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MARIO PAVONE - ARC Trio (2013)

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On this terrific piano trio record, veteran bassist Mario Pavone unites with pianist Craig Taborn and drummer Gerald Cleaver for a live outing from Greenwich Village, allowing us to gain a fascinating glimpse into the levels of musical collaboration possible between three masters of their respective instruments.

The album leads off with the powerhouse “Andrew,” with an infectious groove from Pavone developed in sharp rapport with Cleaver.  Pavone has cited Andrew Hill’s Smokestack as an inspiration for the album, and it’s not hard to hear that influence on the opening cut, as Pavone and Cleaver echo the chemistry on Hill’s record between bassists Richard Davis and Eddie Khan and the propulsive drum work of Roy Haynes.  And Taborn is also in top form on this track, with some dazzling two-handed piano runs and, even more fundamentally, an irrepressible rhythmic quality to his playing which only intensifies the groove.  When he locks in with Pavone and Cleaver at the 3:15 mark, generating an array of percussive bursts, the effect is intoxicating.  The only drawback to the track is that we don’t get to hear a proper ending to it, as it fades off on the recording.

The rest of the tracks are similarly superb, albeit somewhat more cerebral and abstract.  “Eyto,” the second cut, is built around a challenging rhythmic figure that eventually settles into another well-defined groove, providing an ideal vehicle for Taborn’s explorations.  Cleaver is the real star of the show on this one, as he manages brilliantly to remain both in the groove and outside it at the same time, offering enough flexibility to allow Pavone and Taborn to range freely as they see fit while still staying in conversation.  “Not Five Kimono,” the longest track, is a slow cooker, building simmering intensity as Taborn uses insistent repeating chords in the left hand while offering a variety of subtle statements on the melody with his right.  And Pavone gets plenty of opportunities to shine throughout the record as well: witness the way in which he uses rapid-fire staccato punctuation to accompany Taborn’s lightning-quick passages on “Box in Orange,” all the while staying in sync with Cleaver’s constant pulse; or the way he shadows Taborn on the sixth track, “Alban Berg,” providing running commentary on Taborn’s ideas that is unfailingly intelligent and creative.

In addition to its many other virtues, it’s a well-recorded album too, as we’ve come to expect from the folks at Playscape.  Indeed, although it’s a live record, the crowd isn’t heavy in the mix, which almost makes it feel like a studio recording at times.  Part of this is due to the precision of the players, who are so attuned to each other’s moves that they must have seemed to be the only people in the room.  But that’s all to the good, as the results are so consistently stimulating and inventive.  All in all, this is a great reminder that the piano trio format, in the right hands, is still one of jazz’s most exciting contexts for creative improvisation.  Troy Dostert



In planning his first live album after dozens of studio recordings as a leader or co-leader, septuagenarian bassist Mario Pavone wanted the music to capture some of what he heard on trio records fronted by idiosyncratic, genre-spanning pianists during the 1960s. The discs he focused on-Steve Kuhn’s Three Waves, Paul Bley’s Floater and Andrew Hill’s Smokestack are the first three he cites in his liner notes-understandably all boast strong, probing, woody bass work similar to Pavone’s approach on the instrument. But they also feature headstrong pianists adapting then-nascent advances in modal, “free” and hard-bop jazz to create their own postbop styling.

Pavone should be very happy with Arc Trio, which stands proudly both alongside those forebears and on its own kinetic terms. Choosing Craig Taborn as the pianist ensured that the trio’s lead instrument and harmonic force would share Pavone’s cerebral vigor for both the traditional and open-ended rudiments of postbop. And what better drummer than Gerald Cleaver, who has played with Taborn since the pianist was in college a quarter-century ago and has likewise partnered with Pavone on three previous discs and numerous live dates?

Thrown into the fray without rehearsal, the trio takes on eight old and new Pavone originals with relentless imagination. There are no ballads to speak of, and an absence of “sentiment,” save for the shared joy of split-second synergy as they mutually discover the next twist and turn. Pavone is a constant presence, thunking with the deep, woody sonority of a washboard at times, very reminiscent of Steve Swallow on contrabass. Cleaver responds with ballast and dynamism, carving space. Taborn showcases his enormous range-what a year he had in 2013. Some of the best tracks are tributes, including the opening “Andrew,” pressure-paced with elastic impressionism à la Mr. Hill; an “Alban Berg” (for the 20th-century Austrian contemporary of Webern and Schoenberg) that is probably the set’s most accessible track; and “Hotep,” in honor of South African pianist and educator Hotep Idris Galeta, with sterling solos from Pavone and Cleaver.

The result is challenging, probing postbop music that is as dense and alive and enveloping as a forest.  -  Britt Robson


Tracks

1. Andrew

2. Eyto

3. Not Five Kimono

4. Box In Orange

5. Poles

6. Alban Berg

7. Hotep

8. Dialect


MARIO PAVONE  bass

CRAIG TABORN  piano

GERALD CLEAVER  drums


All compositions by Mario Pavone

Recorded February 1, 2013 at Cornelia Street Café, NYC

Playscape Recordings - PSR#20113



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