An edited version of this review appears in the April 2010 issue of All About Jazz-New York.

Tomasz Stanko, Dark Eyes (ECM)
By David R. Adler

Much of trumpeter Tomasz Stanko’s output in the ’00s featured his countrymen Marcin Wasilewski on piano, Slawomir Kurkiewicz on bass and Michal Miskiewicz on drums. Dark Eyes is a departure — the first recording to feature the Polish jazz icon’s new quintet with pianist Alexi Tuomarila, guitarist Jakob Bro, bassist Anders Christensen and drummer Olavi Louhivuori.

Bit by bit, the band’s seductive rapport and cagey dynamics are revealed: first the rubato portent and spaciousness of “So Nice,” then a marked shift to a rock-like beat and cutting Bb-minor ostinato in “Terminal 7,” later the spiky unison lines of “Amsterdam Avenue” and even a Stanko piece with no trumpet at all, the hypnotic three-minute sketch “May Sun.” The music hews to a strategy of slow development and deferred gratification in “Samba Nova,” which isn’t a samba until about halfway through its nine-plus minutes. “The Dark Eyes of Martha Hirsch,” another of the longer pieces, undergoes a similar transition from airy rubato to upbeat swing, following a sequence of ensemble melodies and subdued bass improvisations arranged as a call-and-response.

Stanko paid tribute to his late mentor Krzysztof Komeda with his 1997 album Litania, and there are two Komeda pieces included here as well, “Dirge for Europe” and the ballad “Etiuda Baletowa No. 3.” The former happens also to appear on Requiem by the Komeda Project, a Polish/American quintet that gives the tune a more heated run-through. Stanko’s version is uncannily reminiscent of “Flamenco Sketches” from Kind of Blue in terms of rhythmic pacing and light/dark harmonic contrasts.

Christensen plays electric bass on Dark Eyes, although his warm, natural tone can lead one to think it’s an upright. Bro’s delicate but unmistakably electric guitar adds a sweet sonic expanse, as do Louhivuori’s varied percussive textures. The piano sound, too, is glowing — even by ECM’s high standards, Dark Eyes boasts uncommonly fine audio. All the better to hear Stanko, who prefers open trumpet even in the hazy, ethereal settings where many players would opt for a mute.

2 Comments

  1. Elzbieta-
    April 14, 2010 at 1:57 pm

    It is very strange indeed but this review, as posted here, Does Not appear in the April 2010 issue of All About JazzAny-New York!
    Any mention of the Komeda Project's Requiem and its version of "Dirge for Europe" is missing entirely from the published version of the review. It's also missing from this review published at allaboutjazz.com

  2. David R. Adler-
    April 14, 2010 at 4:00 pm

    Duly noted, thanks. The copy that I submit to the paper is subject to further editing. I'll amend the post to note the difference in the two versions.