Crescent

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Crescent album cover
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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 87:41

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Britt Robson

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Britt Robson has written about jazz for Jazz Times, downbeat, the Washington Post and many other publications over the past 30 years. He currently writes regula...more »

07.20.10
Balancing torrential outpouring with peace and reflection
2010 | Label: NYC Records / IODA

Although Crescent is released under Mainieri's name, on his own NYC label, it belongs just as much to the late saxophonist Charlie Mariano and the music written and/or played by John Coltrane. Mainieri — the vibraphonist who co-founded Steps Ahead, among many other projects in his fruitful career — was friends with Mariano and conceived of this 2005 session a year after the pair had improvised what Mainieri describes as "pure magic" during a concert at the Dusseldorfer Jazz Rally. When Mariano accepted the invitation, he presciently suggested his bassist Dieter Ilg make it a trio session in the studio.

It's fitting that this is one of the last dates Mariano would play, because there is an elegiac serenity to the proceedings. Like Coltrane, Mariano had left the confines of bop for something more spiritual, and was influenced by Indian music. Crescent reminds the listener that while 'Trane is most frequently remembered for his torrential outpouring, it was informed by his understanding of its yin/yang relationship with peace and reflection.

Crescent is still much more old school than New Age, however. Though the tonality may be delicate, the probe, thrust and parry down the stretch of "Ole" resembles a… read more »

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A wonderful, intimate recording

HSWT

The thing that strikes me the most about this fine double album set is the wonderful communication between the players. While maybe not quite as magical as the Corea/Burton and Getz/Barron duo recordings (but then what is), this one is certainly in the same neighborhood. Bassist Deiter Ilg provides strong support but the real magic is between Mariano and Mainieri. The contrast between Mariano's sometimes gritty alto sound and Mainieri's shimmering vibes is great. All this rides on top of some wonderful arrangements of tunes played by or associated with John Coltrane. It doesn't get much better than this!

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Re-inventing the Jazz Trio

davidmidiperc

Shimmering vibes create meloncholic backdrop for this spacious, intimate set. Everyone's listening, making this unique concept sound fresh yet classic, as if vibes, sax and bass were the obvious jazz trio configuration.

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They Say All Music Guide

Vibraphonist Mike Mainieri is hardly the first jazz artist to pay tribute to John Coltrane, but he may very well be the first to do so accompanied solely by alto saxophone (the late Charlie Mariano) and double bass (German Dieter Ilg) — no drummer or pianist in sight. A double CD recorded in 2005, four years before Mariano’s death, Crescent is a largely low-key affair. It unfolds at a leisurely pace and rarely kicks up any serious dust; the artists prefer to stay on a reflective, unhurried path that leaves lots of open space in which they can maneuver. But what Crescent lacks in velocity and volume it more than makes up for in texture and warmth. On both Coltrane originals (“Giant Steps,” “Naima,” the title track) and standards (“Bye Bye Blackbird,” “Body and Soul,” “Nancy”), Mainieri and Mariano lock into a groove that doesn’t echo Coltrane’s arrangements but rather evokes the spirit of the source material. Mainieri says in his liner notes that most of the recordings here were first takes, unrehearsed at that, and indeed there is a sense of spontaneity throughout. But that seat-of-the-pants approach, rather than resulting in a chaotic mess, works to the musicians’ advantage, leaving them free to explore without worrying about precedents. These are confident, experienced musicians who know their way around a melody. The vibes and alto solos, and there are many, are often freewheeling and adventurous, and Ilg’s basslines match them in smarts and inventiveness. Crescent manages to pay tribute to Trane by not trying to be Trane, and as such it stands as one of the more enjoyable nods to his creative example. – Jeff Tamarkin

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