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Local Guitarist Vincent Sims asks the question "Is That Jazz?"
CD Reviews: Dirty Dozen Brass Band "Medicated Magic"
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Chick Corea and the London Philharmonic Orchestra featuring Origin "Corea.Concerto" (Sony Classical) by Philip Booth
It was probably inevitable that Chick Corea's resonant, popular "Spain," a
buoyant theme hinged to familiar Latin rhythms and cleverly shifting chordal
cycles, might eventually be reborn as an orchestral piece: After all, Corea
is a musical renaissance man, ready, willing and able to adapt his enormous
talents as a pianist and composer to any number of settings, from classical
to acoustic bebop to electric funk and everything in between.
That's not to say that his recently realized version of "Spain," debuted on
stage in Japan in 1995 and constituting the first three tracks of
"Corea.Concerto," isn't an intriguing work that offers a new way of seeing
the old favorite. The London Philharmonic, following Corea's
impressionistic, roving piano solo, kicks in with a sonorous fanfare,
foreshadowing the melody and drawing out the tension before giving way to
the pianist's Origin sextet. Bob Sheppard's flute work underscores the
lightness of the feel, and then it's on to other inspired improvisations -
by trombonist Steve Davis, soprano saxophonist Steve Wilson, and Corea -
before the orchestra returns for a dramatic, thundering recap.
Corea's "Concerto No. 1 for Piano and Orchestra," the other half of a disc
that could prove challenging to marketers (i.e., is it jazz or classical?),
is heavily influenced by Mozart and dedicated to "religious freedom" by its
composer, an avowed Scientologist and part-time Clearwater resident. The
first movement, cued by familiar Corean piano curlicues, is a lively, airy
conversation between the soloist, abetted by Origin bassist Avishai Cohen
and drummer Jeff Ballard, and the orchestra. Part two, punched with martial
percussion, is darker and imbued with melancholy; and the final section is
more demonstrative, with heavier accents and a brassy send-off. It's an
engrossing study in contrasts, all the more impressive given that it's
Corea's first experiment with the form.
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