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| PREVIEW OF THE DON
FRIEDMAN TRIO'S APPEARANCE AT THE JAZZ STANDARD: NEW YORK, NY
NOVEMBER 6, 2004
ALL ABOUT JAZZ NEWSPAPER: DECEMBER 2003 EDITION
Waltz for Debby Don Friedman(441 Records) by Andrey Henkin Somewhere Attila Zoller is smiling, pleased to see to his one time foil, pianist don Friedman, playing to a full audience at the Jazz Standard last month in support of his new album Waltz for Debby. Those giddy days of the Zoller-Friedman quartet days are long past but don Friedman has lost little of the touch that made him the darling of the vague area between hard bop and avant garde bubbling in the '60s. Most know Friedman now for his role in the quartet of the venerable trumpeter Clark Terry. But the pianist has been steadily releasing albums since 1993 (after a long hiatus from recording as a leader). This is his second available this year, his first for the 441 Records imprint. Unlike his other effort from 2003, here Friedman goes with heavy hitters in the piano trio support roles in bassist George Mraz and drummer Lewis Nash. The performance replaced Buster Williams for Mraz and Billy Drummond for Nash with a predictably different result but the constant is Friedman's still-fresh approach to mixed programs of standards and originals. Waltz for Debby is a self-conscious celebration of the pianist as a composer, featuring material by such luminaries of his species as Bill Evans (the title track), Michel Legrand ("You Must Believe in Spring"), Chick Corea ("Bud Powell") and Friedman himself. Where the live performance and album diverge is in the contributions of the sidemen. Mraz is usually called for to provide his particularly lyrical, almost folksy lines and solos to the mix while Lewis Nash hums along, integral but not overpowering . Friedman is of the Bill Evans s school, avoiding the florid or the flashy. His playing is the best termed thoughtful; he makes you think to realize all he does. If the piano trio is the currency of jazz, Friedman is its dependable banker. |
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