Let Yourself Go: Fred Hersch at Jordan Hall [Live]

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Pianist Fred Hersch's once-in-a-lifetime combination of prowess and patience not only endeared him to musicians like Stan Getz and Jim Hall, but it also enabled him to become this generation's reigning poet laureate of the piano. This 1998 live recording, done at his alma mater, the New England Conservatory of Music, offers the perfect format to display his gifts. A keyboard descendant of Ahmad Jamal and Bill Evans, Hersch delivers stunning interpretations of some time-honored standards, including a fabulous funereal take on the traditional song "Black Is the Color" and Alex North's immortal "Love Theme from Spartacus." Hersch's performances of "The Nearness of You" and "I Loves You Porgy" are imbued with pastel-like harmonic hazes and lyrical lines, while his rendition of Joni Mitchell's "My Old Man" retains the composer's cool, visual imagery. The piano player's own spectral offering "Departed" could be the jazz canon's new addition we've all been waiting for, while "Speak Low" swings with a snappy, interlocking fugal introduction. Hersch's reading of "Blue Monk" recasts it in a revival-era mood, complete with down-home chordal clusters that evoke that upright piano in the corner of the church. --Eugene Holley Jr.

From Jazziz
Recorded live at New England Conservatory's acoustically correct Jordan Hall, pianist Fred Hersch's October, 1998 performance was approached with the abandon of a long-awaited recital rather than the potentially stifling apprehension of a record date. This, plus the fact that Hersch was just coming off a six-month hiatus from solo performance may account for the high level of inspiration. This disc was not a planned release, states Hersch in his liner notes. listeners will be thankful the tape... read more

Let Yourself Go: Fred Hersch at Jordan Hall [Live]

Let Yourself Go: Fred Hersch at Jordan Hall, Music, Fred Hersch, Jazz, Jazz Music, Pop, Post-Bop
Let Yourself Go: Fred Hersch at Jordan Hall
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Beautiful, sophisticated, original, inventive piano playing.
  • Complete Communion
  • Breath Taking!
  • Hersch's lion heart
  • Fred Hersch "bores you to tears"
Let Yourself Go: Fred Hersch at Jordan Hall
Fred Hersch
Manufacturer: Nonesuch
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

Bebop GeneralBebop General | Bebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
Modern PostbebopModern Postbebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
Bebop & Post-BopBebop & Post-Bop | Compilations | Jazz | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Live Albums | Jazz | Styles | Music
Traditional Vocal PopTraditional Vocal Pop | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. In Amsterdam: Live at the Bimhuis
  2. Live at the Village Vanguard
  3. Passion Flower
  4. Dancing in the Dark
  5. Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol. 31

ASIN: B00000IPXO
Release Date: 1999-05-18

Tracks:

  1. Black Is The Color/Love Theme From 'Spartacus'
  2. Speak Low
  3. My Old Man
  4. I Loves You, Porgy
  5. Moon & Sand
  6. ...Departed
  7. Let Yourself Go
  8. Blue Monk
  9. The Nearness Of You

Amazon.com

Pianist Fred Hersch's once-in-a-lifetime combination of prowess and patience not only endeared him to musicians like Stan Getz and Jim Hall, but it also enabled him to become this generation's reigning poet laureate of the piano. This 1998 live recording, done at his alma mater, the New England Conservatory of Music, offers the perfect format to display his gifts. A keyboard descendant of Ahmad Jamal and Bill Evans, Hersch delivers stunning interpretations of some time-honored standards, including a fabulous funereal take on the traditional song "Black Is the Color" and Alex North's immortal "Love Theme from Spartacus." Hersch's performances of "The Nearness of You" and "I Loves You Porgy" are imbued with pastel-like harmonic hazes and lyrical lines, while his rendition of Joni Mitchell's "My Old Man" retains the composer's cool, visual imagery. The piano player's own spectral offering "Departed" could be the jazz canon's new addition we've all been waiting for, while "Speak Low" swings with a snappy, interlocking fugal introduction. Hersch's reading of "Blue Monk" recasts it in a revival-era mood, complete with down-home chordal clusters that evoke that upright piano in the corner of the church. --Eugene Holley Jr.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Beautiful, sophisticated, original, inventive piano playing........2005-07-30

Fred Hersch is one of the best solo jazz pianists in recent memory. His playing is original, yet versed in the classical and jazz tradition. It is poetic and inventive in a way that makes it almost impossible to mistake Fred for any other pianist.
The recording quality on is not great, as it was not a planned release. Fred decided to release it because he felt it was a special performance.
The first track, "Black is the Colour/Love Them from Spartacus" is sublime: Fred's use of space is flawless, his harmony is sonorous and appropriate, the melodic line flows smoothly through the entire track, and the climax is one of the best in recorded jazz.
The second track, "Speak Low", is full of inventive counterpoint and several exciting devices, such as an exciting ostinato montuno pattern
I won't describe all of the tracks, but every single one is a unique gem. After a while, you may notice Fred repeating some of his ideas from other tracks, but this is almost impossible to avoid in a whole night of solo improvisation.
I highly recommend this disc to solo jazz piano fans, to pianists looking for new ideas, or anyone looking for some beautiful and modern, yet easily-appreciable music.

5 out of 5 stars Complete Communion.......2003-02-24

The title of mine is the famous record of avant garde Jazz, however, we can feel that from this CD. His concentration was excellent, and that of the audience was too. We can feel the intense atmosphere of music at that night.
The concept of Mr. Hershe's performance was not aggressive and progessive, but modereate one, however, his deep insight into the music tonight reflected the mode of his play, and, probably contageous to the audience at that night. Mr.Hershe may not be a gigantic figures of Jazz, however,@this night's perfomance of him was outstanding in the historiy of Jazz, at least in that of Piano Jazz.
@

5 out of 5 stars Breath Taking!.......2000-03-24

Along with John McArthur's, "HIDDEN", Let Yourself Go: Fred Hersch at Jordan Hall may be the most breath-takingly beautiful album I have ever heard. Buy this CD, you will not regreat it.

4 out of 5 stars Hersch's lion heart.......2000-01-10

If James Hillman is right when he writes about the necessity of imagination as a real thinking device, we can say with him that pianist Fred Hearsch makes a very good job in that way. His renderings of standards are (not surprising) endowed with amazing images of almost new landscapes. I found it astonishing brilliant and open-minded. Bravo for Mr. Hearsch (again).

1 out of 5 stars Fred Hersch "bores you to tears".......2000-01-06

After reading a review of this album in the San Francisco Chronicle, I immediately ordered it from Amazon.com. I salivated when it arrived today and immediately played it. I couldn't get completely through even one of the nine cuts on this album. To call it boring would be a compliment. Non-melodic, no accompianment.. tempo slower than a chinese water torture...this is an album to avoid like the plague. The five stars awarded on Amazon's website must have been compiled from reviews from the "artist's" family. A real stinker.

Music:

  1. Like in Love//Something Wonderful [Import]
  2. Magic of Julie London [Import]
  3. Mariana Trench
  4. Matrix
  5. Meet Betty Carter and Ray Bryant
  6. Moment to Moment [Import]
  7. On Broadway/On Broadway, Vol. 2 [Import] [Original recording remastered]
  8. Over the Airwaves
  9. Party Animals [Explicit Lyrics]
  10. Party Jazz

Music

Music