Search - Triptych Myth :: Beautiful

Beautiful
Triptych Myth
Beautiful
Genres: Jazz, New Age, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Triptych Myth is a new collective trio ? Cooper-Moore, Tom Abbs and Chad Taylor. They have been honing their group concept in NYC for the past two years, and this first studio recording exquisitely captures them at the pe...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Triptych Myth
Title: Beautiful
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Aum Fidelity
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 10/4/2005
Genres: Jazz, New Age, Pop
Style: Avant Garde & Free Jazz
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 642623303528

Synopsis

Album Description
Triptych Myth is a new collective trio ? Cooper-Moore, Tom Abbs and Chad Taylor. They have been honing their group concept in NYC for the past two years, and this first studio recording exquisitely captures them at the peak of their powers. Cooper-Moore played piano as a child prodigy in churches near his birthplace in the Piedmont region of the Blue Ridge Mountains. His performance roots in the realm of avant jazz music date to the NYC Loft Jazz era in the early/mid-?70s. His first group was a collective entitled Apogee with David S. Ware and drummer Marc Edwards; in recent times, he was a core member of William Parker?s In Order to Survive quartet and performed regularly with Susie Ibarra. Chad Taylor?s distinct voice and distinguished rhythmic/tonal vocabulary have been heard to great effect in performance, with musicians representing widely varied schools from Fred Anderson to John Zorn. He has also recorded or collaborated with Tortoise, Isotope 217, Sam Prekop, Stereolab, Mouse on Mars and Jim O?Rourke, and is a core member of the Chicago Underground Duo, Trio, Quartet & Orchestra. Tom Abbs? large buoyant tone, versatility, and depth have led him to work with Butch Morris, Charles Gayle, Roy Campbell, Jemeel Moondoc, Billy Bang and many more. The Beautiful ranges through heart-breaking new songs from Cooper-Moore, tone-poem explorations of the Now, new definitions of "swing," excursions into energy music that will further explode pre-conceived expectations, New American folktales waiting for the new America to be born, and cinematic colorations that carve sound into mountains. Word.
 

CD Reviews

Best Jazz Piano Trio album of 2005
Troy Collins | Lancaster, PA United States | 10/25/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

""The Beautiful" is Triptych Myth's first of three albums for AUM Fidelity. Led by visionary jazz multi-instrumentalist and under-recognized composer Cooper-Moore, the trio is rounded out by bassist Tom Abbs and drummer Chad Taylor. Although equally known for his home-made instruments and unconventional techniques, here the leader sticks solely to piano, bringing with him over three decades of playing experience. While this is not the first album recorded by this ensemble, it is their most diverse and the most emblematic of their varied talents.



Opening the album with the skittering lines and frenzied free-bop pulse of "All Up In It," the trio quickly side-steps expected cliché by following with "Frida K. The Beautiful," a devastatingly ruminative ballad that is the yin to the opener's yang. The trio moves across the spectrum of jazz tradition from open ended free meditations like "Trident" and "A Time To" to the angular post-bop, call and response work-out of "Spiraling Out." Down home funky folk melodies like "Poppa's Gin In The Chicken Feed" and "Pooch" represent the rural tradition of American folk music. Exemplifying the trio's ability to circumvent traditional structures, "Pooch" eradicates expected stylistic boundaries by inverting the preconceived notion of soloist and rhythm section. With its repeated, bittersweet melody line underscored by Taylor's open ended free form drumming, Cooper-Moore holds the rhythmic structure of the tune down while the drummer embarks on what is essentially a continuous drum solo.



Cooper-Moore is a devilish pianist, with a touch that varies from deft pianissimo to throttling tone clusters, no technique is left unused. Chad Taylor, who has worked with everyone from the Chicago post-rock crowd to composer/improviser John Zorn, shines here. Often finding rubato rhythms to explore, Taylor is an imposing presence and it is a delight to hear him in such a stripped down acoustic setting. Tom Abbs often plays mediator in the trio, finding the spaces left unfilled by the other two, accompanying them from sporadic root note plucking to full on torrents of arco bowing. The close-knit interplay of these three is apparent from the album's first notes and subsequent listening reveals what is easily the year's finest jazz piano trio record.



Finding inspiration in sources as diverse as Cecil Taylor's classic free jazz excursions of the 1960's to the rural folkways of the Deep South, Triptych Myth is the ultimate distillation of improvised American folk music. "The Beautiful" is a historically aware case study in the diversity of a music who's relevance only deepens with the passing of time."
First impression
Case Quarter | CT USA | 11/27/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"this is immediately gratifying music because it's very lyrical, a lyricism that juxtaposes nicely with avant garde piano. not that cooper-moore's playing reminds me of cecil taylor's playing so much, but listening to his taylored excursions i hear the ellington in the taylor.



the other taylor, chad taylor, who plays drums on the recording, uses cymbals and sticks like instruments separate from the drums; on drums he becomes the complete percussionist.



tom abbs on bass makes triptych myth seamless."
The title says it all
John C. Graham | toronto, ontario Canada | 10/14/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"We need more recordings like this. I have never heard so much past, present, and future on a single disc before. It is as if the whole history of this music is unfolding before your very ears. Cooper-Moore is an astounding pianist and judging by that, he must be an equally astounding human being. To be able to create such sounds that encompass a full spectrum of emotion, and in such a -beautiful-way, would seem to be the work of a lifetime. Laugh, cry, sing, dance, and all things joyous are to be found here.

Tom Abbs and Chad Taylor have played together for a few years now. They can be heard on discs from c.i.m.p. and delmark backing players like Jemeel Moondoc, Steve Swell, and Ori Kaplan. Taylor is a unique percussionist and refreshing in this piano-bass-drums context. Tom Abbs is all over his bass, creating big beefy sounds that add depth and texture to the mix. The trio sounds like they've played together for a while and, indeed, they have a previous release on the hopscotch label.

The sound and production are exceptional. The music is of such a high quality that decades from now it will continue to be re-released. Cooper-Moore is setting a new standard for the contemporary piano trio. This WILL be one to grow old with. I can hardly wait for the impending follow up discs. Thanks for the treasure Aum Fidelity."