Extraordinary pianist Jean Michel Pilc back at the Jazz Bakery!!!
by jazzcat on Jun.14, 2006, under News
Click Pictue above to hear a live interview with Jean Michel Pilc and LeRoy Downs
Slide Show
This is the first night for what I can guarantee is going to
be one hell of a lot of music in a week for three humans to create. Chamber
Music America
and the Doris Duke Foundation have graciously commissioned a Trio Sonata that
will be performed during the second set that everyone is looking forward to. I
had an interview with the monster pianist Jean Michel Pilc last week prior to
this performance and the intellectualism behind the music is created in part by
an atmosphere of like-minded players along with the love for thought provoking,
creative sound.
Most people are afraid of monsters but this morphing, thirty
fingered, six armed mental sound producing machine doesn’t bite. It does swing
though, so watch out or you might become enthralled by its Giant Steps! On the battlefield of Cerebellum, you will
find yourself in a chess match with the music. Checkmate! How did that happen?
Well, the music is an intoxicating splendor of floating kaleidoscopic
shapes, colors, patterns and phrases that you must listen to and concentrate
on. If you stare long enough, the painting appears before your eyes with the clue
that you have been looking for. You are so enamored by the Cirque de Soleil of
feats that you did not realize that the powers of the music have taken control
of all of your senses. You can feel, taste, hear, touch and smell the Monk,
Trane and Duke in the mix. The game has been played before you could make one
move.
Jean Michel Pilc and his trio of Ari Honig on drums and
Francois Moutin on bass played a five part suite that resembled the wonder and amazement
of a journey up, down, through and across the fabric, layers and texture of
landscapes less traveled. The natural elements of earth, the ocean’s current
and the dark lurking imagery that nightfall can bring upon one’s imagination.
One moment the chase is on and the next finds you focusing on the precipitation
of a rose in the early morning. The tender transitions have the musicians act
as characters stepping seamlessly out of one scene into four parts of another.
From Technicolor into sepia tones to black and white and back.
Thelonious can do that, but listen to this cat! The Jean
Michel Pilc Trio!
LeRoy Downs