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Piloo Records

REVIEWS

Kerry Politzer

Blue In Blue

ALL ABOUT JAZZ August 2010 By Dan McClenaghan

Two of the most enduring and popular ensemble set-ups in jazz are the piano triopiano/bass/drumsand the piano trio, with a saxophone joining in. Pianist Kerry Politzer combines formats on Blue in Blue, with six tunes featuring her trio and four more with guest saxophonist Donny McCaslin.

While You Took Me In (Polisonic Records, 2007) featured Politzer in a more pop-leaning mood, Blue in Blue finds her back in mainstream jazz land, sculpting a sound that mixes up piano influences from the likes of Bill Evans and Chick Corea, giving them, at times, the lightness and cool flow of Bossa Nova.

"Desolation or Hope" opens this set of Politzer originals, beginning with a mournful piano intro that shifts to a light-stepping and hopeful trio interlude, leading to McCaslin's mournful tenor. It is an adept dance between the emotions on a tune that shifts between light and dark.

"Early Spring" shifts to the trio, with drummer George Colligan and bassist Paul Beaudry. The sophistication, beauty and accessibility of this lighter-than-air tune points to Politzer's award-winning songwriting skills, while the delicacy and subtle piano touch lean toward her early classical studies, before the jazz bug bit.

"November" brings McCaslin back, giving a heartily freewheeling feel to the proceedings. Politzer's solo glows with bright spontaneity in front of the bass and drums' rumble and bustle rhythm. "Washington Park" has an off-kilter, mildly funky zest with a Brazilian injection, Beaudry rolling with jittery, Scott LaFaro energy on his solo as Colligan bumps into a bouncy groove.

"Shifting Clouds," with McCaslin on soprano, finds Politzer delivering another of her succinct and sparklingly gorgeous solo spots. The title tune (with the trio) has that inward, unhurried, meditative mood of Miles Davis' "Green in Blue," with Politzer displaying a more outgoing, busier piano approach than Bill Evans did with Davis' original on Kind of Blue (Columbia, 1959).

Blue in Blue proves itself a first-rate jazz outing, from one of the genre's rising stars.

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