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In the mid-'60s, Burton Greene was arguably the leading pianist on the New York free jazz scene, sideman to a long list of downtown luminaries and leader of his own group on two releases for ESP-Disk. Unlike the majority of his peers, however, Greene spent the following decades developing his questing spirit, opening his musical worldview β he became a leader in the klezmer-jazz fusion of the '80s and '90s, and otherwise kept up with new ideas that intrigued him. Therefore, on the live, in-the-studio solo recording Live at Grasland, the 67-year-old Greene plays with at least as much excitement and intelligence as he did 40 years before on a program of originals (save for a haunting rendition of "Angels," a tune by clarinetist Perry Robinson, a longtime musical partner of Greene's) that touch upon all of his influences. The centerpiece of the album, the two-part "South Florida Odyssey Suite," has echoes of Carla Bley's witty musical jokes, and the distinctively Eastern European "In the Footsteps of the Bratslav" shows the pianist-composer's folk influence. However, the more straightforward waltz-time "A Cozy Veggy Soup" recalls Dave Brubeck's similar time-signature experiments, showing that free expression doesn't always have to be "challenging," in the old sense. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Calistrophy
Burton Greene
In The Footsteps Of The Bratslav
Burton Greene
Sylosophy (Digitalville)
Burton Greene
12,733 Shopping Malls, from the South Florida Odys
Burton Greene
Florida Summer Odyssey, from the South Florida Ody
Burton Greene
A Cozy Winter Veggy Soup
Burton Greene
Gnat Dance
Burton Greene
Angels
Burton Greene