Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!
Become a Fan of The Village Voice on Facebook

Daily Voice «

169 Bar Nyc
• website • view ad
92nd St.y   Tribeca
• website
Al B Entertainment
• website
Bb Kings
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
The Bitter End
• website • view ad
Blender
• website • view ad
Blue Note
• website • view ad
Bowery Ballroom
• website • view ad
Fat Cat/smalls
• website • view ad
Hammerstein Ballroom
• website • view ad
Highline Ballroom
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Iridium Jazz Club
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Irving Plaza
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Knitting Factory
• website • view ad
Le Poison Rouge
• website
Nokia Theatre
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Pianos
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Radegast Hall & Biergarten
• website • view ad
Red Lion
• website • view ad
Roseland
• website • view ad
Sounds Of Brazil
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Southpaw
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Spike Hill
• website • view ad
Sullivan Hall
• website • view ad
The Bell House
• website
The Studio @ Webster Hall
• website • view ad
Music

Share

  • rss
Music

Jessica Williams's Songs for a New Century

Overlooked jazz pianist gets a little too sleepy

By Brandt Reiter

Tuesday, April 22nd 2008 at 2:44pm

You grow up in Baltimore, study classical piano at the Peabody Institute, and wind up gigging with Philly Joe Jones in his namesake town while you're still in your twenties. In '77, you split for the West Coast, hold down the house seat at San Francisco's Keystone Korner, back Stan Getz, Dexter Gordon, Tony Williams, and Charlie Haden. By the late '90s, you've cut a couple dozen discs under your own name, been compared to everyone from Tatum to Tyner to Tristano to Monk, done the requisite Maybeck recital, and garnered plaudits from keyboard peers like Cedar Walton and Dave Brubeck, the latter calling you "one of the greatest jazz pianists I've ever heard." Hell, you've even scored a Guggenheim fellowship. And still, someone mentions your name in New York and the response is: "Jessica who?"

I'd like to say this new solo disc is the one that'll win Williams the East Coast recognition she merits. Unfortunately, Songs for a New Century is a low-key-to-a-fault affair, a somewhat soporific set of mostly pensive, impressionistic originals that display little of the fire, wit, or jaw-dropping technique for which Williams, 60, is lauded. Frankly, it all sounds quite a bit like the old century—specifically, like Bill Evans (another fan, and for whom Williams opened) circa 1961. Often lovely, the record nonetheless bears few surprises. Seek out 2002's splendid This Side Up for a better introduction to this overlooked artist, who remains based in the Northwest and is thus far out-side New York's provincial jazz purview.

Recent Articles

More by Brandt Reiter

Most Popular