Posted on

JazzWrap reviews Nick Hempton “The Business”…

jazzwrap.blogspot.com

Nick Hempton: The Business (Posi-Tone Records; 2011)

Nick Hempton (sax)

Dan Aran (drums)
Marco Panascia (bass)
Art Hirahara (piano)
Yotam Silberstein (guitar)
I first encountered Nick Hempton through Smalls Jazz Club in New York. The group is tight and fierce. It’s a true, swingin’ yet basic hard bop outfit that should instantly attract the attention of even ardent non-jazz fan. Nick Hempton, originally from Australia then transplanted to New York, has been on the scene for just a few years. Hempton’s style is like a young Dexter Gordon, but don’t underestimate Nick Hempton or his band for just another revivalist of hard bop. Hempton can craft a tune and his long standing quintet can cut some powerful chords.
After fighting it out to get gigs at the various venues around the city, Hempton finally landed a fairly regular gig at Smalls. That open environment definitely permeated the group’s debut album, Nick Hempton Band (self produced; 2009) which included some terrific numbers including the infectious opener “Get This” and the midtempo rhythms of “Serenity”. Marco Panascia and Hempton share some wonderful passages throughout. Hirahara and Aran also add a strong element of unity for the group as evident on the groovy “The Artful Roger” which could feel at home on any Tubby Hayes record. A solid debut that really shouldn’t be missed.
The freedom and cohesiveness of the group are tightened on the new release, The Business (Posi-Tone; 2011), now adding Silberstein as guest on a couple of tracks. The group and Hempton  display a real sense of growth over the last two years. Hempton sounds bigger and mature. His compositions are also very well rounded as the buoyant, “Art Is In The Groove” demonstrates with great toe-tapping beats from Aran. But even more delicious is the killer organ and guitar work from Hirahara and Silberstein that gives the track a sizzlin’ Jimmy Smith flavour. Hempton wails but is more determined to let his bandmates shine. The standard “Gee Baby, Ain’t I Good To You” (one of my favourites), is exquisitely executed by the group. The bluesy, gospel delivery by Hempton has all the elements of a late night club date. The rest of group lay back and follow but tone is rich and unified.
“Encounter At E” is a lovely original ballad that is the best number I’ve heard from Hempton so far in my short time following this group. The group adds a great deal of colour to Hempton’s material here but it still retains a soft tone and glides gently along allowing the listener to absorb every note. Panascia delivers some great lines late that are moving, and accompanied by Hirahara’s smooth well balanced touches on the keys. Hempton’s performance is romantic and very lyrical while the composition itself brings out the best in the group.
The band closes out with a high spirited “Carry On Up The Blues” featuring astounding performances from both Silberstein and Hirahara. Hempton rockets the group through most of the beginning of the piece before turning the show over to the group. It’s a great display of what this band does live. The Nick Hempton Band seems to do what most groups have trouble with – delivering the same patterns and energy that are conveyed in the live performance and translating that to record. The Business is evidence that bop is alive and well and can be delivered both on stage and off. An excellent second record from a group and a leader that are getting better and better with each outing.
Posted on

The Jazz Word on Nick Hempton “The Business”…

thejazzword.blogspot.com

Saxophonist Nick Hempton leads a swinging quartet for his debut with Posi-Tone Records, The Business. The Australian native, currently residing in New York has a warm, soulfulness to his playing, emulating the styles of hard bop and R & B saxophone giants such as Dexter Gordon, Cannonball Adderley and Hank Crawford.

Hempton brings a swinging determination to his own compositions, particularly on the sly 5/4 groove of “Press One for Bupkis” and the boppish “Not Here for a Haircut.” A straight-up rendering of “Gee Baby, Ain’t I Good to You” reveals a strong penchant for no frills blues playing. The disc’s other cover tune, Rahsaan Roland Kirk’s “From Bechet, Byas, and Fats,” an up-tempo minor blues with a bridge, features an exceptional solo from pianist Art Hirahara and fiery trading between Hempton and drummer Dan Aran—Aran provides a tight groove from one tune to the next with the aid of bassist Marco Panascia.

