Outdoes his last effort (quite a feat)
Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 09/25/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"What has Jean-Michel Pilc learned in the year and a half since his spectacular initial release, Welcome Home?A lot.He's learned how to play less notes without sacrificing his monster chops. He's learned to find ideal, entirely sympathetic bandmates (Ari Hoenig, drums; James Genus, bass; and the greatly underrated Sam Newsom, soprano sax). He's learned that mood, space, and voicing are every bit as important in creating and playing effective jazz as speed.This disc has much more of a world-jazz feel than Welcome Home, with tinges of Oriental ("East") Latin ("South) Nordic ("North") and Left Coast hip ("West") filtering through. There's even a Reggae tune "Fred's Walk." There's still plenty of virtuosity--check out the high-wire act of "Ari's Mode" as well as, esp., Part I of "Trio Sonata." It's just that there's also a lot more maturity and much closer attention paid to creating effective soundscapes. The result is a disc that in some ways is even more remarkable than its predecessor.The incorporation of a broader musical canvas helps move things to the next level. Especially noteworthy is the playing of Sam Newsome, who has an absolutely unique and instantly recognizable sound on soprano sax. The inclusion of percussionist Abdou M'Boup on four cuts adds exotic flavor and coloration. Pilc also shows himself to be a composer to reckon with. The title track, with its attractive head and tricky/sinuous piano-sax unison lines proves to be a perfect vehicle for some startling Pilc solo flights of fancy (including a teasingly brief quote of "Eleanor Rigby") and Sam Newsome's finest solo on record. James Genus's acoustic bass solo (he mainly plays e-bass here, and I for one would like to hear more of him on acoustic) is also quite something, as is Ari Hoenig's drum solo that merges into a driving percussion passage from M'Boup.With this remarkable disc, Pilc proves he's anything but a one-hit wonder. Already a major piano voice, he should over the next few years come to be regarded among the very top echelon of jazz players and composers."