By Ric Bang
Buy CD: True North
This
is the third album I’ve reviewed by this talented pianist, and she just gets
better and better.
Pintchik
was a teaching assistant in English literature at Columbia University — where
she received a master’s degree in philosophy — before she discovered that her
future lay in the field of jazz, as a pianist and composer. “Discovering” her
took longer because, as with many musicians, she performs mostly in the area where
she grew up and resides. Her territory is in and around New York and New
Jersey.
She
initially performed in trios and quartets; as time passed, she added
instrumentalists. This album features a sextet; she’s joined by Steve Wilson on
soprano and also sax; Ron Horton on trumpet and flugelhorn; Scott Hardy on
bass; Michael Sarin on drums; and Satoshi Takeishi on additional percussion.
Pintchik
composed six of the 10 charts; the remaining tracks are arrangements of John
Lennon’s “Imagine,” Hollander and Lerner’s “Falling in Love Again,” Mancini and
Mercer’s “Charade,” and a live performance of Coots and Lewis’ “For All We Know.”
Most
of the arrangements are soft, swinging tempos, with rhythmic lines that include
waltz, samba, bossa nova, straight-four and even R&B feelings. The
exception — and my favorite track — is “Crooked as a Dog’s Hind Leg,” which is
a tricky, bluesy, up-tempo tune that changes chords for each soloist. It’s
guaranteed to get your fingers snapping and toes tapping.
All
the musicians are superb. Pintchik’s piano is tasty, thoughtful, reserved but
joyful; as I’ve mentioned previously, she’s on a level with Bill Evans. Wilson
and Horton are inventive; they play off each other — and Pintchik — wonderfully.
Hardy, Sarin and Takeishi not only provide a solid background, but nicely enhance
the interactions among the other instrumentalists.
They’re
a first-class jazz group, and this is a first-class album.
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