The sound of four hands playing
Looking forward greatly to a two-piano concert I’m doing in San Diego tonight (April 7) with one of today’s true masters, Kenny Werner.
It’s not always that we have the opportunity to appear with those we’ve long admired and respected, and particularly another pianist. I’m fortunate to have performed duo piano in the past with Bill Mays, Pete Malinverni and Bill Cunliffe. This meeting with Kenny Werner, one of the lights of contemporary jazz piano, will be another memorable event for me.
I still return regularly to my copy of the magic “Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall” CD from 1957, released finally on Blue Note in 2007. I’m convinced it’s the definitive distillation on record of Monk’s artistic genius and pianism, as well as a crucial documenting of John Coltrane’s ongoing development at that time.
The uncanny intuitiveness between these two giants is something to behold, with no little help from Ahmed Abdul-Malik on bass and Shadow Wilson, drums. A classic moment in our music by anyone’s standards.
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Tags: Coltrane, John Coltrane, Kenny Werner, Mike Wofford, Monk, Thelonious Monk
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