Pianist Mike Longo
Reconvenes His Trio with
Bob Cranshaw & Lewis Nash
For "Step on It,"
Their Third Recording
Reconvenes His Trio with
Bob Cranshaw & Lewis Nash
For "Step on It,"
Their Third Recording
CD to Be Released March 4
By Longo's Consolidated Artists Productions
By Longo's Consolidated Artists Productions
February 7, 2014 Terri Hinte
510-234-8781
hudba@sbcglobal.net
www.terrihinte.com
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"To the average listener he is playing great jazz," says producer Bob Magnuson of Longo, "but anyone who has followed the curve of his career hears the highly refined development of a consummate artist."
Playing songs you've heard hundreds of times, Longo makes you think you're hearing them for the first time. Wayne Shorter's "Nefertiti," a pensive modal classic by the Miles Davis Quintet, is transformed on Step On It into what Longo called "a real groove thing." Joe Henderson's mini-tone poem, "Black Narcissus," is pumped with energy. "We play it like a delicate waltz," said the pianist. His polymetric threesome's treatment of "Poinciana" was influenced not by Ahmad Jamal's classic cocktail recording but the Four Freshmen's textured, high-spirited rendition.
"Jazz
is like a baseball game," says Longo. "People say, oh man, I've seen
all this before. But then you start playing, even with the least bit of
preparation, and you find something new in the themes, the time
conception, the band's touch. The three of us all come from the same
school of playing. We don't know what's gonna happen."
Back in New York, he accompanied such singing greats as Jimmy Rushing, Nancy Wilson, and Joe Williams. Serendipity struck at the Metropole, where Longo was performing downstairs with trumpeter Red Allen at the same time Dizzy Gillespie
was leading his band in the room upstairs. During a break, Gillespie
saw Longo perform and was impressed enough to name him as one of the
best young talents around in the union magazine, International Musician.
Two
years later, Gillespie saw Longo perform at Embers East; some months
after that, Gillespie asked him to become his pianist after seeing
Longo's trio (with bass great Paul Chambers) back Roy Eldridge,
a hero of Dizzy's, at Embers West. Longo held down the piano chair in
Gillespie's quintet from 1966 to 1973 (following Kenny Barron). He
became Dizzy's music director, composer, arranger, and devoted blood
brother, and continued working with the man long after going out on his
own.
Longo's 1962 debut album, A Jazz Portrait of Funny Girl,
was one of numerous jazz-goes-Broadway collections released during that
era. In the intervening years, he has amassed a deep body of originals,
including a wide assortment written for or about Dizzy ("Matrix," "Soul Kiss," "Samba," "I Miss You John," and the orchestral work, A World of Gillespie). He also has enjoyed a successful second career as an educator and creator of instructional books and videos.
Web Sites:
www.jazzbeat.comwww.mikelongojazz.com
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