with trumpeter Wallace Roney,
saxophonist Gary Bartz, bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Jack
DeJohnette, another Miles Davis alum); and duos old and new, with
pianists Marcus Roberts (featuring a guest appearance by Wynton
Marsalis) and Herbie Hancock, vocal gymnast Bobby McFerrin, and vibraphonist Gary
Burton—this time joined by the Harlem String Quartet that made its first
appearance with the pair on Hot House (Concord, 2012), as well as a
guest appearance by Corea’s wife, singer Gayle Moran Corea.
Perhaps the biggest challenge—beyond coordinating and rehearsing ten groups and
thirty musicians for a month-long program of live sets—was: how to whittle down
literally hundreds of performances into a representative three-CD set (or the
three-CD/one-Blu Ray that also includes the 96-minute documentary, Chick
Corea: The Musician)? Not unlike the Rendezvous in New York double
CD, The Musician’ sole flaw, if it can be called one, is that it’s
impossible for a selection of one, two or three performances by each group to
truly represent them in their totality.
Perhaps the clearest case in point is the For Miles quintet. While the
documentary shows the quintet rehearsing the more electric “It’s About
That Time,” from Davis’ seminal jazz-rock outing In a Silent
Way (Columbia, 1969), both selections chosen for inclusion on The
Musician are culled from the late trumpeter’s earlier acoustic work,
albeit demonstrating that music this familiar, in such great hands, can still
feel as fresh as it did back in the day. “If I Were a Bell”—that
oft-played standard that commonly kicked off Davis’ live sets, most notably
during the three-night run finally documented in its entirety with the
eight-CD The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965 (Legacy, 1995)
box—gets an extended workout here, with fiery solos from all involved and showing
how a familiar tune can be grist for greater exploration and, beyond its
memorable melody, complete freedom of expression. Shorter’s title track to
Davis’ Nefertiti (Columbia, 1968)—the trumpeter’s final wholly
acoustic studio recording—also gets a lengthy look, combining the original’s
repetitive use of Shorter’s theme as the foundation for what is essentially an
improvisational vehicle for the drummer. This time, however, the tune swings
more fervently and, while DeJohnette manages to straddle the line between holding
down the pulse and acting as front-line solo voice, there’s even more interplay
amongst the quintet to render the track even more explosive.
Still, when given the need to choose what best
represents each of the ten groups with somewhere between ten and thirty minutes
of music, some pretty firm decisions clearly had to be made, as it’s more than
just picking great performances from each collaboration; they have to flow
together on each of the three discs rather than coming off as merely a
collection of great tracks. And in that regard, while more music would
certainly have been welcome—and here’s hoping that Corea opts to release full
video sets from each group, à la the Rendezvous in New York DVD box,
sometime in the next year or two—The Musician’s three CDs are more successful,
overall, in both demonstrating some of each group’s finer
moments and possessing a flow that makes each disc (and all three
taken together, if you’ve got three hours and forty minutes to spare) an
appealing listen from start to finish.
Orchestrating rehearsals for this many groups meant they had to be kept to a
minimum, so that some of them were more quickly thrown-together…though that
in no way should be taken to suggest that they sound under-rehearsed.
Instead, with the astute skill of an artist who has been leading groups for
fifty years, Corea leverages the idea of compositions chosen as jumping off
points for improvisational exploration against more firmly composed
pieces…those complex charts more often than not found in the electric groups,
though there’s no doubt that the music for Corea and Burton’s
“Overture,” from the duo’s final ECM album, Lyric Suite for
Sextet (1983), was a lengthy and challenging one.
“Overture” demonstrates the uncanny precision, intuitive nature,
spontaneous handing off of responsibilities normally assigned to bassists and
drummers and the improvisational perfection that has singularly characterized
this duo for 35 years (sadly, no longer, with Burton’s recent retirement from
recording and gigging). That said, the pair’s second included performance,
“Your Eyes Speak to Me”—written by and featuring Gayle Moran
Corea—finds the duo (again, augmented by the Harlem String Quartet) in an
uncharacteristically supportive role, demonstrating that they also excel,
unsurprisingly, in this (for them) less-traveled direction. Moran Corea’s voice
may be an acquired taste for some, but there are few voices as pure, as
accurate and with as broad a range, in particular at her age (unknown, but
she’s been married to Corea for over forty years, after first coming to
prominence in John McLaughlin’s second, much-expanded Mahavishnu Orchestra
lineup), and this sole appearance in The Musician’s three CDs is a
thoroughly enjoyable one.
