CD/LP/Track Review

Marty Williams: Long Time Comin' (2011)

By
C. MICHAEL BAILEY,
C. Michael Bailey

C. Michael Bailey

Senior Contributor since 1997

...wants to know if Gene Harris is playing "Summertime" in Heaven...

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Published: February 27, 2011
Marty Williams: Long Time Comin'

Bay Area fixture Marty Williams does not have a pretty singing voice. It doesn't need to be because it is a commanding one—readily identifiable, friendly, accessible and honest. and worth much more than being pretty. Doubly talented, Williams has a piano style right out of the righteous songbook of Junior ManceJunior Mance Junior Mance
b.1928
piano
, Les McCannLes McCann Les McCann
b.1935
piano
, and Gene HarrisGene Harris Gene Harris
1933 - 2000
piano
, full of blues, bluster and block chords that inform every song he performs. Together, the two talents make Long Time Comin' a song stylist's dream: hip and smart.

In the dozen songs covered, Williams spans the width and breadth of 20th Century popular music's golden age. From the 1930 Hollander/Lerner "Falling in Love Again" to 1967's Bacharach/David "The Look of Love," Williams applies his own unique stamp to the recital, making all songs his own. Williams imparts an easy, sure swing to all the songs, seasoned with his churchy-roadhouse piano playing. This is most easily heard on his cover of The BeatlesThe Beatles The Beatles

band/orchestra
' sinister "Come Together," propelled by bassist Ruth DaviesRuth Davies Ruth Davies

bass, acoustic
, and supercharged with guitarist Eric SwindermanEric Swinderman Eric Swinderman
's wah-wah, Williams need only accent the song, which he does with all his funky grace.

A second example of Williams' viral command of music in his performance is "Compared to What." This song is so iconic—so closely associated with Les McCann and Eddie HarrisEddie Harris Eddie Harris
1934 - 1994
saxophone
' nuclear performance at the 1969 Montreux Jazz Festival, documented on Swiss Movement (Rhino, 1969), that covering it is all but unthinkable. But Williams carries it off, with a raging grace and the exquisite soul-jazz piano of which he is a master; the double-fisted vehicle of social protest.

Williams' almost eccentric singing style is best displayed on "Falling in Love Again," "Love for Sale," and "Sunny," where his' vocals remains stylishly behind the beat, in a fractured rhythm recalling Thelonious MonkThelonious Monk Thelonious Monk
1917 - 1982
piano
compositions. Williams achieves perfection in his vocal and piano approach on "Love for Sale" and "Caravan," two of the lengthier pieces on the disc, where his patience and deliberate pacing frame these songs in an architecture conducive to soloing and straight playing. Were these performances any shorter, they would be too short.

It is obvious that Williams enjoys what he is doing, and does it with the relative ease of a true professional. So satisfying is this music, it should be canned and sold as a soul-food staple.

Track Listing: Brother (Where Are You); Caravan; Come Together; Compared to What; Falling In Love Again; Love for Sale; Mercy, Mercy, Mercy; Monk's Dream; On A Clear Day; Sunny; Sweet and Lovely; The Look of Love.

Personnel: Marty Williams: piano, vocals; Eric Swinderman: guitar; Ruth Davies: bass; Jon Evans: bass; Ranzel Merritt: drums.

Record Label: Self Produced

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