Jazz pianist
Stetch is well-known for his bravado and imagination as a composer and as an interpreter of other styles of music, as evidenced by his stellar
Ukranianism album from 2001. That recording took classic folk songs from
Stetch's heritage -- familial, he hails from Canada and lives in New York -- and reinvented them solo-style as wonderfully strident jazz tunes. That album was the first of a projected trilogy of solo recordings, of which
Standards is the second volume. The casual jazz listener should beware the title of this recording: While all the tunes are from the canon and have been played by everyone from
Teddy Wilson to
Bill Evans and
Oscar Peterson, these interpretations are radical, off-road readings that reinvent these songs as much as execute them. All the years
Stetch has spent as a leader -- he released seven recordings with bands before the solo outings, and as a sideman with such notable vanguard figures as
James Blood Ulmer,
Rashied Ali,
Reggie Workman,
Billy Hart, and others -- offered him a way of hearing that few pianists have. In the harmonic force of
Stetch's read of
Jerome Kern's "All the Things You Are," for instance, he takes the melodic line and realigns it harmonically so that it flows in reverse with the changes. This is no gimmick; subtleties and inventions of rhythm and intervallic notions had to be reworked in order to make the tune continue to sing. And it does. His take on "Like Someone in Love," the Burke/Van Heusen nugget, comes across as a piece that could have been written and arranged by
Ravel or
Debussy with its shimmering, suspended chords and haunting glissandi. Despite these eyebrow-raising revisionings of these time-honored gems, it is
Stetch's visionary interpretations of
Monk and
Charlie Parker that are the true masterpieces here. In the case of
Parker, few pianists take on his work solo because it wasn't composed that way. But
Stetch employs his amazing rhythmic and scalar intelligence to both "Moose the Mooche," with a rolling groove and notes falling like rain, and "Segment," a
Parker obscurity that becomes a swinging mind-bender of jazz minimalism in
Stetch's wonderfully creative hands. In recording "Pannonica,"
Stetch reveals his greatest influence,
Thelonious Monk.
Stetch has an angular approach to harmony that begins somewhere in the middle of a scale and works both ways at once. His rhythmic sense, while a bit more conventional than
Monk's, is still to the left of players such as
Keith Jarrett,
Herbie Hancock, or
Geri Allen. His turn of
Monk's phrases, falling just outside the meter the way they do, keeps the composer's lyricism while moving the boundary's edge just enough to make the tune sound dangerous again. This is a fine prep, since
Stetch will be recording his third volume in his solo series around the music of
Monk. This is unlike any other recording of jazz standards out there and a watermark for
Stetch. ~ Thom Jurek