Beyond choosing tracks that represent each group at
their best, some attention was clearly paid to contributing new material to the
set lists, where appropriate. While it would have been easy to simply go back
to the Elektric Band’s original repertoire, the two choices for this
“classic lineup” are unusual: “Ritual” comes
from Paint the World (GRP, 1993), which featured a completely new
Elektric Band II lineup, with the exception of the returning Corea and
Marienthal; “Silver Temple,” on the other hand, is drawn from the
very first The Chick Corea Elektric Band (GRP, 1986) album, where the
core, saxophone-less trio of Corea, Patitucci and Weckl are joined on different
tracks, pre-Gambale, by guitarists Scott Henderson. Infused with plenty of
energy, the group that would ultimately release five albums between 1987 and
2004 delivers almost thirty minutes of staggering virtuosity, in both its
readings of these challenging charts and collective solo acumen. Patitucci has
gone on to become better known, in recent years, for his long tenure on double
bass, with Danilo Perez and Brian Blade, in Wayne Shorter’s
quartet—last heard on the saxophonist’s 2013 return to Blue Note
Records, Without a Net—but here he not only proves himself to still be a
monster on electric (six-string) bass with the Elektric Band, but also as a
more-than-capable substitution for unavailable Five Peace Band
bassist Christian McBride.
Again, with Five Peace Band, Corea opts for the unexpected. A new piece by the
keyboardist, “Spirit Rides,” opens this group’s 30-minute slot on the
first disc—following a, well, rhapsodic look at the Great American Songbook
chestnut “I Hear a Rhapsody,” which swings mightily, after a lengthy
piano intro, thanks to Gary Peacock’s muscular support and Brian Blade’s
unshakable brushwork. A modal workout that acts as a particularly fiery
foundation for some in-tandem soloing by McLaughlin and saxophonist Kenny
Garrett, it’s great to hear the version of Five Peace Band with Blade; the
original group’s drum chair was shared by Blade and the admittedly fine Vinnie
Colaiuta, but Blade’s looser, explosive playing helps elevate the track into
the stratosphere, even as Patitucci anchors everything, alternating between a
two-note obstinate and powerfully sinewy walk.
The second Five Peace Band track, the near-17-minute
“Special Beings,” comes from McLaughlin’s pen and was first featured
on the guitarist’s 4th Dimension album, To the One (Abstract Logix,
2010). That To the One was inspired by John Coltrane (while
featuring no tracks written by or associated with the late saxophonist) links
“Special Beings,” at least on a spiritual level, with Corea’s
similarly inspired “Spirit Rides” and, with Patitucci on double bass
and featuring stellar solos from Corea, McLaughlin and Garrett—in particular
McLaughlin, who balances light-speed lyricism with the virtuosic guitar
equivalent of Coltrane’s “sheets of sound”—renders the Five Peace
Band segment one of The Musician clear highlights.
Another highlight is Return to Forever Unplugged, which opens The
Musician with two tunes from its second release, Light as a Feather.
Corea’s “Captain Marvel” comes first and, while the unplugged nature
means Corea is on grand piano rather than the Fender Rhodes he plays on the
album, he still manages to recreate its lithe Latin vibe while, at the same
time, keeping things fresh and contemporary. Stanley Clarke, on double bass,
delivers one of his signature pyrotechnic solos, while Frank Gambale adds some
impressive, warm-toned guitar to a group that had no guitarist in its first
incarnation. With the quintet also delivering a 14-minute look at Clarke’s
first compositional contribution to Return to Forever, Light as a
Feather’s title track, explorative space abounds for all, with Gambale again
delivering a particularly impressive solo that proves his talents go far beyond
“just” fusion. As strong as White is, there are times when his overly
muscular approach is a bit heavy-handed compared to Light as a
Feather’s Airto Moreira. It’s a small quibble, though; White’s
decades-long connection to Corea and Clarke means he’s joined at the hip to his
partners, making him an ideal band mate capable of effortlessly shifting gears,
as “Light as a Feather” suddenly heads into a fiery double time
section during Corea’s extended solo.
Elsewhere, Corea and Herbie Hancock reprise their duo, focusing on two Hancock
classics—an ethereal, free-wheeling version of “Dolphin Dance” and
more faithful but still explorative look at “Cantaloupe Island,”
from Maiden Voyage (Blue Note, 1965) and Empyrean
Isles (Blue Note, 1964) respectively—and the more scripted and
idiosyncratic title track to what looks to be Corea’s final studio recording
with Gary Burton, Hot House. The duo with McFerrin is what’s to be
expected: plenty of mischievous interaction that leverages Corea’s sometimes
Puck-ish nature against McFerrin’s equally playful personality as the duo
delivers one standard (“I’ve Got the World on a String”) and,
perhaps, Corea’s most famous composition, “Spain.” Corea’s duet with
pianist Marcus Roberts is more down-the-middle than his pairing with Hancock; a
more intrinsically in-the-tradition look at a straightforward blues (“CC’s
Birthday Blues,” also featuring a guest appearance by Wynton Marsalis) and
the Duke Ellington chestnut, “Caravan.”
