Rating:
Genre:
Jazz
Release Date: 01/30/2007
Long considered a classic album from
the Modern Jazz Quartet, the
European Concert defines them simultaneously as a recording entity and as a working band. Issued by
Collectables on a single disc is the entire performance originally issued on a pair of
Atlantic LPs in 1962 and briefly released on CD by
Joel Dorn's
M Label in the year 2000.
MJQ presented
jazz in the context of a formally structured environment, much like a chamber group in the
classical context. Within the band, the groove of
Milt "Bags" Jackson's vibes met the solid swing of
Connie Kay's drums, the funky strut of
Percy Heath's bass, and the elegant classicism of
John Lewis' piano. The
MJQ were able, in a context that pushed at
jazz's boundaries from the outside, to create a music that swung without edges or fragmented harmonic structures. Instead -- as this album perhaps more than any of their studio recordings exemplifies -- they used concepts of time, space, meter, rhythm, and changes to weave together a seamless whole, where melody grounded the
improvisation but never really restricted it. The kind of graceful counterpoint that exists between
Lewis and
Jackson here is instinctual at this time in 1960. The show included the finest moments of their early recording career in a live setting. One listen to
"Django" will make your head swim with its sparse rhythmic texture that is still driving and
Lewis' rag melody line when it encounters the pure stretch of the polytonal rhythms
Jackson is laying down. If it weren't for
Heath the entire thing would become unglued, because he was the hinge on this set. Elsewhere on
"I Should Care," Lewis brings his solo down to a rudimentary three-finger patter -- without chords -- that takes the line apart harmonically while never straying from anything in the architecture of the tune. Much later, on the encore
"Round Midnight," MJQ take
Monk's masterwork and turn it into a near rondo as time changes are constant in the first 16 bars. The front line melody blurs between
Jackson and
Lewis, as do harmonic counterpoint changes. While it's true this was a tune nobody should have had to change, almost everyone who covered it did.
Lewis, whose playing style couldn't have been more antithetical to
Monk's, quotes
Monk's own solo in his and turns it into a piece of the melody near the end where
Jackson is vibing chord changes and intervallic spaces. It leaves both audience and listeners breathless at the end of its all-too-brief three-minutes-and-forty seconds.
~Thom Jurek, All Music Guide