For jazz pianists, there's a lot to be said for reaching your early seventies. If your chops have held up -- and that's a big if, of course -- and the enthusiasm is still there, that combination of knowledge, experience, and technical skills can be a wonderful thing.
Barry Harris was 72 when, in August 2002,
Live in New York was recorded in a Big Apple club -- the credits and liner notes don't tell which one -- and the veteran pianist obviously hasn't lost anything in the chops department. He is in good to excellent form throughout this CD, which finds him leading a quintet that employs
Charles Davis on tenor sax, Paul West on upright bass,
Leroy Williams on drums, and Israeli improviser
Roni Ben-Hur on guitar. Nothing groundbreaking occurs, but then,
Harris was never groundbreaking to begin with. Even in his youth,
Harris was a follower rather than a leader -- a pure, unapologetic bebopper who, like
Sonny Stitt on the saxophone, excelled by sticking with the tried and proven instead of pushing jazz's envelope. And on
Live in New York, the 72-year-old
Harris maintains that hell-belt-for-bop outlook on three original pieces ("Monking Around," "To Dizzy With Love," and the congenial "7-4-3") as well as
Tadd Dameron's intriguing "Casbah" and
Thelonious Monk's "'Round Midnight." Yes, the latter has been beaten to death over the years -- some would argue that there needs to be a moratorium on "'Round Midnight" (for younger artists, anyway). But because
Harris is old enough to remember the dawn of bebop, one ends up welcoming his inspired performance of a great but overdone standard that Orrin Keepnews has correctly described as "the national anthem of jazz."
Live in New York falls short of essential, although it's a solid, rewarding effort that
Harris' longtime fans will enjoy. ~ Alex Henderson