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DESCRIPTION:Event Name: Stev Kuhn Trio featuring David Finck & Billy Drummo
 nd\nEvent Url: http://www.artsboston.org/event/detail/441127455/Stev_Kuhn_
 Trio_featuring_David_Finck_Billy_Drummond\nEvent Date Begin: 2011-03-02\nE
 vent Date End: 2011-03-02\n\n'Mostly Coltrane' the latest recording from p
 ianist Steve Kuhn is a multi-faceted celebration of the magisterial music 
 of John Coltrane\, presented by a player who was the original pianist in t
 he Coltrane Quartet.\n\nAt the end of 1959\, when Coltrane was preparing t
 o leave Miles Davis and commit himself to a career as a leader\, the great
  saxophonist called upon Kuhn\, bassist Steve Davis and drummer Pete La Ro
 ca to join him for live performances. &ldquo\;In January\, February and Ma
 rch of 1960\, I was privileged to work with John Coltrane at the Jazz Gall
 ery in New York City&rdquo\;\, says Kuhn in his introductory note to &ldqu
 o\;Mostly Coltrane&rdquo\;. &ldquo\;This music reflects my deep respect fo
 r him.&rdquo\;\n\nOn this recording\, Kuhn and his fellow musicians\, with
  Joe Lovano at the very top of his form (rising to the considerable challe
 nge of playing tenor sax on a Coltrane tribute)\, and Joey Baron channelli
 ng and transforming the influence of Elvin Jones\, explore the highways an
 d byways of Coltrane's musical journey. In these performances\, Kuhn not o
 nly returns to pieces he once played with Coltrane &ndash\; &ldquo\;Centra
 l Park West&rdquo\;\, &ldquo\;The Night Has A Thousand Eyes&rdquo\;\, &ldq
 uo\;I Want To Talk About You&rdquo\; &ndash\; but follows Trane's story th
 rough to the end. Kuhn's extremely well-plotted tribute includes versions 
 of material (&ldquo\;Jimmy's Mode&rdquo\;\, &ldquo\;Configuration&rdquo\;)
  which only surfaced in 1994\, nearly 30 years after Coltrane's death\, on
  the posthumously-issued &ldquo\;Stellar Regions&rdquo\; album assembled b
 y Alice Coltrane.\n\nThe album opens\, however\, with &ldquo\;Welcome&rdqu
 o\;\, from 1965's &ldquo\;Kulu S&eacute\; Mama&rdquo\;\, of which Coltrane
  once wrote: &ldquo\;'Welcome' is that feeling you have when you finally r
 each awareness\, an understanding\, which you have earned through struggle
 . A welcome feeling of peace.&rdquo\;\n\nSteve Kuhn himself sounds so unli
 ke either of the pianists most closely associated with Coltrane &ndash\; A
 lice Coltrane or McCoy Tyner &ndash\; that it is tempting to speculate on 
 what might have been made\, had his time with Coltrane been extended. But 
 at 21\, Kuhn was still finding his own musical directions\, a prodigiously
 -talented pianist whose work was yet to find its artistic focus. With hind
 sight he can bring all his knowledge to bear on the material &ndash\; and 
 the results are riveting\, as he develops his cogent musical arguments in 
 a span from balladry to free playing.\n\nThe level of group understanding 
 is as evident as the strength of the individual contributions. Although Jo
 e Lovano is joining an established band here &ndash\; Kuhn's long-running 
 trio with David Finck and Joey Baron (whose &ldquo\;Remembering Tomorrow&r
 dquo\; album was recorded by ECM fourteen years ago) &ndash\; there is nev
 er a sense of soloist-with-rhythm-section: this is a thoroughly-integrated
  quartet\, which itself is a 'Coltranean' position\, Coltrane Quartet musi
 c being amongst the first in post-bop jazz to make of the music more than 
 the sum of its solos.\nThis was a lesson not lost on the young Joe Lovano 
 (b. 1952) who grew up immersed in Coltrane's sound. His father\, saxophoni
 st Tony Lovano had jammed with Coltrane in Cleveland in the early 1950s. J
 oe learned to play by studying\, with attention to detail\, all subsequent
  stations on Coltrane's journey\, and his involvement with the music has b
