Monday, March 5, 2012

Frank Harrison Trio - Sideways (Linus Records 2012)

Frank Harrison took up the piano at 11, and began playing gigs when he was 15. After taking up a scholarship at Berklee School Of Music, Boston, he returned to the UK and joined Gilad Atzmon s band. In 2000 they started the Orient House Ensemble, with whom Frank has recorded seven albums, including BBC Jazz Album Of The Year 2003, Exile. The band regularly tours Europe, playing at major Jazz and World music festivals. Frank has also performed with Peter King, Julian Arguelles, Julian Siegel, Don Weller, Alan Barnes, John Etheridge, Louis Stewart and Iain Ballamy. In 2006 Frank formed a trio with drummer Stephen Keogh and bassist Aidan O Donnell. Their debut album, First Light, launched to critical acclaim and they have since toured regularly in Europe and the Far East, as well as collaborating with special guests such as Louis Stewart and Tina May. Frank's new trio features Davide Petrocca on bass and Stephen Keogh on drums. AMAZON.COM




Frank Harrison is saxophonist Gilad Atzmon's regular pianist, so UK audiences often hear him skilfully navigating middle-eastern, north African and southern European folk music. But he's currently touring this elegant, straightahead jazz with the subtle, Barcelona-based Irish drummer Stephen Keogh and the agile former Monty Alexander bassist Davide Petrocca. With its softly swinging grooves under songs by Gershwin or Jobim, plenty of bass solos and a predominantly throttled-back feel, this sounds pretty familiar – but Harrison's delicate touch and thoughtful narrative-building lift it above the crowd. The opening Autumn Leaves prevaricates at first, teasingly hinting at harmonies that eventually coalesce into the classic theme. Then it becomes a piano improvisation, full of sly timing, feints and weaves. Jobim's Dindi develops over Keogh's bustling snare-drum pattern and a single repeating bass note. How Long Has This Been Going On? is a patient ballad exposition that intensifies melodically without losing the mood. You and the Night and the Music appears out of hesitant doodlings, preoccupied brushwork and faintly agitated, morse-code stutters. It's a set of classy variations on a jazz method that goes back decades.

John Fordham / guardian.co.uk,