Keyon Harrold comes to jazz and pop from his home in St. Louis, and at age 28 presents his debut recording of straight-ahead modern mainstream music in the typical Criss Cross label tradition. He's not carved in the mold of hometown icon
Miles Davis, but has some of the bold technique of
Freddie Hubbard and fluidity of
Lee Morgan, while stylistically within the neo-bop range of
Wynton Marsalis or
Tom Harrell.
Harrold has played with the
Count Basie and Roy Hargrove big bands and as a sideman with
Billy Harper, and has worked with
Jay-Z,
Beyoncé Knowles, and
Snoop Dogg, among others, so he knows the twentysomething audience as well as grown-up purist jazz listeners. Brothers
Marcus Strickland (saxes) and E.J. Strickland (drums) support
Harrold, along with the fabulous young pianist
Danny Grissett and bassist Derzon Douglas. As you'd expect,
Harrold is an accomplished player with both youth and experience on his side, but also uses different arenas of modern jazz as a composer. His opener, "TMF Nuttz," is a
Marsalis-type angular bop-strewn swinger powered by
Grissett's two-fisted chords and a ripe solo by the brassman, and features
Harrold's mentor, fellow trumpeter
Charles Tolliver. The chunkier melody of "The Awakening" takes into account a blues aspect that identifies
Harrell's pure tuneful sound, while an atypical version of
Horace Silver's "Peace" is stewed in a light Brazilian broth with guitarist Jeremy Most added on in an interpretation quite different from the pensive, balladic original.
Grissett is fond of switching to the electric Fender Rhodes piano, adding more of a retro feel to the funky boogaloo strains of "Shirley's Blues" and the 4/4 bounce during "Hip Hop Joint," with
Harrold's muted horn alongside
Marcus Strickland's solid tenor sax. In reference to his deep St. Louis gospel roots, "Amazing Grace"/"Lord, My God" is fairly typical in the main, but
Marcus Strickland's soprano sax adds brighter color to the combo piece. These are all very good and well for what one might expect, but "Sudden Inspiration" stands out in its easy swing stance offset by staggered phrasings that jump out, where "Keyon Beyond" more perfectly envisions the duality of clockwork beats with a hip-hop sway that made
Ahmad Jamal's "Poinciana" a seminal reference point for current music in the urban collective. Certainly this is a credible first effort, as
Harrold only scratches the surface of his potential, and though somewhat derivative of past predecessors, it bodes well for his bright future alongside
Jeremy Pelt,
Sean Jones, and
Ambrose Akinmusire as the leading jazz trumpet players of a new generation. ~ Michael G. Nastos