On 
Joy in Spite of Everything, Italian pianist 
Stefano Bollani reconvened his longstanding trio with drummer 
Morten Lund and bassist 
Jesper Bodilsen. They recorded three previous dates together, the most recent being 2009's excellent Stone in the Water on 
ECM. 
Bollani has continually displayed -- from his dates with mentor 
Enrico Rava, on solo offerings, and with other leaders, that his playing and composing signatures are not only versatile and Catholic in their approach to jazz, but informed equally by the building blocks and possibilities of song itself. To that end, he has added two more players to this date, guitarist 
Bill Frisell and saxophonist 
Mark Turner. The group performs on these tunes not only as a quintet, but in various quartets, trios, and duets. The tracks are long enough to stretch a bit and offer a wide, colorful palette of approaches. Opener "Easy Healing" has a calypso-cum-plena vibe that allows for lovely interplay from the rhythm section, but also between 
Frisell and 
Turner -- who is unusually lyrical rather than cerebral -- in his solo. It's followed by "No Pope No Party." With knotty, stop-and-start post-bop as its entryway, it swings throughout even when it moves afield; the dialogue between saxophonist and pianist is canny, with 
Frisell's solo melding straight-ahead swing with Americana. "Alobar e Kudra" is a piano trio that offers 
Bollani's fluid voicings, light and dark, balanced by shimmering ostinati as the rhythm section digs in and extrapolates on them. "Las Hortensias" is a long, moody ballad for a quartet with lovely understated work by the pianist. 
Turner explores the fringes of the melody and engages in counterpoint after his restrained solo break. The set's lengthiest number is "Vale." It commences skeletally as a nearly formless, languid, balladic improvisation. 
Bollani brings angles into view after his own solo, touching on post-bop, 
Nino Rota's delicate classicism, and the Italian jazz tradition, but it's 
Turner's solo that shines brightest. "Teddy," a duet with 
Frisell, was inspired by pianist 
Teddy Wilson, though its sparse, impressionistic opening would hardly suggest that. Nonetheless, in its sprightly, swinging dialogue, one can hear its subject's influence -- though musically it reaches much further.  "Ismene" is a beautiful ballad, and a fine vehicle for 
Frisell's instinctive manner of chordal voicings and poignant lyrical fills. The closing title track for 
Bollani's trio is fleet, wildly creative post-bop that shows off just how intuitive the group's development has become in the last decade. 
Joy in Spite of Everything's myriad colors and moods illustrate its title -- even in the most melancholy places. As an album it reveals how confident and sensitive 
Bollani is, in full command of his musical range and technical facility -- as composer, bandleader, pianist, and arranger -- as well as in the depth of his honesty in emotional expression. ~ Thom Jurek