The group is augmented on a few tracks with guitarist Yotam Silberstein who comps and solos with great facility on the closing “Carry On Up the Blues.” A well-conceived disc with hip tunes and strong playing, The Business is an unpretentious, toe-tapping musical ride.

Posted on

Another review for Art Hirahara “Noble Path”…

trioriot.blogspot.com

Art Hirahara’s new debut CD Noble Path is full of well crafted stories told in a contemporary style that borrows more from the mainstream than the modern – but don’t let that fool you – this is an exciting new trio with depth and width in their vision and execution. Hirahara builds tension and excitement with two hands, the left locking into full fingered voicings and the right exploring multiple runs and percussive accents that never seem to lack imagination, surprise or momentum. The opening Hirahara original, the easy going I’m OK, could have come from the pen of Tadd Dameron and indeed there are four underplayed standards here rendered with great maturity and ease of expression beyond his years, Con Alma, Ellington’s beautiful IsfahanAll or Nothing At All and Porter’s Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye. But it is the Hirahara originals that intrigue the most with an unpredictable turn of harmony and a gradual layering of harmonic and melodic intensity – those story telling hands have a lot to say.

Yoshi Waki on bass and Dan Aran on drums are Hirahara’s equals and for the trio’s next release I want to hear many more solos especially from Waki who, with Aran, is top flight. Listen carefully and you can here how he converses but occasionally I’d like to hear him make a speech! On the brilliantly constructed Noble Path his playing is superb.

It sounds like this grouping has played often and after a while when you disengage your ears directly from the three music elements and focus on the shared musical thrust you feel the ebb and flow (one of Art’s best originals in this collection is calledEbb and Flow) of a music that although erring on the mainstream is played by three souls who have mastered the craft of musical communication both within their trio and with the listener. From the excellent Posi-Tone label – highly recommend.

Paul Zetter/Trioriot

 

Posted on

AAJ review for Art Hirahara “Noble Path”….

www.allaboutjazz.com

Art Hirahara has gained the most notice for his work on saxophonist Fred Ho’s adventurous outings, but the pianist’s own music, while occasionally outward bound, often has a more immediately accessible sound to it. Featuring eight pieces from Hirahara’s pen and four newly arranged classics,Noble Path is a piano trio record that’s both commonplace and unique. The album can seem like a standard trio affair because few pieces veer too far off the road and the material is delivered with polish and panache, but Hirahara’s sense of programming and ability to tap into different ideas at will, and the communicative skills within the trio, all help to elevate this album high above the mundane musical meals that often tend to serve as piano trio outings.

Hirahara expertly covers all of the must-haves on a trio date, including a jazz waltz (“Ebb And Flow”), perky and soulful Brazilian-inspired fare (“Stood Down”), classy (if somewhat forgettable) straightforward swing (“I’m OK”), and enjoyable standards (“All Or Nothing At All” and “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye”), but he also pushes the envelope in a few places. He delivers music with a loose and flowing celestial aura (“Peace Unknown”) and explores the darker and scarier side of night music (“Nocturne”) with supreme skill and a fearless attitude.

While the majority of the music focuses in on Hirahara, with drummer Dan Aran and bassist Yoshi Waki providing support and taking a backseat as soloists, that isn’t always the case. The looser numbers tend to be more collaborative affairs, Waki’s work at the outset of “Vast” proves to be the best part of the piece, and both rhythm men trade fours and have a ball on a buoyant take of Billy Strayhorn’s “Isfahan.” Of the standards, Dizzy Gillespie’s “Con Alma” tends to stand out because of its unique arrangement in five and the sheer joy that all three musicians seem to be feeling, but all four classic covers are first-rate. In fact, all twelve pieces on Noble Path give notice that Art Hirahara’s music is worth hearing.

