Want the real Crypto experience? You have Flash installed? Check out the Flash site!
Cryptogramophone


  • You Must Believe In Spring (4:54)
  • Barcelona (4:30)
  • Highway 14 (5:53)
  • All The Things You Are (4:35)
  • My New Old Friend (8:28)
  • Body and Soul (7:16)
  • One More Once (4:16)
  • Vienna (7:02)
  • Wichita Lineman (5:55)
  • Stick Slap (4:33)
  • Smile (5:31)

Artists

CG 122
My New Old Friend
Alan Pasqua

Pianist Alan Pasqua, has recorded with Tony Williams, Jack DeJohnette, Paul Motian, Dave Holland, Michael and Randy Brecker, Alan Holdsworth, Gary Burton, John Patitucci, Sheila Jordan, and many others. My New Old Friend offers intensely personal renditions of some unusual standards, as well as many of Alan's moving original compositions. This intimate piano trio setting features drummer Peter Erskine and bassist Darek Oles. Pasqua was featured pianist on Ray Charles' Grammy winning Genius Loves Company.



Reviews

  • While Alan Pasqua is well known by fusion heads as the keyboardist in the New Tony Williams Lifetime and composer of that band's anthemic "Proto-Cosmos" (which former Lifetime guitarist Allan Holdsworth still uses as an encore), this intimate piano trio offering showcases an entirely different side of his musicality. My New Old Friend is underscored by the supple yet sparse bass work of Darek Oles (a kind of West Coast counterpart to Larry Grenadier who has been wildly in demand in recent years) and the sensitive, ECM-ish drumming of Peter Erskine. The CD is a striking collection of luminous and moving originals like Pasqua's "Barcelona," "Vienna" and the title track along with intensely personal, and eminently swinging, interpretations of jazz standards like "You Must Believe in Spring," "All the Things You Are" and "Body and Soul." The trio also turns in affecting renditions of Jimmy Webb's "Wichita Lineman" and Charlie Chaplin's "Smile," underscored by Erskine's Zen-like brushwork. Fans of the highly interactive piano trios of Keith Jarrett and Brad Mehldau would be well advised to check out this beautiful recording.
    Bill Milkowski
    Jazz Times [4-1-05]
  • Pianist Alan Pasqua's My New Old Friend clearly refers to his bandmates: drummer Peter Erskine, with whom Pasqua has worked in a trio for the past few years, but whose association goes back much further; and bassist Darek Oles, who has begun playing with Pasqua more recently. But it's the liner notes from Pasqua that perhaps describe the music best: "I hope that the music created here will give you, the listener, a place to rest for a while. It was made with love, care and respect..." Care may be the most important keyword. No idle stream-of-consciousness ramblings here: Pasqua is a spare and economical player for whom each note and chord is given the utmost attention. Avoiding rough surfaces and hard edges, there’s an unabashed romanticism about Pasqua’s work that makes it eminently accessible, and yet that's not to imply there isn't anything substantive. His reharmonizations of familiar tunes like "You Must Believe in Spring," "All the Things You Are," and "Smile" indicate a player with a deeper understanding than his easy-on-the-ears approach might lead some to assume. And while his compositions are equally lyrical and delicate, navigating them is more challenging than it might seem. The elegant "Barcelona" rotates through a series of harmonic centers, encouraging everyone to take the care that Pasqua refers to, to find melodies and common notes to tie together the cycle of changes, making it sound whole. Erskine continues to demonstrate the attention to detail so evident on his recent release with Bill Dobbins, Cologne. His evolution has been remarkable over the past thirty years—from an unquestionably talented but more obvious player to one with a more sophisticated philosophy that integrates more seamlessly into any context. Erskine’s accompaniment is sometimes so understated that it almost goes by unnoticed, felt as much as heard; yet his contribution remains key to the collective complexion of the music. Like Pasqua, he is not one to waste a note, and his ability to fit any context and listen as much as he plays, makes him a most sensitive addition to any ensemble. He has the ability to make a tune like "All the Things You Are" swing with the lightest touch on a cymbal; and when he trades fours with Pasqua he exhibits the kind of thoughtfulness and intention that makes the slightest figure a statement. Oles, who has been on the LA scene for a little over a decade but only recently released his first album as a leader - Like a Dream - is another player whose careful yet intuitive note selection and graceful sense of colour give this collection of largely medium and slow tempo tunes its life and light shimmer. Refined yet playful in a less-is-more kind of way, My New Old Friend appeals on many levels - but by avoiding the obvious and eschewing virtuosic displays, it's the kind of record where one has to pay attention to truly appreciate the riches revealed beneath its soft and engaging surface.
    John Kelman
    All About Jazz [4-1-05]
  • "Alan Pasqua's trio examines six originals and five standards with an airy, thoughtful, heartfelt creativity. The melody is never stated on All The Things You Are, but there's no doubt that's what you're hearing. Other evergreens, all delicately played, include Body and Soul, You Must Believe In Spring, Smile, and the surprise of the set, Wichita Lineman. Among Pasqua's compositions, I was drawn particulary to Barcelona, a gentle alternative to, say, Chick Corea's Apain. This is music you both hear and feel." ***1/2
    George Fendel
    Portland Jazz Scene [4-1-05]