Ethan Iverson | News | Infotext - Ethan Iverson: TECHNICALLY ACCEPTABLE

Ethan Iverson
Ethan Iverson

Infotext – Ethan Iverson: TECHNICALLY ACCEPTABLE

01.01.2024
ETHAN IVERSON
TECHNICALLY ACCEPTABLE
Blue Note Records / Universal Music
CD 00602455812186
VÖ: 19.01.2024
  1. Conundrum (Ethan Iverson) 1:31
  2. Victory is Assured (Ethan Iverson) 2:39
  3. Technically Acceptable (Ethan Iverson) 4:18
  4. Who Are You, Really? (Ethan Iverson) 3:25
  5. The Chicago Style (Ethan Iverson) 2:37
  6. It’s Fine to Decline (Ethan Iverson) 2:58
  7. The Way Things Are (Ethan Iverson) 3:50
  8. Killing Me Softly With His Song (Charles Fox/Norman Gimbel) 3:50
  9. ’Round Midnight (Thelonious Monk, Charles Cootie Williams, Bernard Hanighen) 4:22
  10. The Feeling is Mutual (Ethan Iverson) 4:15
  11. Piano Sonata: Allegro Moderato (Ethan Iverson) 6:30
  12. Piano Sonata: Andante (Ethan Iverson) 4:10
  13. Piano Sonata: Rondo (Ethan Iverson) 4:42
 
Ethan Iverson: Piano / Thomas Morgan: Bass / Kush Abadey: Drums
Simón Willson: Bass (8, 10) / Vinnie Sperrazza: Drums (8, 10) / Rob Schwimmer: Theremin (9)
Produced by Ethan Iverson / Recorded by Andreas Meyer at Samurai Hotel, Queens, NY
Der amerikanische Pianist und Komponist lässt auf sein Blue-Note-Debüt „Every Note Is True“ (2022) ein vielseitiges neues Projekt mit zwei verschiedenen Trios – mit Thomas Morgan/Kush Abadey und Simón Willson/Vinnie Sperrazza – folgen, mit Originalen aus eigener Feder sowie einfallsreichen Versionen des Pop-Klassikers „Killing Me Softly With His Song“ und des Jazz-Klassikers „'Round Midnight“. Den Abschluss bildet die Erstveröffentlichung von Iversons eigener Klaviersonate, solistisch auf höchstem Niveau interpretiert.
LINER NOTES
The program opens with a substantial set from an ensemble that will be playing the Village Vanguard and touring Europe at the time of this record’s release. Thomas Morgan and Kush Abadey are major stylists: my compositions for a trio of this caliber are usually fairly basic and easy to grasp, enabling good-humored interplay from the first beat.
“Conundrum” is the proposed theme for an (as yet un-produced) TV quiz show. 
“Victory is Assured (Alla Breve)” offers something of the classic Kansas City jump blues.
It is required to announce from the stage, “The next piece is ‘Technically Acceptable.’”
Dexter Gordon would ask the question, “Who Are You, Really?"
“The Chicago Style” gives us chance to experiment. One chord is straight from Ralph Shapey, a composer who lived in Chicago for a time.
The blues return with “It’s Fine to Decline.”
“The Way Things Are” is my version of the Serenity Prayer.
Up next are three pieces with either Vinnie Sperrazza and Simón Willson or Rob Schwimmer, friends and great musicians who join me for major projects with the Mark Morris Dance Group. 
Hampton Hawes introduced me to “Killing Me Softly With His Song.” 
As far as we know, this the first time Thelonious Monk’s anthem “‘Round Midnight” has been recorded by a theremin; it’s also the first time a theremin is featured on Blue Note records.
“The Feeling is Mutual.” There’s nothing better.
Finally, I offer another first for Blue Note, my premiere Piano Sonata: Three movements, fully notated, structured like Mozart or Beethoven, yet informed by my lived-in vocabulary as a 21st-century jazz musician. The sonata is dedicated to Yegor Shevtsov, an excellent pianist who has given me valuable advice on technical matters. Indeed, Yegor has helped me become a bit more “Technically Acceptable.”
— Ethan Iverson
 
