Lennie Tristano (1919-1978) is another of one those tragically unheralded musical masters, a pianist and composer who was the first to use "free improvisation" in jazz in seminal late Forties recordings. Born in Chicago, his sight was severely impaired from birth and he was totally blind by the time he was ten. Despite this, he had immense musical talent, playing horns, guitar, drums and piano, the latter becoming his main instrument. He studied at the American Music Conservatory in his hometown, finishing the course in three years but denied his diploma because of a financial dispute and continuing with graduate work and he performed and taught, with one of his students being saxophonist Lee Konitz, later a major figure in jazz and who died this past spring at age 92 from COVID-19. While Tristano achieved some recognition during the full ferment of the bebop years of last half of the 1940s and into the next decade, he moved further into teaching and less with recording and performing. Tristano died at age 59 and was largely forgotten, leading, it was said, to bitterness and disappointment on his part. His aversion to commercialism and his dedication and devotion to his musical vision left him underappreciated and under-recognized over the years, though he was greatly admired by Miles Davis, Bill Evans, Anthony Braxton and Charlie Parker, among many others.
This great four-disc overview of Tristano's work between 1945 and 1952 issued by the British label Proper Records in 2005 shows just how forward-thinking this amazing musician could be, but it can also be understood (sorta) why his innovations did not connect with a wider jazz-loving public. It wasn't just the revolutionary free improvisation employed in tunes like "Intuition" and "Digression" recorded in spring 1949 and which definitely prefigured what Ornette Coleman and Cecil Taylor would do years later, but Tristano's approach to harmony and tonality were distinctive, even if, usually, the rhythm sections played very much "straight-ahead," leading to the critique that the music lacked swing and was cold and formal. The first two discs have plenty of interesting material, including some great piano solo work and fine trio recordings, with the excellent "Out on a Limb" and a series of tunes, some with an added clarinet, recorded on the last day of 1947 being standouts for this listener.
It is disc three, though, that astounds, with an all-star workout from 3 January 1949 including Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis and Fats Navarro on trumpet, Parker, J.J. Johnson and Kai Winding on trombone, Shelly Manne on drums, Charlie Ventura on tenor, and Tristano blowing through "Victory Ball;" some great work with a quartet and quintet session about a week later, featuring Konitz; a sextet with Konitz and Marsh in March with "Wow" named for a reason as the sax players play a phenomenal intertwined passage; and that free session in May, also with the two sax masters. Disc four has the great benefit of mainly consisting of live material offering greatly extended renditions of tunes with much longer soloing, including a Christmas Eve 1949 performance with Konitz and Marsh of two tunes at a Parker-headlined concert at Carnegie Hall, and a half-dozen tunes recorded in Toronto in summer 1952, again with his primary soloists. There are also a couple of pieces recorded in the trio format in fall 1951 for Tristano's short-lived label and including a young Roy Haynes—a master drummer who is still with us and who will be 96 in March.
With a four-disc set, there's a lot more that could be said, but, generally, as was the case with the long-neglected Herbie Nichols, given some of the great material, innovations, and beautiful playing found throughout, the one word that stands out, with Marsh and Konitz melding their horns together so excellently is: Wow.
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