Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Hans Koller: Wild Roses
Hans Koller: Wild Roses
ByThis new trio album with bassist Dave Whitford and drummer Gene Calderazzo, regular small group and big band compadres, is a more conventional and rough and ready affair than Koller's big bands. Recorded on-the-hoof in a day last summer, it's a romping, exuberant, standards and head arrangements shaped affair, with consistently dynamic, high energy contributions from all three players (only Bill Frisell's midway "Throughout" and Koller's closing "Paris Blues" cool and slow down to the relatively reflective).
Standouts are Herbie Nichols' "2300 Skidoo" and "The Third World," Mingus' gorgeous "Peggy's Blue Skylight," and Koller's "Wild Roses" and "Paris Blues," the first elliptical, the second lushly lyrical. The two Monk covers, "Pannonica" and "Bye-Ya," don't go anywhere we haven't been before, but they're boss tunes, performed with muscle and respect.
Unapologetically in the pre-EST piano trio traditionin energy, expansiveness and in-the-moment abandonWild Roses harks back to the great trio albums Hampton Hawes made with Red Mitchell and Chuck Thompson in the mid '50s. But unlike Hawes, and as an added bonus, Koller gives generous space to his partners on the bass and drums, and these two men fill it with plenty of their own fire and passion.
Not a revolution then, but a good time ruckus to be sure.
Track Listing
2300 Skidoo; Remember Rockefeller At Attica; Wild Roses; Peggy's Blue Skylight; Throughout; The Third World; The Eternal City; Pannonica; Bye-Ya; Paris Blues.
Personnel
Hans Koller
saxophone, altoHans Koller, piano; Dave Whitford, bass; Gene Calderazzo, drums.
Album information
Title: Wild Roses | Year Released: 2005 | Record Label: Unknown label
< Previous
SFJAZZ Collective
Next >
Red Dragonfly
Comments
About Hans Koller
Instrument: Saxophone, alto
Related Articles | Concerts | Albums | Photos | Similar To