Track Listing: I’m OK; All Or Nothing At All; Stood Down; Ebb And Flow; Noble Path; Con Alma; Peace Unknown; Change Your Look; Isfahan; Nocturne; Vast; Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye.

Personnel: Art Hirahara: piano; Yoshi Waki: bass; Dan Aran: drums.

Record Label: Posi-Tone Records | Style: Modern Jazz

Dan Bilawsky/All About Jazz

 

Posted on

Richard Kamins Step Tempest review for Art Hirahara “Noble Path”…

steptempest.blogspot.com

Born in the Bay Area of San Francisco, pianist Art Hirahira has been playing, studying and teaching music most of his life.  He’s studied with Charlie Haden and Wadada Leo Smith at CalArts, performed with Dave Douglas, Vincent Herring, Travis Sullivan’s Bjorkestra, Jim Black, Jenny Scheinman, Fred Ho, Sean Nowell, royal hartigan, and Rufus Reid.  His work on saxophonist Sarah Manning’s impressive 2010 recording “Dandelion Clock” (Posi-Tone Records) really caught my attention (Ms. Manning’s playing is mighty impressive as well) and now the label has issued his first CD as a leader in over a decade.

Noble Path” features the pianist/composer in the company of bassist Yoshi Waki and drummer Dan Aran and is one of those “piano trio” recordings that captures one’s ear with its musicality, subtlety and intelligence.  Don’t let that scare you away – the music also has bounce, swing, and strong solos.  The program starts with the warm swing of Hirahira’s “I’m OK“, with a melody, a piece that feels influenced by Phineas Newborn Jr. and Harold Mabern, with a piano solo that moves easily from two-handed chordal phrases to rippling single-note runs. Waki and Aran keep the flow moving without over-playing.

The CD includes 4 “standards”, ranging from the driving hard-bop attack of “All or Nothing at All” to the gracious take on Dizzy Gillespie’s “Con Alma” to the lithe swing of Duke Ellington & Billy Strayhorn’s “Isfahan” (really strong piano solo) to Cole Porter’s gentle ballad “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye” (the rhythm section is soft, supportive and creative behind the pianist.) Each song respects the original piece but the trio’s interactions make each piece shine anew.

Hirahara’s compositions cover much creative ground. The title track starts with a handsome melody (with a bit of a country music twist in the phrases) before stretching out into a sweet piano solo (Aran’s snare work mirrors the pianist’s lines nicely.)  A hint of both gospel music and Vince Guaraldi can be detected on the beautiful “Peace Unknown” with the pretty melody and piano solo supported by melodic bass lines and muted drums.  “Ebb and Flow” has a joyous swing, gentle not hard-edged while “Nocturne” is dreamy at the onset then opens up with some of the “freest” playing on the CD (the musicians go “out” without losing the melodic kernel of the piece.) “Change Your Look” begins with a harder attack (there’s a hard-driving section in the first third of the performance) then the pianist takes it down before jumping back into a faster pace. The tempo shifts back and forth as the intensity rises, ending on a short, impressionistic, solo piano coda.

Noble Path” is a generous hour’s worth of music, generous in many senses, not the least of which is the abundance of melody.  Like the trio music of Bill Evans and Denny Zeitlin, the listener is drawn in by the quiet intensity of the players, by solos that capture the ear with unique turns-of-phrase, and sharp interplay.  Art Hirahara is a musician and person you should check out – his music will win you over.

Posted on

New CD released today on Posi-Tone! Art Hirahara “Noble Path”……

www.posi-tone.com

Art Hirahara – Piano

Yoshi Waki – Bass

Dan Aran – Drums

Turn over a new leaf and tune in to the tasteful stylings of pianist Art Hirahara as he travels down along the “Noble Path.” Employing a wide palette of styles and sounds, Hirahara quickly establishes himself as a gifted instrumentalist and makes a bold statement of purpose with both his stunning musicianship and his collection of original compositions.

