Billy Lester Unabridged Notes by Howard Mandel
Pianist
Billy Lester is a musical original. That’s obvious from the first, oh,
17 seconds of Unabridged, his sixth album and second all-solo recording.
Listen to the unusual, brief motif with which Lester opens
“Overture: Passionate Musings,” then develops, complicates and completes
it faster than you’d tie a shoelace. Pause -- and he continues. Not to
just recapitulate or elaborate the cell-like theme through variation,
but to expand it as a theme in a concentrated, melodically flowing way
that’s not exactly “songlike,” or modal, either. Call it the genre of no
genre.
Because what Lester does here contains sonic elements
that might be identified with compositional modernism, contemporary
“classical” music, or sounds that seem to exist as if only sprung from
themselves – it’s not so obvious that he arrives at his singularity
through decades of deep devotion to and teaching of the music we all
call jazz. Swing, the blues and American songbook standards, jazz icons
as well as major composers of the Western classical tradition are
Lester’s touchstones, regardless of that fact that what he’s creating
now ignores, sidesteps, bypasses or abstracts virtually all American
music’s basic conventions.