Ideally, jazz should accommodate innovators as well as traditionalists. There is room for avant-garde explorers who push the envelope (
Ivo Perelman,
Henry Threadgill,
Dave Douglas) and there is also room for a swing-to-bop traditionalist like
Scott Hamilton (who was never cutting-edge but is damn good at what he does).
The Five A.M. Strut,
Ezra Weiss' first album as a leader, won't go down in history as the most innovative or forward-thinking debut of the early 2000s; much of his hard bop and post-bop material could have been written 40 years earlier. Throughout the album, the acoustic pianist is quite mindful of the '60s -- especially the classic Blue Note recordings of
Horace Silver and
Art Blakey's
Jazz Messengers. But if
Weiss is determined to be a traditionalist, his goal should be to provide quality traditionalism -- and
The Five A.M. Strut is a solid debut for this Portland, OR, resident, who was only 23 when he co-produced this CD with bassist
Leon Lee Dorsey in New York in October 2002. This sextet date shows
Weiss to be a triple threat; he is skillful as a pianist (
Horace Silver,
McCoy Tyner, and
Cedar Walton are obvious pianistic influences) and he is also talented as a bandleader/arranger and a composer.
Weiss, in fact, wrote all of the material himself, which certainly counts for something when you consider how many of today's jazz artists are content to play the same old beaten-to-death warhorses over and over. ("My Funny Valentine" is a great song, but do we really need to hear hundreds of new versions in the 21st century?)
The Five A.M. Strut falls short of remarkable, but it's an enjoyable, if derivative, demonstration of the pianist's various talents. ~ Alex Henderson