Songs:

I’m OK 4:36 / All Or Nothing At All 4:19 / Stood Down 5:15 / Ebb And Flow 3:52 / Noble Path 3:38 / Con Alma 6:03 / Peace Unknown 5:18 / Change Your Look 5:22 / Isfahan 5:44 / Nocturne 5:30 / Vast 7:27 / Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye 6:09

Posted on

SomethingElse! coverage for Art Hirahara “Noble Path”….

somethingelsereviews.com

On May 3rd, Posi-Tone Records will deliver a rare new album by NYC-based pianist Art Hirahara, called Noble Path. “Lyrical” is an adjective I’ve seen ascribed to pianist Art Hirahara, and it’s one he lives up to on this trio date for his first Posi-Tone record. Though he hadn’t been very prolific leading sessions, Hirahara has been busy on the club circuit since arriving in New York in 2002, and done some sideman dates, including this one for Sarah Manning. For Noble Path, he brought in his working trio with him: Dan Aran on drums and Yoshi Waki on bass. This record tends to be pastoral more often than not, but it has its share of unpredictable moments: “Change Your Look” ambles along slowly when right in the middle of it, the band brings up the pace to a funky, snappy gait, and “Nocturne” flirts with free jazz. The stirring “Peace Unknown” leverages the heavy classical training of Hirahara’s youth. No matter what the leader throws out, the band is able to stay with it, a clear benefit of all those club dates together. With Noble Path, Hirahara has found a nice home at Posi-Tone and hopefully this signals the beginning of a long-overdue burst of recording activity.

Posted on

A new review for Art Hirahara “Noble Path”…

jazzinspace.blogspot.com

For his trio CD, “Noble Path” (Posi-Tone) the Bay area pianist Art Hirahara goes pleasurably old school, with an abundance of catchy, melodic originals. It’s a successful foray into the kind of music that one associates with leaders like Kenny Barron, Cedar Walton or John Hicks, and it’s clear that Hirahara holds a deep respect for musicians that ply the jazz trio tradition. Bassist Yoshi Waki and drummer Dan Aran, both rhythm masters in their own right, provide exemplary support on inspired originals (“Stood Down”) and dazzling covers (“All Or Nothing At All,” Dizzy Gillespie’s “Con Alma.”) Hirahara has a deft technique that memorably crowns his originals and his fleet finger play positively shines on the title track. But you can sense this working group’s own satisfaction when bopping through the changes on Billy Strayhorn’s “Isfahan” or feeling the love from the music on Cole Porter’s “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye.” (12 tracks; 63:16 minutes)

Posted on

The first review for Art Hirahara “Noble Path”…

www.audaud.com

Art Hirahara – Noble Path – Posi-Tone

On Art Hirahara’s new album, Noble Path, the tune is the truth and the truth is tuneful.

Published on April 26, 2011

Art Hirahara – Noble Path – Posi-Tone

 

Art Hirahara – Noble Path – Posi-Tone PR8074, 63:09 ****:

(Art Hirahara – piano; Dan Aran – drums, percussion; Yoshi Waki – bass)

Pianist Art Hirahara did not start out as a jazz composer and interpreter. During his college years he made progressive music using computers. But two things led him to a desire to play in a jazz combo and converse with like-minded musicians. One was the aspiration to bounce ideas off other music makers and another was listening to Branford Marsalis’s Crazy People Music (1989), the first jazz album Hirahara bought. Being a fellow keyboardist, Hirahara was deeply enticed by Kenny Kirkland’s lyrical energy as well as the quartet’s unity of purpose.

Over the decades, Hirahara has honed his own ability as a melodic performer as well as a group leader who strongly believes in interaction. Those skills can be heard on Hirahara’s first foray on the Posi-Tone label, Noble Path, which also includes drummer/percussionist Dan Aran and bassist Yoshi Waki. Hirahara penned eight of the 12 tracks: the others are two Tin Pan Alley pop tunes and two jazz standards by Dizzy Gillespie and Duke Ellington.