Along with Five Peace Band, Return to Forever
Unplugged and Elektric Band, The Musician’s other highlight amongst many
highlights is Flamenco Heart, where the core of Touchstone—Corea, Jorge Pardo
and Carles Benavent—is joined by guitarist Niño Josele and drummer Jeff
Ballard (Brad Mehldau Trio, FLY) for a rousing version
of Rhumba Flamenco—Live in Europe’s knotty “Zyryab,” where the
guitarist proves himself someone on which to keep serious eyes and ears, as
Benavent’s mastery of a flamenco-styled approach to electric bass bolsters the
track hand-in-glove with Ballard, whose time spent living in Spain has clearly
allowed the drummer to become immersed in the country’s music, lending his
playing a clear sense of verisimilitude and authenticity. Pardo’s soprano
saxophone work—in particular his extended solo—represents some of The
Musician’s best moments; meanwhile, his flute work on guest vocalist Concha
Buika’s “Mi Nina Lala” is equally attention-grabbing.
Throughout The Musician’s three CDs, Corea’s playing is as percussive yet
lithely dextrous as ever, in a program that demonstrates his full range better
than Rendezvous in New York did. While the accompanying Blu Ray
documentary, Chick Corea: The Musician contains plenty of great
interview, rehearsal and live performance footage from the various participants
in this month-long celebration, it’s not unlike its
predecessor, Rendezvous in New York: The Movie, in being more about the
celebration and less about his career. There are, of course, references to his
life’s experiences, including time spent with Miles Davis—and the interesting
discovery that a full eight of the members of The Musician’s full roster
are Davis alumni—some information about his growing up years and more. But
overall, if Emma Franz’s 2017 film, Bill Frisell: A Portrait, is the
definitive look at a guitarist who, like Corea, still has plenty left to say, a
proper, similarly definitive documentary that truly digs deeply into Corea’s
life and music has yet to be made.
That’s not to say Chick Corea: The Musician is bad; far from it. It’s
an engaging watch, with moments of deep playing and unabashed humor. But, in a
beautiful hardback book-like package that includes—in addition the three CDs
and one Blu Ray—a 45-page embedded booklet with liners by Thelonious
Monk biographer Robin D.G. Kelley, a few historical photos and a bevy of
beautiful color shots from the month-long Blue Note run, it’s the three hours
and forty minutes of music on the three CDs that make The
Musician the most comprehensive live look at Corea’s career to date…and
the box set’s greatest attraction. That the three CDs are also available
without the Blu Ray means that those looking for the music alone are in luck.
Even better news: The Musician is not the final word at career-spanning live collections from a career now in its sixth decade. Corea wrapped up yet another celebration in 2016—this time, his 75th birthday, with a seven-and-a-half-week run at the Blue Note that was even broader in scope, with a full fifteen groups and more than fifty musicians. Corea managed a remarkable range of projects, from revamped electric and acoustic versions of Return to Forever—the electric lineup a one-time meeting with the music of Mahavishnu Orchestra’s John McLaughlin; performances of music from The Leprechaun and Three Quartets (GRP, 1981); a new For Miles group that, with guitarist Mike Stern and Marcus Miller, suggested a more electric look; a reunited Elektric Band and Flamenco Heart; an ambitious reprise of Live in Molde (MNJ, 2006), including flying Norway’s Trondheim Jazz Orchestra, with arranger/conductor Erlend Skomsvoll to New York; duets with McLaughlin, Gary Burton, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Herbie Hancock and Brad Mehldau; a new version of Origin; and Experiments in Electronica, where Corea pushes himself into areas previously unexplored.
There will, no doubt, be some document of these seven-and-a-half weeks in the future; and given Corea’s clear proclivity for making each event bigger and more expansive, interested folks may want to book an apartment in New York City for 2021. Extrapolating his three extant birthday celebrations, chances are that the keyboardist could be looking at a three-month residency at the Blue Note to celebrate his 80th birthday. in the meantime, with The Musician, Corea provides an enticing and appropriately broad-spectrum’d cross-section of his month-long 70th birthday celebration. Given its compilation-like nature, it isn’t exactly like being there, but given how unlikely it is that many people were able to attend a show from each of the ten groups represented, The Musician is the closest those unable to make it to New York for any of these shows will be able to get. And complete though it may not be, that’s plenty more than good enough.
John Kelman (All About Jazz)