Italian pianist
Giovanni Guidi has been recording for ECM since 2013. During that time, he cut three albums in trio and quartet settings.
Avec le Temps adds "quintet" to the leader's résumé; its lineup is comprised of old friends -- bassist
Thomas Morgan and drummer Joao Lobo -- and some new ones in guitarist
Roberto Cecchetto and saxophonist
Francesco Bearzatti (the instrument's current standard bearer in 21st century Italian jazz).
Avec le Temps is bookended by trio performances, the title track, and "Tomasz," dedicated to the late Polish trumpeter
Tomasz Stanko. The former is the recording's only cover, a
Leo Ferre-penned chanson -- lyrics are reprinted in French and English in the booklet. The Monaco-born
Ferre, one of the great singers and songwriters of French chanson, lived in Tuscany for decades before his death in 1993, hence
Guidi's intimate familiarity with his material. His songs are considered international treasures, the musical poetry underscoring the victories and defeats of everyday life socially, politically, romantically, and existentially. "Avec le Temps" is no exception.
Guidi's passion for lyricism is reflected in his articulation of the tune's lyricism, but his dedication to discovery is ever present in the spontaneous invention between him and the rhythm section. "15th of August" stays on the melodic tip, albeit with a quintet.
Morgan's crystalline lower-register rumble introduces the theme and
Cecchetto employs a restrained
Pat Metheny-esque aesthetic that opens a door before the piano enters on a modal drone with
Bearzatti following along. Syncopated snares underscore motion more than time and the drone becomes the central tenet with the saxophonist offering post-
Coltrane explorations of its margins, punctuated by guitar fills as
Guidi rumbles on in the lower-middle register but keeps the tension. "Postludium and a Kiss" and "Johnny the Liar" are untethered improvisations that reflect different sides of
Guidi's exploratory M.O. The former is a spectral ballad with all the track elements of conventional melody implied in its first couple of minutes, and it undoes itself with speculative interplay by
Bearzatti with
Cecchetto just under him as
Guidi paints colors on the edges and the rhythm section balances tension and release. The latter's late middle section is all inquiry and question. Contrast these with the nearly straight-ahead post-bop of "No Taxi," where pianist, guitarist, and saxophonist all share the knotty, slightly angular head before
Guidi moves into a dazzling solo in his middle register.
Morgan, one of the more physical yet unobtrusive bassists in jazz, paints in muted colors on "Caino," with magnificent arco playing and Lobo's flow accenting each choral pass.
Guidi's cascading arpeggios usher in subdued but illustrative playing from
Bearzatti and
Cecchetto. Closer "Tomasz" is a haunting, spherical ballad with
Morgan offering the melody and
Guidi building on it in response before the pair seamlessly trade places. Lobo's hi-hat, cymbals, and brushed snares add circular motion under the lyric, as
Guidi adds surprisingly brief yet pronounced phrases from gospel and classical musics.
Guidi is one of ECM's more compelling pianists; on
Avec le Temps his dedication to lyricism is weighted in equal portion with his inquisitive, restless will to improvise as he's ably supported by his sidemen. ~ Thom Jurek