There are several different emotional impressions inherent to Hirahara’s mainstream jazz compositions, from jaunty to melancholy, but they all serve Hirahara’s goal to move to a higher level of musical understanding and truth, similar to Buddhist guidelines. The luminous “Stood Down” is one refined example. The arrangement unfolds bit by bit as the trio displays synchronicity: Hirahara’s lower register keyboard lines merge with Aran’s percussive timekeeping and Waki’s conjoined bass. Hirahara’s beatific ballad “Peace Unknown” is even better, a poetic piece which captures the feel of Ennio Morricone’s gentle-natured nostalgia. No surprise the tune was influenced by Morricone’s score for Cinema Paradiso. Hirahara’s “Vast” is a late-night reverie where listeners can almost see the stars sprinkling the infinite evening sky: while Hirahara’s piano is sublime, Aran’s misty percussion adds just the right degree of humidity.

The mid-tempo cuts all share a lively tempo and allow plenty of room for Hirahara to dance across the keys. The opener “I’m OK” recalls some of the classic trio recordings from the 1950s and 1960s with its combination of ensemble togetherness and crisp soloing as well as a responsive melody. The unpredictable “Change Your Look” – Hirahara’s conception of crazy people music – is particularly well constructed with lots of shifts which provide a candid expression of the threesome’s varied rhythmic and harmonic organization.

On previous outings as a member of The Rhythm Section, Hirahara showed a penchant for translating other artists’ works. Here, Hirahara and his trio put some bounce and rebound on Arthur Altman’s well-known “All or Nothing At All,” which evokes Freddie Hubbard and John Coltrane, who both recorded versions. Dizzy Gillespie’s “Con Alma” is also a highlight and the number has become one of the trio’s live favorites. Billy Strayhorn’s enduring “Isfahan” gets an artful rendition sparked by Hirahara’s wily piano playing. The hour-long program wraps up serenely with a reflective rendering of Cole Porter’s “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye,” where the trio genuinely communicates the essence of Porter’s romantic sentiments.

TrackList:
1. I’m OK
2. All or Nothing at All
3. Stood Down
4. Ebb and Flow
5. Noble Path
6. Con Alma
7. Peace Unknown
8. Change Your Look
9. Isfahan
10. Nocturne
11. Vast
12. Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye

— Doug Simpson

 

 

Posted on Leave a comment

Another compelling writeup for Sarah Manning “Dandelion Clock”….

by Tim Niland
Studying with jazz iconoclasts like Jackie McLean and Yusef Lateef has given Sarah Manning the confidence to develop her own conception of jazz music. Employing a tart and immediate tone on alto saxophone and supported by pianist Art Hirahara, bassist Linda Oh and drummer Kyle Struve, she explores eleven compositions, both standards and originals. “The Peacocks” opens the album with pinched acerbic alto saxophone and lush piano. Manning’s dark toned alto floats over an atmospheric, rippling backdrop to good effect. She is very successful with the ballad “Habersham Street,” employing a yearning tone over emotional, nearly romantic piano support. An impressive unaccompanied alto section allows her to fly solo with dramatic and effective results. “I Tell Time by the Dandelion Clock” broods moodily before picking up to an insistent trio section and pinched alto saxophone solo. “The Owls (Are on the March)” is the centerpiece of the album, opening spare and spacious and then building suite-like through sections of march drumming with saxophone and an expansive piano – saxophone duet. “Phoenix Song” builds the pace to a sing-song feel and solid medium tempo quartet swing. After a rippling piano trio feature, Manning’s strong saxophone returns in a dialogue trading nimble phrases with the drummer Struve. This was a very solid album of modern mainstream jazz. The most impressive thing for me was the strong and piercing tone that Sarah Manning has developed on her instrument, she is well on her way to the holy grail that musicians strive for, “finding their own voice.” Linda Oh (who released a great album of her own last year) is excellent as well with rock solid accompaniment and inventive soloing.