Jeff Hamilton's recordings have always been focused as straight-ahead and mainstream as your typical superhighway, with occasional time for rest stops, gassing up, and sleepovers. While always a good listen,
Hamilton and his non-stop rotation of up-and-coming pianists and bassists never really pushed the envelope, staying the course set by his mentor, the late, great bassist
Ray Brown, and other California-based coolsters. With
Symbiosis, though, there's a change in the weather with the addition of extraordinary young talent in pianist
Tamir Hendelman and bassist
Christoph Luty. This is not at all to say that
Hamilton's music had no fire, guts, or glory, but the difference in internal energy heard on this recording is noticeable.
Hamilton is also playing brushes for the most part, instead of sticks, and he proves the finest exponent of that style of jazz performance since
Ed Thigpen. There's some truly extraordinary playing going on here, evident right off the bat on a two-fisted, bluesy take of the otherwise corny "You Make Me Feel So Young," where the mellow mood is trumped by some deft key changes and interplay. Their version of the
George Gershwin chestnut "Fascinating Rhythm" is loaded with multiple rhythm changes that seem telepathic but in fact are well rehearsed, while a hopped up take on the
Miles Davis obscurity "The Serpent's Tooth" is saturated with
Hamilton's fills and drum inserts as
Hendelman and
Luty jam away on the modified melody. The tour de force track is
Hamilton's original "Samba De Martelo," as all three musicians take great poetic license and liberties in an amazing discourse that sounds free and improvised like most great jazz should, but is a virtuosic display of calculated, clean, and keen melodic sensibility that leaps out of the speakers -- a truly impressive track.
Luty likes to bow arco style as on the melody line of "Blues in the Night" or the intro of the light bossa nova version of "Polka Dots & Moonbeams," while
Hendelman is not only a marvelous performer and rising jazz star of the piano, but an original thinking man's arranger who puts that stamp on half of the selections. Perhaps
Hamilton has led bands as good, but not better than this, showing up in many real and important ways, especially upon repeat listenings. This recording comes heartily recommended, especially for skeptics who think the tried-and-true piano-bass-drums jazz trio has exhausted its possibilities. ~ Michael G. Nastos