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Bordeaux Concert
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Barnes and Noble
Bordeaux Concert
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
Bordeaux Concert
Current price: $19.99
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Size: CD
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Pianist
suffered a massive stroke in February 2018, leaving him unable to play the piano. This date, recorded at Auditorium de l'Opera National de Bordeaux on July 6, 2016, is his final French concert. It is the second release from his last European tour, following
(released in 2019) and
(2020). All three showcase the improvising musician at a creative peak. The performance has been divided into 13 sections with natural breaks.
"I" commences with an abrupt phrase that fades behind pedaled low notes.
is assertive, playing percussively distinct yet rapid single notes and shapes, while establishing a circular rhythm. He stops abruptly after six minutes and begins layering thick chords atop a jagged tempo. Eventually, single notes from the high register return to replace chords.
has given the audience a gift by jumping into the deep end first. "II" reveals the pianist at his most lyrical after a feinted intro partially deceives the listener. He adds another surprise just under four minutes as he slides into a minor-tinged walking left-hand rhythm that fades into a single note. "IV" is spectral and inquisitive throughout, though its first half offers effusive ostinati and illustrative arpeggios that recall
before
strips them down into syncopated lyric jazz articulated by ghostly chord voicings. The interlocking pulses, notes, and chords in "V" recall
at his most investigative, though
cannot help but contribute a more detailed harmonic sensibility, even as he extrapolates, transposing root melodic chords into rhythmic pulses. "VII" is worth the price of admission by itself.
has loved folk and classical traditions throughout his life (for proof of the former, check 1987's classic
). In this section he channels both in one of the most poignant ballad improvisations of his long career. He follows it with "VIII" -- a mutant, stride boogie woogie piece that references
,
, and
-era
almost simultaneously. "X" sounds like a circular classical minuet filtered through gospel and played by
. It is startling and delightful. The closing section is unsettlingly funereal. Its elegiac dirge is offered with spacious frames for each chord and note, it emerges in stages as
begins a scalar inquiry at around two minutes, then explores the margins, humming along under the notes as they falter, rumble, and whisper forward. It leaves only open questions at its conclusion.
is not for the
beginner, but for seasoned fans of his many solo recordings, that are, after all, responsible for a sizeable portion of his legendary reputation. The dialogue he engages in with the piano here challenges its own assertions with an unassuming, even reverential authority. This is not only masterful, it soulful, interrogatory, and virtuosic. ~ Thom Jurek