Ivy Trio
Download links and information about Ivy Trio by Greg Burk Trio. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 7 tracks with total duration of 52:07 minutes.
Artist: | Greg Burk Trio |
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Release date: | 2007 |
Genre: | Jazz |
Tracks: | 7 |
Duration: | 52:07 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Look to the Neutrino | 5:27 |
2. | Blink to Be | 7:17 |
3. | Dumbo's Dilemma | 8:05 |
4. | Hupid Stumid | 7:54 |
5. | Ducks and Gulls | 7:14 |
6. | Operetta | 6:23 |
7. | Billie's Bounce | 9:47 |
Details
[Edit]Greg Burk resides in Rome, Italy, but this CD recalled days when he was living in the Metro-Boston area, working with the Either/Orchestra and being inspired by swimming in the legendary Walden Pond. Many years prior he initially connected with bassist Jonathan Robinson and drummer Luther Gray at a class Archie Shepp taught at U-Massachusetts. Recorded in a study lounge at Harvard, the Ivy Trio, reunited 14 years later, parallels few piano-bass drums triads, as they suggest the European stylings Burk would later adopt. Burk, a clearly talented and forward-thinking pianist, is searching for new variance in nuance and phrasings. He is swinging sweet and light during "Dumbo's Dilemma," and takes an alluring samba to heart on "Operetta." "Duck & Gulls," clearly inspired by the Pond, is introspective and moody, but more percussive than melodic. He digs in on a powerful "Hupid Stumid," muscular and direct, but not pushy, rambles quite freely during "Blink to Be," and wittily changes chords in a unique fashion on the bop warhorse "Billie's Bounce." The first tune "Look to the Neutrino" is completely disarming and not reflective of the rest of the album. A knuckle-curve for sure, it utilizes a thorny, muddy, dense Moog synthesizer, sounding like a Farfisa organ, and is similar to a Bad Plus stance before Burk goes back to the acoustic piano. It's not bad, just incongruent. This is a minor quibble, for Burk presents a piano trio of a different stripe, removed from influences, save maybe Paul Bley, and creates on-the-spot spontaneous composition that is easy to recognize, tough to pigeonhole, smartly conceived, and well realized. ~ Michael G. Nastos, Rovi