KEITH JARRETT
The Carnegie Hall Concert
ECM
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Let Me Go-Live In Tokyo
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the Jazzitude review of Keith Jarrett/Fort
Yawuh
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the Jazzitude review of Keith Jarrett/Up
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Keith Jarrett Recordings
by Marshall Bowden
Any recording artist as prolific as Keith
Jarrett is going to have peaks and valleys. Jarrett has
had surprisingly few valleys, and it can be argued that
many of those result from his trying something new that
perhaps didn’t work out perfectly at the time, but
which generally became integrated into his subsequent work
in satisfying ways. When you are talking about music created
at this high a level, there really isn’t any bad music;
its reception depends largely on the listener’s tastes
and on the mood that Jarrett is projecting at any given
time. Where those two elements mesh there is clearly something
special that occurs.
The dawn of the new millennium found Jarrett
still exploring various work with his Standards Trio, featuring
Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette. Whisper Not,
a Paris ’99 concert released in 2000, found Jarrett
beginning to bounce back from his harrowing bout with chronic
fatigue syndrome, which had sidelined him for a number of
years. Next came the trio release Inside Out, which
found the group experimenting with group improvisations
in a manner not unlike Jarrett’s earlier solo piano
improvisational concerts. The group had grown sufficiently
telepathic to allow them to perform in this manner, as demonstrated
by 2002’s Always Let Me Go/Live In Tokyo.
Two more traditional trio CDs followed: 2003 saw the release
of Up For It, which showed a relaxed trio performing
live in France, while 2004’s Out of Towners
was, if a little less inspired, still a classic Jarrett
trio performance. Then, in 2005, came the release of Radiance,
the first live improvised solo piano performance since 1997’s
La Scala. Recorded in 2002, the Radiance
featured Jarrett improvising suites of music based on ideas—melodic,
rhythmic, harmonic—that radiate from the previously
improvised section. These sections were much briefer than
his long-form improvisations (Köln Concerts,
etc.) and the relationship between them was sometimes abstract.
This new approach seems meant to provide Jarrett with the
ability to perform improvisational solo piano concerts again,
though it also seems to suggest a blossoming re-interest
in compositional structure as well. Jarrett the composer
has frequently been overshadowed by Jarrett the improviser,
but there is no doubt that his compositional skills are
formidable.
The Carnegie Hall Concert was recorded
September 26, 2005, and is released a year to the date later.
This 2-CD set applies the approach of Radiance
to the bulk of the performance, but there is a difference.
Whereas Radiance was frequently abstract and difficult
to get a handle on from the listener’s point of view,
the ten improvised sections of Carnegie Hall are
very warm and approachable, though still challenging at
times. There are nearly two hours of music here (curiously
divided between 32 minutes on Disc One and an hour and a
quarter on Disc Two), but it seems unlikely that very many
of those in attendance were looking at their watches during
this first solo Jarrett American performance in ten years.
Part I opens with a strong note of classicism,
and suggestions of some of Jarrett’s work interpreting
classical artists, particularly Dimitri Shostakovich’s
Preludes and Fugues. Part II creates a rhythmic
backdrop for some bluesy soloing that, were it being played
on electric piano or the combination of electric piano and
organ that Jarrett used while playing with Miles Davis,
would be downright funky. There is a strong audience ovation
following this propulsive section. It’s followed by
the lyrical Part III, the type of exercise in spare romanticism
that has beguiled many of Jarrett’s followers. More
than ever Jarrett allows space and silence to speak volumes.
Part IV is frenetic and relatively atonal until it settles,
uneasily, back into a minor key near its conclusion. Part
V picks up from there and builds in more melodicism, while
keeping the listener just a little off balance at the same
time.
Disc 2 begins with Part VI, another playful
abstraction that demonstrates the way in which Jarrett’s
considerable technique is always used only as a tool to
express the musical ideas in his head. Part VII is a revelation,
as Jarrett returns to the kind of open-hearted gospel/Americana
that he does better than anyone, yet has not done for some
time. This section demonstrates the way that he is able
to turn the simplest of chord progressions into a full-fledged
musical piece that builds in emotion until it seems to explode
forth from the keyboard, direct from some inspirational
force, with Jarrett merely as its interpreter. The audience
clearly enjoys this piece following several darker and more
pensive sections. Part VIII is contemplative, but more unabashedly
romantic than anything on Disc One. This sets up the ending
sequence—an almost stride number, Part IX, and the
gentle Part X, with its repetitive rhythm pedal note, a
theme that conjures all the wide-screen dreams as well as
the sense of aloneness and uncertainty that can reside in
the same person at the same time in an urban environment
like New York City. It ends the piece on a note that, while
not dark, is more somber than might have been the case.
Following the copious and thunderous applause
that explodes at the piece’s conclusion, Jarrett performed
five encores—all composed pieces. One of these—the
finale—is a standard, the Youmans/Adamson/Gordon piece
“Time On My Hands.” The others are all Jarrett
compositions—three of them new. “The Good America”
is the kind of open sky piece that Jarrett has specialized
in—a kind of Americana that springs from the soil
of the heartland and comes close to being a kind of hymn.
“Paint My Heart Red” is a classic Jarrett jazz
performance, as he swings through some phrases and displays
a classical sense of restraint on others. Jarrett’s
“True Blues” is a real boogie-woogie fest that
results in several minutes of applause. The other Jarrett
piece here is a vintage composition—“My Song,”
originally recorded in 1977 with his “European”
quartet that featured Jan Garbarek, Palle Danielson, and
Jon Christensen. His solo performance here is simply gorgeous,
a delicate rendering of the tune that offers up its romantic
core without a trace of sentimentalism. It’s the first
time Jarrett has dug back into his considerable repertoire
of compositions in a long time, and it is one of several
hopeful signs here that we may see more of Jarrett playing
solo piano onstage in the years to come. Truly one of his
best solo performances since the days of Köln Concerts
and Sun Bear Concerts, and easily one of this year’s
best overall releases.