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Brad Mehldau's Songs: The Art of the Trio, Vol. 3
Songs, released at the end of 1998, marks the
third in the Grammy-nominated series "The Art of the Trio." Each album explores
the limits of trio music by exploiting the fullness (or emptiness) intrinsic to
the trio sound. In his last album, Live at the Village Vanguard, pianist
Mehldau blanketed the crowd with sound. Songs breaks from this
strategy: recorded in the studio, the album has all the emptiness, loneliness,
and introspection characteristic of Bill Evans.
The album hits its high point on Mehldau's cover of "Exit Music (for a Film),"
from Radiohead's incredible OK Computer. The song, about Romeo and
Juliet, carries the same melancholy plot line as the torch-song standards that
surround it. Though thematically "Exit Music" draws from jazz, Mehldau
rearranges the song into something that sounds more like a piano sonata. A
classically trained musician, Mehldau acknowledges that often during composing
and improvising he adopts from his favorite composers--Brahms, Beethoven, and
Chopin. "Song-Song," an original that opens the album, is a sad, slow waltz.
After the short intro, bassist Larry Grenadier uses a bow to create the
orchestral feel of Marccone's Cinema Paradiso score. In
"Unrequited" and "Convalescent," Mehldau leaves behind the constraints of
time signature, chord progression, and tonality, conjuring phrases that
seem to flow from sadness itself.
Mehldau only falters when he tries to be traditional. The standards seem
forced, despite the efforts of Larry Grenadier and Jorge Rossy. With "At a
Loss," the album loses steam. But at its best, Songs makes up in
originality what it lacks in jazz tradition. Pat Metheny has called Mehldau
"the most exciting pianist since Herbie Hancock," and the ability of a young
pianist to make one feel so deeply makes Mehldau one to watch. (Warner Bros.)
--Rob Giampietro
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