INFO
There are a number of elements on Technically Acceptable, the second Blue Note Records release from pianist/composer Ethan Iverson, that would feel equally at home during any point in the label’s storied history. There’s an ample helping of the blues, a tune built on rhythm changes, spirited trio interactions, a reimagined song from the hit parade, even a rendition of Thelonious Monk’s iconic “‘Round Midnight.”
This being an Ethan Iverson date, however, none of those classic idioms are revived without a twist of some kind. The album’s first half, a nearly LP-length trio outing with bassist Thomas Morgan and drummer Kush Abadey, is balanced on the back end by the first-ever piano sonata in the Blue Note catalog. The blues and rhythm changes are refracted through an irreverent contemporary lens, while the standard in question is the Robert Flack ballad “Killing Me Softly With His Song,” given a 60s pop vibe in partnership with bassist Simón Willson and drummer Vinnie Sperrazza
And that version of “‘Round Midnight?” It features another Blue Note first, a theremin in the role of the main melodic instrument courtesy of virtuoso pianist and multi-instrumentalist Rob Schwimmer.
“I’m interested in trying to wrangle these almost archaic forms in a modernist way,” Iverson explains. “When I play a 12-bar blues with Thomas and Kush, it doesn’t sound like 1944 in the slightest. It sounds like 2023. But at the same time, it is a serious throwback. That’s where I connect to someone like Jaki Byard, who could play the most up-to-date creative music with Eric Dolphy or play behind a blues singer and be totally comfortable. And when he played solo or trio, it all came out at once.”
The history-spanning wealth of influences and eras that Iverson has investigated as pianist, composer and critic all emerge, in often surprising and delightful ways, throughout Technically Acceptable. Released just over 30 years since Iverson’s 1993 debut School Work, the album is, in a sense, three albums in one. The first third comprises a set of new originals with Morgan and Abadey, Iverson’s new working trio, who will celebrate the record release with a run at the legendary Village Vanguard and a tour of Europe.
In the past Iverson has used his leader dates as a way to connect with and learn from elders like Billy Hart and Jack DeJohnette. For the first time he’s working solely with younger musicians, who find ample space for freewheeling invention even within the concise forms of these short tunes, whose pop-like precision harkens back to his days with The Bad Plus.
“The Bad Plus’ music was very tightly constructed,” Iverson says. “We really knew how to reach an audience in a different way. Live we’ll inevitably stretch out, but I myself enjoy tunes that you can’t stop listening to for the duration of the piece.”
That’s certainly true of the album’s infectious opener, “Conundrum,” which the composer posits as the theme song for an imaginary game show. (He hasn’t figured out the rules, but he’s willing to work with interested producers.) That’s followed by the angular jump blues of “Victory is Assured (Alla Breve)” which takes us back to Kansas City by way of the post-war avant-garde. “It’s Fine To Decline” is an even more abstracted blues, while the title track plays over rhythm changes with an almost Cubist range of perspective. 
“Who Are You, Really?” appends a Dexter Gordon quote to a joyously catchy tune that dances around Morgan’s robust bass line, and “The Chicago Style” embeds at least one chord from composer Ralph Shapey into an exploratory excursion that feels almost, but not quite, entirely unlike the Windy City experiments of the AACM and others. The blissful, upward gaze of “The Way Things Are” ends this segment with Iverson’s shruggingly accepting take on the Serenity Prayer.
The following three tunes feature Willson, Sperrazza and Schwimmer, Iverson’s compatriots on projects with the Mark Morris Dance Group. Their experience on “The Look of Love,” choreographed to Iverson’s arrangements of Burt Bacharach’s music (given the imprimatur of the late songwriter himself), infuses the trio’s “Killing Me Softly.” Iverson first heard the song not via Flack’s classic hit but in a jazz rendition by Hampton Hawes – his own take splits the difference. A similarly velvety feel cushions Iverson’s wistful “The Feeling Is Mutual.” In between comes the startling duo of Iverson’s piano and Schwimmer’s keening theremin on Monk’s immortal piece, in a version like none of the countless others.
The album concludes with Iverson’s first Piano Sonata, a through-composed, three-movement piece constructed from the composer’s era-fusing jazz vocabulary. In describing the piece, Iverson details a history of 20th century American classical music that left behind the innovations of Gershwin, Copland and James P. Johnson for “hardcore modernism” of Elliott Carter and Milton Babbitt and then the severe minimalism of Philip Glass and Steve Reich.
“Gershwin, Copland and Johnson really tried to blend concert and vernacular idioms,” he explains. “Then after World War II, high modernism and then relatively simple minimalism ruled the roost, and that mix got shunted aside. In my humble way, I’m trying to pick up that 1930’s thread.”
In the process, through a repertoire that alights on myriad points on the jazz and classical timelines in playful yet inventive ways, Iverson allows himself the credential that christens the album. “If I’m taking the measure of my own work: I’m on a journey, but I don’t think it’s finished yet. My first album was called School Work; maybe in another ten years I’ll create the album Flawless Masterpiece. For now, I’m Technically Acceptable.”
PR Presse / Online
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