Thelonious Monk is a good example of one of those musical geniuses who early on in their careers created a sound that was considered experimental and cutting edge but with the passage of time has become standard fare on the jazz menu. The innovative young pianist composer became the revered grand master, and after his death in 1982 nothing short of a legend. And nothing says legend like fellow musicians paying tribute to your music by making it their own. It's one thing when people copy what you've done; it's quite another to use what you've done as an inspiration to build upon and create.
Trumpeter Jimmy Owens' The
Monk Project is just such a tribute. "Thelonious Monk," he
says, "is one of the world's premier jazz artists and composers. Many of his compositions provide (even the
best) jazz artists with musical challenges, such as the opportunity to maneuver
through difficult chord changes and execute unusual melodies. I chose compositions that people may have
heard before, however, when I arranged the pieces I wanted to give them a
different feeling than how they have been performed in the past." Owens has taken the music and transformed it
into something new, yet something still quite recognizable. But more importantly, something that might
well have brought a smile to the face of the legend. The Monk Project is jazz as
it ought to be.
The trumpeter leads a septet
consisting of Wycliffe Gordon on Trombone, Marcus Strickland on tenor sax and
Howard Johnson on the tuba and baritone sax.
Kenny Barron is on the piano, Kenny Davis on bass and Winard Harper
plays drums. It is a group that combines
veteran talent with new young voices—age and youth, a winning combination. They feed off each other as though they have
been playing together for years, and in some cases they have.
There are ten tracks on the album
beginning with a swinging arrangement of "Bright Mississippi." "Well
You Needn't" follows featuring Owens on the flugelhorn and the septet's
rhythm section. Owens and Barron have in
fact played together for years and it shows.
A funky "Blue Monk" is a real show stopper with some down and
dirty trombone from Gordon. This is one
of the highlights of an album filled with highlights. The group's take on
"Stuffy Turkey" is treated more playfully, in contrast to the low
down "Blue Monk." Kenny Davis
gets an opportunity to get out front on the bass.
"Pannonica," one of
Monk's most elegant melodies, is slowed down some in Owens' hands and achieves
an almost more impressive eloquence. They
follow with an up tempo version of "Let's Cool One" with Strickland's
sax featured in the opening solo.
"It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" will have
you bopping and nodding again with some low down improvisation. Owens and the combo play around with rhythms
on the complexities of "Brilliant Corners," and the album follows
with a contemplative (what else would you expect) take on
"Reflections." A ten minute
ride through "Epistrophy" which gives each of the seven a moment to
shine ends the album with style. Scheduled for release in January of 2012,
The Monk Project is an album to keep your ears open for.
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