Kenny Barron Trio

Released March 4, 2016

Grammy Nominee for Best Jazz Instrumental Album 2017

YouTube: https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_ncjq2z5J0626N-5l0P8hIdkzLe2L0GMNI

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/614bG4wyE1qwWSYN3ET3mF?si=e1QYG7K1RjOZxwgD_2b6rg

About:

Remarkably, while piano maestro Kenny Barron has recorded more than 40 albums as a leader and countless others as a valued sideman, he had never documented his impressive working trio of bassist Kiyoshi Kitagawa, with him for 20 years, and drummer Johnathan Blake, onboard for the past 10 years. That missing piece in Barron’s lengthy discography has been sublimely addressed with his new recording, Book of Intuition, a refined, elegant, lyrical and swinging affair of new and reimagined originals and a triad of covers, including two obscure Thelonious Monk compositions. It’s the second of a series of recordings Barron will be delivering for impulse! Records, remarkably revived in 2014 by veteran recording executive and producer Jean-Philippe Allard as a division of Universal Music France.

“Recording my trio had never come up,” says the award-winning 72-year-old pianist, who’s certainly one of jazz’s finest composers and arguably one of the busiest musicians in the idiom. “I had been working on other recording projects, including a duo with Dave Holland as well as the Brazilian Knights band. Thankfully, the trio had been able to work consistently without the benefit of a recording, but then Jean-Philippe heard us play and he got excited. He then wanted to record us as he was very open to the idea. He doesn’t dictate, though he may ask, ‘how do you feel about doing this?’” (Barron’s association with Allard dates back to when he was signed to Verve France in 1994 for his Wanton Spirit album in a trio setting with Charlie Haden and Roy Haynes that was executive produced by Allard.)

In the liner notes to Book of Intuition, writer John Murph proclaims the album as one of his best: “As Barron continues writing new compositions while simultaneously revamping his older material, history will certainly reveal Book of Intuition as a quintessential chapter in a fascinating, ever-unfolding oeuvre that exemplifies modern jazz at its finest.”

The revisited pieces range from a song he had previously recorded under a different name to a work he pulled out of his playbook that he had recorded but never performed live. A couple of the pieces are tunes that the trio had never done. “It’s funny that when you play with a group, you tend to stay with a certain repertoire,” Barron says, “and you never go beyond that.”

Barron’s reimagining older pieces begin at the onset of Book of Intuition with the playfully swinging, rhythmically driven “Magic Dance”–a dance indeed-that originally appeared under the title of “J.J. Dream” in 2010 with bassist Ron Carter and drummer Lenny White as the Super Premium Band for the Japan-based East Wind label. It’s also informed by his love for Brazilian music. Another revisit is the fiery “Bud-Like,” first recorded by the pianist on his solo project in 1982, Kenny Barron at the Piano on the Xanadu imprint, and also played solo on his 1991 album Live at Maybeck Recital Hall Volume Ten. Here, in his homage to Bud Powell, Barron plays fast, with blurring single-note runs. He also takes a sweetly loving ride through the Latin-tinged “Cook’s Bay,” inspired by his wife when they were celebrating their 40th wedding anniversary in Tahiti and appearing on his 2000 Verve disc Spirit Song. Another reflection from the past comes on the upbeat “Lunacy,” teeming with torrential rhythms and first being recorded in a quintet setting on 1988’s Live at Fat Tuesday for Enja Records. As for the Brazilian-flavored balladic “Dreams,” it dates back to the early ’70s and was recorded by such artists as James Moody and Stan Getz. “This is song that I’ve always enjoyed playing, and the trio had never played it,’ Barron says. “I had to dig it out of the vault for the session.”

Barron’s new compositions come courtesy of a soundtrack he wrote for the 2010 film Another Harvest Moon, directed by Greg Swartz. Of the 20 tunes for a variety of scenes he wrote for the film, he offers two here. The first, the quiet and drum-brushed “In the Slow Lane” appeared as the theme in the opening credits, and the reflective “Prayer” hit at the heart of the film’s storyline about four elderly people at a nursing home, dealing with life and death by suicide. “It was the first opportunity for me to write for a film,” Barron says. “I wrote sketches that Greg interspersed throughout the story. I still have a bunch of those tunes that at some point I hope to expand on and record.”

Barron also rendered two Monk tunes that are not commonly covered. He takes “Shuffle Boil” for a stride piano-rooted ride and in the next track plays a stunning solo interpretation of “Light Blue,” with Monk’s dissonance in the mix. As for the former, Barron says: “For me, this is one of Monk’s greatest tunes. I love playing it.” And the latter: “It’s another great one and the dissonance is tongue-in-cheek. I wanted to play it with a sense of humor.”

The final tune on Book of Intuition is a meditation on Charlie Haden’s “Nightfall”–somber and beautiful. “I played with Charlie often over the years,” Barron says. “This song is so pretty, so quiet. This is Charlie.”

Track Listing:

1. Magic Dance (Kenny Barron) 7:53

2. Bud Like (Kenny Barron) 5:30

3. Cook’s Bay (Kenny Barron) 6:02

4. In the Slow Lane (Kenny Barron) 6:34

5. Shuffle Boil (Thelonious Monk) 6:55

6. Light Blue (Thelonious Monk) 4:09

7. Lunacy (Kenny Barron) 5:09

8. Dreams (Kenny Barron) 5:59

9. Prayer (Kenny Barron) 4:43

10. Nightfall (Charlie Haden) 7:06

Personnel:

Kenny Barron: piano

Kiyoshi Kitagawa: double bass

Johnathan Blake: drums

Recorded July 3-4, 2015, at Avatar Studios

Produced by Kenny Barron and Jean-Philippe Allard

Recorded and mixed by Jay Newland

Mastered by Mark Wilder

Design: Marielle Costosèque and Patrice Beauséjour

Art Direction: Farida Bachir

Review:

For some strange reason, the trio that Kenny Barron has been leading for the past decade, featuring bassist Kiyoshi Kitagawa and drummer Johnathan Blake, had never cut an album until now. We should all thank the deity of our choice that they finally entered a recording studio, because Book of Intuition is a total delight.
From the first minute of the bossa-nova-ish opening track, “Magic Dance,” previously recorded as “J.J. Dream” with Ron Carter and Lenny White, the high degree of attunement between Barron and his bandmates is obvious. When he lays into a particularly frisky single-note phrase early on in his solo, Blake responds split seconds later with a flourish of ride cymbal and side stick, over which Kitagawa imposes a slight ritard to humorous effect. Next up is “Bud Like,” a blazing Barron performance stoked by Blake’s command of accents and Kitagawa’s dexterous walking. And so it continues through a mix of old and new material, including two pretty selections from Barron’s soundtrack for the 2010 film Another Harvest Moon.
Two standout pieces are by Thelonious Monk, to whom Barron’s had a direct spiritual line for many years. Although he may be a much smoother pianist technically than Monk, the two share a wicked sense of humor. For “Shuffle Boil,” Barron starts off his solo in a surprisingly romantic mood, then delves into deep funk, as if to say he was only kidding with that first bit. Even better is his solo take on “Light Blue,” which alternates fluid Tatum-esque arpeggios with jarring dissonances and ends on a downward glissando that fails perfectly to resolve anything.

Mac Randall (JazzTimes)