Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Vijay's way

A JazzTimes piece on pianist and composer Vijay Iyer, who's got to be the only jazz musician with a PhD in music AND cognitive science, prompted me to pick up his new CD "Reimagining." It's one of the most interesting things I've heard this year, adventurous 21st century jazz bordering on, and sometimes in, the avant-garde.

"Revolutions" and "Inertia," which open the session, remind me of The Bad Plus, high volume, dense, group-oriented sonic explorations in a jazz context. "Song for Midwood" works some Indian rhythms (Iyer's parents are Indian immigrants) into a McCoy Tynerish-sounding piece and he continues to do so elsewhere ("The Big Almost") on the disk, which is attention grabbing from beginning to end. All the compositions are Iyer's, except for a near-classical recasting of John Lennon's "Imagine."

As a pianist, I don't believe Iyer can be pigeonholed, but if you think of a mix of Tyner, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea and Dave Brubeck you've got an idea. Rudresh Mahanthappa is powerful and creative on alto sax in a Tony Malaby or Joshua Redman way and Stephan Crump and Marcus Gilmore are a perfect fit on bass and drums. This is special stuff.

2 comments:

  1. Little Mike's recent iTunes purchase:

    (I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone (Single Version)
    Theme from "Valley of the Dolls"
    I Say a Little Prayer
    I Go to Rio (Extended Version)
    One Less Bell to Answer (LP Version)
    Rhinestone Cowboy
    Blowin' in the Wind
    Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody
    Hey Ya!
    On and On
    Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow)
    Comin' Home Baby
    Leaving On a Jet Plane
    If I Had a Hammer
    Year of the Cat
    The Greeks Don't Want No Freaks
    Thanks for the Memories
    Road to Morocco
    Danke Schoen
    Like a Rolling Stone

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  2. What, no "Y.M.C.A.?"

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