Cure

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
All Keith Jarrett's trio releases with drummer Jack DeJohnette and bassist Gary Peacock contain passages of luminous brilliance, and there are many here. The leader's predilection for emotional intensity predictably takes precedence over his vehicles on this occasion--all of them standards, or near-standards. At a live recording at New York's Town Hall in 1990, Jarrett first backs into Monk's "Bemsha Swing," then does exquisite service to the tune. Similar personal inflections appear in a rollicking interpretation of Dizzy Gillespie's "Woody 'n You" and a fine "Golden Earrings" and "Body and Soul." Throughout, Jarrett does things that no other pianist would. With a striking mixture of sympathy and independence, DeJohnette trundles, lags, and lurches, yet projects great solidity and dependability. Gary Peacock provides the more essential timekeeping, while providing much lift. Before ending with "Things Ain't What They Used to Be," the trio performs the only Jarrett original, the title track, and there's a great sense of liberation and flight. --Peter Monaghan

Cure,Keith Jarrett,Ecm Records,Jazz,Pop

Jazz Music:

  1. Curves Ahead
  2. Early Alchemy
  3. Epistrophy
  4. Flashpoint [Import]
  5. Friendship (& Max Roach) [SACD] [Import]
  6. Full House [Live]
  7. Gerry Wiggins & Friends: Celebrating Wig's 80th at the Jazz Bakery [Live]
  8. Glass Tube [Box set] [Import]
  9. Graffito
  10. Is Love Enough?

Jazz Music

jazz music

Jazz Music

70's Rock Must Die [EP]

Carl Nielsen: Complete Works for Solo Piano

Copland: The Complete Edited Piano Works [Box set]

Music: Sneaky Flute Music [CD-single] [EP]

Sacred Heart [Import]

Dumbala Dumba [Import]

Don't Smoke in Bed

Discovering the Classics

Contra Roots and Branches

Classical Jazz... a guitar tribute to Charlie Byrd

Crush [Import]

Collection

Ayer, Hoy y Siempre

Cabaret (Original Broadway Cast)

Ganryu Island