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CD
Reviews:
The
Life of a Day --- Reviewed by Phil DiPietro
The
Painter --- Reviewed by Terrell Holms
The Painter ---Reviewed by Franz A. Matzner
The
Painter --- Percussions.org review
The
Painter --- Reviewed by Alex Henderson
The
Painter --- Reviewed by J. Dennis
DVD
Reviews:
Los
Angeles Times
All
About Jazz
Latterland
Gig
Reviews:
Ari
Hoenig Record Release Party at Chris' Jazz Cafe
Bohemian
Revolution: Ari Hoenig at Twins Jazz
Jazz
Times Magazine / May, 2004
ARI HOENIG - THE PAINTER
An innovative drummer cast in Roy Haynes' ultracreative, ever-swinging
mold is Ari Hoenig (a regular with Kenny Werner and Jean-Michel
Pilc's trios and Joshua Redman's Elastic Band). On his debut as
a leader, The Painter (Smalls), Hoenig introduces his quartet with
Pilc on piano, Matt Penman on bass and Jacques Schwarz-Bart on tenor
sax at a live gig at the Fat Cat in New York City.
A remarkable player with an uncommon penchant for melodicism on
the kit, Hoenig has already put out two amazing solo drum recordings
in which he plays the heads to familiar jazz standards by playing
strictly skins, shells and cymbals with nothing more than sticks,
brushes, mallets, hands and elbows. The Philadelphia-born, New York-based
drummer swings fervently with brushes before switching to sticks
and unleashing behind Pilc's pyrotechnic keyboard work on the blazing
opener, a stunning trio rendition of Monk's "I Mean You"
(catch his melodic quoting of the head at the tag).
The title track is Hoenig's lovely waltz-time ballad. Starting off
with brushes, he plays it gracefully while still bristling with
swinging momentum, eventually switching to sticks behind Schwarz-Bart's
urgent tenor solo and finally erupting on a solo of his own at the
tag. Hoenig displays some ultrasensitive brushwork on his bittersweet
ballad "For Tracy" and also "Pilc-ing Around,"
a kind of dissonant mediation on "Naima." He then demonstrates
some ultrahip metric modulation on the time-shifting burner "Condemnation"
and also on his "Birdless," which also serves as a swinging
showcase for both Schwarz-Bart's bravura tenor work and Pilc's mercurial
touch. And he closes out the live set with a 16-minute version of
"Summertime," in which he pulls from his full bag of melodic
drumming tricks. This track alone-full of allusions to "Giant
Steps" and underscored by all manner of dramatic extrapolation
and virtuosic metric modulation-should be hip enough to make other
drummers sit up and take note.
-BILL MILKOWSKI
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