 een a lifelong passion.\n\nIn the mid-1970s\, shortly after moving to New 
 York\, Joe Lovano played with Rashied Ali. In 1997 he recorded with Elvin 
 Jones in a trio programme that already included Lovano's own tributes to C
 oltrane\, and in our present century he has toured and recorded with McCoy
  Tyner\, still monitoring his own growth as a mature artist with reference
  to Coltrane's circle.\n\n&ldquo\;Mostly Coltrane&rdquo\; was recorded in 
 New York's Avatar Studios in December 2008\, with Manfred Eicher producing
 .\n\nBorn in Brooklyn in 1938\, Steve Kuhn was fascinated with jazz very e
 arly in his life. In his teens\, Kuhn studied with legendary teacher Marga
 ret Chaloff who schooled him in the &ldquo\;Russian Technique&rdquo\;\, an
  invaluable tool for tone production and projection. Chaloff's son\, Serge
 \, baritone saxophonist for Woody Herman\, hired the 13 year-old pianist t
 o play in his group. Throughout his teens Kuhn continued to play in Boston
  jazz clubs with\, amongst other visiting celebrities\, Coleman Hawkins\, 
 Chet Baker\, and Vic Dickenson.\n\nIn 1959 Kuhn attended the Lenox School 
 of Music where he played and recorded with Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry 
 The faculty included Bill Evans\, George Russell\, and Gunther Schuller. W
 hile at Lenox\, Kuhn met trumpeter Kenny Dorham and began a two-year stint
  in his group\, interrupted when Kuhn was asked to join John Coltrane's ne
 wly-formed quartet. Kuhn next joined Stan Getz's band\, which included bas
 sist Scott LaFaro. After a period with Art Farmer\, he formed the first St
 eve Kuhn Trio\, with Pete LaRoca and Steve Swallow.\n\nAt the end of the 1
 960s he spent four years living in Europe\, mostly in Scandinavia where hi
 s performance had a significant impact upon local players. Upon returning 
 to the United States\, Kuhn began his affiliation with ECM\, resulting in 
 a row of important albums. Three of these were reprised last year in the b
 ox set &ldquo\;Life's Backward Glances&rdquo\; \, which included the solo 
 album &rdquo\;Ecstasy&rdquo\;\, and the quartet discs &ldquo\;Motility&rdq
 uo\; and &ldquo\;Playground&rdquo\; (the latter with singer Sheila Jordan)
 : the collection received many glowing reviews.\n\nMore recent Kuhn record
 ings on ECM include &ldquo\;Promises Kept&rdquo\; on which the Kuhn piano 
 is set against the string arrangements of Carlos Franzetti.\n\nJoe Lovano 
 today records as a leader for Blue Note. His early reputation was in part 
 established by his ECM albums with Paul Motian\, and he still records for 
 the label in Motian's trio with Bill Frisell. Recent Motian/Frisell/Lovano
  albums are &ldquo\;I Have The Room Above Her&rdquo\; and &ldquo\;Time and
  Time Again.&rdquo\; Lovano can also be heard on Marc Johnson's &ldquo\;Sh
 ades of Jade&rdquo\; and John Abercrombie's &ldquo\;Open Land&rdquo\;.\n\n
 Joey Baron is a member of the John Abercrombie Quartet\, whose albums incl
 ude &ldquo\;Class Trip&rdquo\;\, &ldquo\;Cat'n'Mouse&rdquo\;\, &ldquo\;The
  Third Quartet&rdquo\;\, (a new album\, &ldquo\;Wait Till You see Her&rdqu
 o\; is due later this year) Other ECM appearances include John Taylor's &l
 dquo\;Rosslyn&rdquo\; and Bill Frisell's &ldquo\;Lookout for Hope&rdquo\;.
 \n\nParallel to his twenty-year association with Steve Kuhn\, bassist Davi
 d Finck has been active as a session player\, arranger and producer\, work
 ing with everyone from Sir Andr&eacute\; Previn to Pete Seeger\, via Herbi
 e Hancock and Paquito D'Rivera.\n\nStart time: 8pm
DTSTART:20110302T000000
DTEND:20110302T000000
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:Stev Kuhn Trio featuring David Finck & Billy Drummond
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