Aaron Parks trio @ Turner Sims

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  • Ian Thumwood
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 4242

    Aaron Parks trio @ Turner Sims

    I belatedly decided to rush home form work last night and see pianist Aaron Parks's trio with Ben Street and Billy Hart perform at the Turner Sims. The concert was really poorly attended and many people in the audience had decided to see the gig on the strength of the drummer. To be honest, Billy Hart gave a master-class and was the best thing about the trio - both more his supreme musicianship and taste as well as his enthusiasm for working with two younger musicians.

    The repertoire was varied with the first half being programed and the second consisting of standards called out by the pianist including "Tenderly", "Airegin" , "Body and soul" and Charlie Parker's "Cheryl." Some of the originals worked better than others and I was more impressed by Parks' ability with ballads as opposed to the up-tempo performances where I think his style of playing did not dig in and swing enough for me. The consensus after the gig was favourable although there were comments about Parks being more conservative and restrained than expected. The billing of "ECM recording artist" can be a prelude to be underwhelming in a live setting yet Parks was perhaps slightly more exuberant than some of the pianists preferred by Eicher. However, I didn't feel that Parks had his own style. Parts of his playing recalled Corea and Jarrett although he sometimes sounded like the more conservative Bill Charlap. You could hardly describe his music as "contemporary" but the way his phrasing skated over the rhythm was indicative of the current fashion amongst many of today's younger pianists where the newer generations of pianists are increasingly unlikely to yield another McCoy Tyner or Don Pullen with a muscular and driving approach to soloing. I'd seen Parks previously around 200/9 when he was signed to Blue Note and not been over-impressed. This concert seemed to witness a maturing artist and one less in the thrall of Brad Mehldau yet there were large moments when the piano failed to grab the attention with Hart's drumming increasingly revealing a mismatch between the men and the boys. I much preferred the last group I saw featuring Billy Hart and maybe the post-Coltrane / freer approach of Chico Freeman more squarely captured the kind of jazz that I increasingly prefer these days.
  • Hornspieler
    Late Member
    • Sep 2012
    • 1847

    #2
    I have a treasured possession, given to me in the coffee lounge in New York Amazon Bookshop by Aaron Parks' mother of the Aaron Parks Trio, who were performing for the customers.

    Probably their first ever CD and sadly, no longer available from Amazon.
    I was immediately impressed by the fresh approach of this young trio and was delighted to talk to Aaron's mother, who was acting as their Manager at that time.
    Titled "First Romance", I was impressed enough to send notice of this young group to Humphrey Lyttleton, but heard no more from him at the time.
    It would have been in about 2002 that my wife and I were touring up the East side of the USA from Washington to Niagara and then back to New York.

    This OP is the first mention of the trio since that time.

    I am very delighted to read of their successful development.

    HS

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    • Ian Thumwood
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 4242

      #3
      Hornspieler

      I was staggered to find that Parks is still only 33. He seems to have been around for ages. I can see him being a popular performer albeit I see him as an arch-conservative. He performed in the club in Vienne a long while ago and I was too tired and disinterested to spend too long checking him out. At the time, there were too many piano trios booked to perform and I found him to be under-whelming and too indebted to Brad Mehldau. I don't think the influence is as strong as it was but he has an extremely light touch , a concise approach to the improvised line and a nice sense of harmony. That said, I didn't sense a strong personality.

      The curious thing was the audience he attracted. Most of the people were probably there to hear Billy Hart but I was struck by the almost total absence of young people and the number of people who were clearly of retirement age. I' am not too aware of his work but even when he attempted to play be-bop, the result was quaint as opposed to being on the money. He will certainly appeal to an audience coming from Classical Music but am not too surprised by the lack of interest by the typical jazz audience. He is probably only a few notches up from the likes of the late Sir Richard Rodney-Bennett for my liking even if the Englishman probably would not have tackled Shorter's "Marie Antoinette" nor dedicated a piece to Alice Coltrane - a really unlikely dedicatee given the style of jazz he played . park seems very informed about the repertoire.The music he produces isn't exactly muscular or driving and I found myself far more interested in what Billy Hart was playing on his kit which was far more adventurous , especially in the way that he read the rhythm. I've never read anything about Park on this board and don't ever recall hearing any of his records. My guess would be that given the negative response the superior Gwylim Simcock received on this site from some quarters, there would probably be a negative reaction. This is nothing wrong with Aaron Parks but ECM is stacked full of pianists who are on the quiet side with this style now being the norm and not the exception. All in all, fair play to him for assembling a first class bass and drums.

      Not sure if this trio is touring elsewhere or whether anyone else had come to the same conclusion as myself.

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