"Talking about music is like dancing about architecture." - Thelonious Monk

Jul 1, 2010

ORRIN EVANS TRIO - Faith In Action


Have you heard Orrin Evans play the piano? With a loaded name like that, try Bill Keepnews, it’s easy to be confused but don’t be – you need to hear him, you should hear him, you will hear him. Making jazz albums since the mid nineties, I’m ashamed to say I’ve only just connected to this piano master born in New Jersey in 1976. Faith In Action is a tribute to the great alto player and composer, Bobby Watson whose tunes make up nearly half the CD. Playing here in the company of Nasheet Waits, drums and Luques Curtis, bass, the trio plays in a straight ahead contemporary style with hints of Tyner, Hancock and Monk at the roots. Evans has remained largely under the radar compared to some of his contemporaries in the US scene like Robert Glasper and Taylor Eigsti - maybe because his approach is totally uncompromising, acerbic and without artifice. He swings hard and unrelentingly; Don’t Call Me Wally, Appointment in Milano, but can also turn corners into reflective exploration and meditations on a mood; Matthew’s Song, Love Remains. I love it when the playing descends (or do I mean ascends?) into the avant garde on the fringes of pieces that seem to fray the edges of near oblivion like MAT-Mat and Wheel Within a Wheel. This is as good as it gets and when he launches into the Monk-washed, Two Steppin’ With Dawn, you hear the pedigree loud and clear.

For people who like well conceived hard swinging solos that knock at the doors of perception with no hint of commercial compromise, Orrin Evans and the trio is for you. It’s like sailing in a choppy sea in a sleek yacht with an experienced crew who know how to ride the crest of the wave. Highly recommended – the title says it all.