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Rosenthal Releases An Album That’s “Out Of This World”
For Release: December 14, 2011 Review by Dan McClenaghan from All About Jazz, 11/29/11
2011 has been productive year in the recording realm for pianist Ted Rosenthal. His
contribution to The Westchester Jazz Orchestra's superb Maiden Voyage Suite (WJO Records) helped elevate the re-imaging of pianist Herbie Hancock's classic Maiden Voyage (Blue Note, 1965) to the highest level of big band artistry. With Out of this World, Rosenthal slips back to the more minimal piano trio, for his exquisite interpretations
of some of The Great American Songbook's most beloved compositions.
Covering classic tunes by some of the Songbook's best-known composers with a high sheen and Rosenthal's distinctive style and refined
touch, the trio opens with the title tune, written by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer.
The trio takes the tune on a rolling and fluid 9/8 groove that seems to float on the
clouds, buoyed by bassist Noriko Ueda's succinct bounce and drummer Quincy Davis'
odd-meter surprises.
It wouldn't be a standards set without some Cole Porter. Rosenthal and the trio explore
the beauty of the composer's "So in Love," beginning with a wistful elegance that
slips from Latin groove to up-tempo swing.
And if a standards set must have some Cole Porter, George Gershwin certainly can't
be left out. There are three of Gershwin's works: "Prelude #2," taken into the deep
blues; another odd-meter tryst with "Embraceable You;" and "How Long Has This Been
Going On?," which gets the lightest of Rosenthal's touch—wistful and pretty, full
of inventive eddies.
"Lotus Blossom," from the pen of Billy Strayhorn, is delicately lovely, and "In the
Wee Small Hours of the Morning," which was covered so perfectly by vocalist Frank
Sinatra on his 1955 Capitol Records album, In the Wee Small Hours, is the perfect closer here, a reverent treatment of the timeless ballad full of
longing and, in the hands of Rosenthal and his trio, a glimmer, perhaps, of hope.
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