by Joe Major
February 27-28, March 1, 2025
Northampton Center for the Arts
After a years-long hiatus, A World of Piano marked its third straight festival series at Northampton Center for the Arts. Jazz Shares circuit-goers welcomed the annual three-day return with equal parts heightened anticipation, determined examination and pilgrimage-worthy stamina — qualities that in no small measure were reflected in the solo pianists themselves.
They hailed from a big tent, did practitioners Matthew Shipp, Greg Burk and Sylvie Courvoisier. And from within their improvised music spheres, there existed a consistent wondrous through line of varied probing aspect: from expressive driven intonation to expressive mathematic chordal contortion to expressive check-under-the-hood innards manipulation. Expression reigned.
Night One: Matthew Shipp. Instant ignition. From the opening of the nearly set-long piece that I came to think of as Opus One, Shipp immersed listeners in tumultuous storm-tossed furies. His relentless scrums of muscular glissandos, followed by lulls barely porous enough to allow a recuperative shard of hopeful light to escape, formed a thrum beat of heaving, reluctant elasticity.
With a prospector’s fervor to persist, persist, perchance to comp, perchance to rep, plus a rarely exercised penchant to alight, nothing was safe from his roiling bottom register checklist of assertive edicts, grievances and pronouncements. That rise and fall schematic seemed simple enough, but what sustained it were the intricacies embedded in the full throttle fusillade. There was inevitably an integrated back-channel leverage of chiming, extoling, bursting release — rooting out the verities from the calamitous dross.
A concert comrade of mine mentioned that henceforth he’d “think of piano as a verb.” That’s it; that unfettered, uninhibited, regenerative pianism deployed in the service of translating emotion, and showing your work while doing so. Shipp finished by surfing over and navigating through the mild undulations of a slurred, feathery, ethereal cloud — levitating, as if to suggest there were more tools in his toolbox than just thump widgets. After the set I approached Shipp and deferentially offered that the evening brought to mind the Walt Whitman line, “I contain multitudes.” And to my everlasting delight, Shipp responded, “Huh, I love Whitman!”
Night Two: Greg Burk. Prestidigitation. Many of Burk’s painterly, pastoral compositions were undeniably beauteous; sweeping, lushly saturated soundscapes that belied an inner, angular gravity. Coursing through his tapestry, a nuanced thread of wariness might be discerned in the otherwise shimmering fabric. His lavish light-fingered classicism was initially overwhelming, sprouting as it did with cascading upper register filigree. On numbers like “Petals on the Water” and a lovely reverent piece dedicated to his mother, Burk subtly transitioned from haltingly articulate, swooning melodic bits to velvety comped pangs of abstraction. Cloaked abstraction, abstraction born of seemingly plain-view lines intersecting with one another in just the right sequences to create an introspective, suddenly outside-of-self otherness.
There was no ambiguation about “Blues for Yusef Lateef.” He opened with a breathy ceremonial-sounding pipe flute meditation that evolved into a jaunty syncopated exploration featuring a rollicking knockabout bottom and a squirrelly high end. The aftermath of the big crescendo led to a leeward slide, a stilted stride-style cadence that never abandoned the look-inside-oneself ethos.
Nor were there any doubts about a couple of outright prancing romps, one of which Burk said was Bird-inspired. Both were replete with pixilated, unabashedly jazzy pokes and runs that, despite the louche aura of the Parker-esque tune, retained a signature Burk sparkle. And both bore the earmarks of Burk architecture; grand archways in which substantive and exquisite chord arrays could investigate.
Two tunes, “Sequoia Song” and “Clean Spring,” swapped out any semblance of the shell game gambit. There were no opaque intentions or quick-look-there legerdemain, and abstraction distractions were vanquished. Instead, a crisp effervescence permeated the joie de la nature; sinewy for one, bubbly for the other. Their straight forward direction lent a dexterous air of dimensional relief to Burk’s work. And to my ear, wispy hints of Abdullah Ibrahim only added resonant grace to the performance.
Night Three: Sylvie Courvoisier. Avant-garde acoustic bric a brac boutique. En garde! Buckle up! Courvoisier’s set was a riveting, careening tour through what essentially amounted to her sound sculpture. She staged the piano so that it was chockablock with hardware items, whimsical trinkets and everyday jetsam, integrating the resulting sonic effects with her oft measured, oft rampant keyboard trajectories. It was a curated exploration of the symbiotic string/soundboard relationship.
The sounds — from ticks and tocks, to clinks and clunks, to harmonic drone-like vibration, to the anvil-like thunk of her elbow on the keys — cleaved to her demonstrative, fervent, asymmetrical piano playing. But beyond that, the whole enterprise writ large sought to find and develop a cohesive, viable syntax for this ungainly, instantly-appearing piano language.
There were four forays. The first was a stringy pluck-and-play that alternately veered from progressions of thunder and lull into rivulets of tinny pie plate-sounding classical, jazzy-tempo jive, and sacred temple tonalities. She paced herself with some near-ragtime, near-stride, and then, like a Dave Burrell, she’d succumb to out of the blue chaotic spasms of abstraction and distraction. Her piano-speak concoctions were punctuated with violent black hole implosions, leaving gaping, gulping voids of finality. Another piece began with Flight of the Bumblebee flurry and then wavered from mid-tempo contemplation to a bluesy dissonance segment where her right hand felt free to scatter at will. Crescendo, climax, calm wake, then seismometer-worthy Mach 1 boom!
A third sortie gave the accoutrements a real workout, with the piano strings getting a rhythmic knocking, punching, pinching, vibrating and tingling. That grew into a legit rippling jazzy riff that in turn devolved into particles and shards. Some low-end pirouettes gave lyricism to strains of an old blues that was forgotten but was there all the time. Finally, the last number pulled out all the stops, or more precisely, unloaded the whole gadget shopping cart as Courvoisier geared up to peak arpeggio power and melded noise and, oh yeah, notes. It had a lopsided, loopy gait; kind of a stride-akimbo, teetering imbalance that eventually found its legs and, as unadorned piano, flared brightly. Intense rolls, runs and slides; chrysanthemum flourish; sudden stop, and out. There was a brief encore duet with her touring and recording partner, clarinetist Ned Rothenberg. They performed a layered, sensitive peekaboo/hide and seek interplay that featured his extraordinary circular breathing and referenced the earlier coalescence-seeking syntactical togetherness that resided in the heart of her whole customized endeavor.
Following Nights: Epilogue. The Northampton Center for the Arts is not set in 490 CE Marathon, and I did not run home twenty plus miles to Athens, or even my corner of Western Massachusetts, to convey news of a victorious battle — yet my takeaway from this three-prong music marathon, these creative front lines, is just as endearingly momentous. Attaining zero-degrees-of-separation proximity to artists of this echelon is in itself a triumphant privilege. Their poignant commitment to craft, and their zealous shielding of personal inner vision, is resolute enough, by extension, to bolster tribes of attentive listeners.