Quantcast
NEWS |   Sign In   |   I'm New Here
Return to home page





In Between Moods
Tony Foster
First Steps
Min Rager
Go and Find
Leanne Weatherly
Shambhala
Susan Wylde
Moods
Michaela Rabitsch & Robert Pawlik Quartet
This Heart of Mine
Pamela Hines








Pete McCann
Info | Enter
Gretchen Parlato
Info | Enter
Henry Threadgill
Info | Enter
Keith Jarrett
Info | Enter

Abstractionisms
Marty Namaro | HGW (2002)


By William Grim
Comments        

This is a very interesting album by multi-instrumentalist Marty Namaro. The pieces on Abstractionisms, all originals, are much less abstract than the title of the album would seem to indicate. Many of the faster numbers have a certain latin flavor, and the ballads are particuarly interesting from a harmonic standpoint.

According to the liner notes, this CD originally was influenced by a one-man play Namaro had written some years back (Namaro is also an actor.). To make a long story short, the original conception of the album changed. The same pieces which originally were meant to have programmatic meanings based on the play, now came to represent abstract concepts. This probably says much more about the impossibility of music providing literal meanings in the literary sense than it does about the quality of the compositions themselves. The music is quite good and it can be fully appreciated without any knowledge of the intentions behind the composition of the music.

The two most successful works on the album are "Strange Beings of Futurity" and "Skirmish of the Minds" in which Namaro is joined by reedman Kenny Pexton. While Namaro appears to be able to do everything well, when he is playing with (or against) another live player it seems to improve his playing. Jazz, after all, is a live, spontaneous muical genre, and the interplay with another soloist is especially vital. It remains impressive, however, that Namaro is equally as good a drummer as he is a pianist. Like the Singers Unlimited, Namaro's multi-instrumental virtuosity unfortunately remains a studio phenomenon and not one that can be experienced in a live setting.

For more about Marty Namaro, please see his website /www.martynamaro.com .


Track listing: The Accident; Booba; Marty's Bossa; Time Travel Sequence/Strange Beings of Futurity; Hidden Demons; The Social Morality of Immorality; The Classicist's Law; Skirmish of the Minds; The Imperical Matron; The 3R's; Blues for Angela; Ode to Wells

Personnel: Marty Mamaro, piano, drums, percussion; Aleksander Sternfeld-Dunn, bass; Kenny Pexton, tenor & soprano saxes

Style: Modern Jazz
Published: November 06, 2002


Be the first to post a comment on:
Marty Namaro's Abstractionisms

Signup & post a comment!






More articles by William Grim

Denada
Noted
You Know
Persistencia
Happy, Sad and Satisfied




Recent CD Reviews
George Garzone - Among Friends George Garzone
Among Friends
Charles Tyler - Charles Tyler Ensemble Charles Tyler
Charles Tyler Ensemble
Rudi Mahall / Axel Dorner / Jan Roder / Uli Jennessen - Die Enttausschung Rudi Mahall / Axel Dorner / Jan Roder / Uli Jennessen
Die Enttausschung
Fay Victor Ensemble - The Freesong Suite Fay Victor Ensemble
The Freesong Suite
Jon Irabagon with Mike Pride - I Don't Hear Nothin' But the Blues Jon Irabagon with Mike Pride
I Don't Hear Nothin' But the Blues
Hank Jones / Oliver Jones - Pleased To Meet You Hank Jones / Oliver Jones
Pleased To Meet You

CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 




 
(42)













.. Privacy Policy | AAJ Supports: Lens Lady All material copyright © 2009 All About Jazz and/or contributing writer/visual artist. All rights reserved. Advertise | Contact Us