Brad Mehldau, Largo (Warner Brothers): Instrumentation includes “piano with putty treatment in lower two octaves” and “distorto-piano through leslie with whammy pedal” (I did not make that up). Oboes and bassoons and French horns play material by Radiohead (“Paranoid Android”), Antonio Carlos Jobim (“Wave”), and the Beatles (“Dear Prudence,” “Mother Nature’s Son”). There are rock backbeats, fancy studio tricks, and electronic effects. The record company hypes the album as “the jazz of the future.” Some critics are calling it pretentious. They are wrong. Mehldau’s gorgeous new album has such a strong sense of itself and of propriety and purpose that it self-defines and justifies. His elegant keyboard lyricism swings somewhere between Bud Powell and Brahms. The rhythm section is always in just the right slot no matter what the stylistic slant (and there are quite a few). It is not necessary to be able to analyze the sophisticated counter-rhythms to be tickled by them. One of the most tasteful, adventurous, and consistent pianists around, Mehldau just gets better and better.
Ron Miles, Heaven (Sterling Circle): Trumpeter Miles teaches at Metropolitan State College in Denver and has been under the radar for too long. In duo with Bill Frissell, one of the most respected guitarists of the day, he plays originals and songs by Bob Dylan (“A Hard Rain’s A-gonna Fall”), Thelonious Monk, Hank Williams (“Your Cheatin’ Heart”), and Jelly Roll Morton. Calling the album “minimalist” is an understatement. This is a duo without ambition to sound bigger, and splits notes with a brittle, breathy, innocent sound (reminiscent of Johnny Coles with Gil Evans). He tried to “pick songs that go together to capture a joyous feeling.” Miles and Frissell create a fresh textural spectrum. With the guitarist’s haunting detuned harmonies, the collective sound is like the shining a poet once described as coming from “shook foil.”
Leon Parker, Belief (Columbia): Famously minimalist percussionist Parker features African and Latin influences (steel pan, marimba, berimbau, claves, hand drums) to arrive at a kind of grown-up inter-continental children’s music. There are dancing dialogues and soulful duets between Tom Harrell, trumpet, Steve Wilson, saxophone, and Steve Davis on trombone. Joel Dorn’s production is notable, as are Ugonna Okegwo’s tough and tender bass lines. For Parker, being a musician is “both a responsibility and a privilege.”
This article appears in Nov 27 – Dec 3, 2002.


