Recorded live, Largo uses innovative audio techniques yet no overdubbing. As Brad Mehldau stretches out by adding horn sections and playing the vibes, he creates a truly extraordinary sonic experience that cuts across g... more »enres from jazz to rock. Produced by Jon Brion (Aimee Mann, Fiona Apple, Rufus Wainwright). 2002.« less
Recorded live, Largo uses innovative audio techniques yet no overdubbing. As Brad Mehldau stretches out by adding horn sections and playing the vibes, he creates a truly extraordinary sonic experience that cuts across genres from jazz to rock. Produced by Jon Brion (Aimee Mann, Fiona Apple, Rufus Wainwright). 2002.
Matt B. from VANCOUVER, WA Reviewed on 9/1/2009...
Great Jazz piano. The cover of radioheads paranoid android is amazing.
CD Reviews
One Finger Symphonies
Patrick Burnette | Crawfordsville, IN USA | 12/29/2002
(3 out of 5 stars)
"The idea behind Largo sounds good - put jazz pianist Brad Mehldau into pop contexts crafted by Jon Brion, whose production work with Aimee Mann and Fiona Apple was witty and warm, if also a little mannered at times. Jazz desperately needs to expand its appeal to non-initiates. No need to dumb it down (we've got plenty of stupid music to satisfy our baser urges) but no reason to expect audiences to respond to a set of cultural reference-points fifty years old. Widely ranging textures, familiar rock rhythms, and a repertoire that goes beyond the bebop era are all plausible ways of luring younger folk into the fold. And by all means, lure away - as long as the spontaneity, intelligence, and freedom characteristic of jazz remains. Largo, unfortunately, doesn't have these characteristics. Brion's pop arrangements and sound manipulations are fine, although nothing spectacular. But Mehldau never finds his place within them. The first problem is the mix. Even when not being obtrusively tweaked by Brion, Mehldau's piano sound lacks body and texture. Brion may be able to juggle dozens of instruments in his studio, but this production doesn't seem to appreciate the jazzer's ability to get many different and rich sonorities out of a single piano (or horn or bass or drumset . . .) The piano sounds distant in the mix, which is odd given that Mehldau headlines the project. You rarely have the sense that Mehldau is driving, inspiring, or even interacting with the rest of the musicians. Nothing kills a good jazz buzz more quickly.More troubling, Mehldau hasn't figured out how to solo effectively in Brion's environments. The pianist relies almost exclusively on single-note lines. This further erodes the instrument's textural interest, but it also robs Mehldau of the harmonic and rhythmic inventiveness that marks his trio work. Mehldau usually relies on ostinatos and obsessive reworking of motivic ideas to generate tension and release in his playing; these go missing. Worse, the simple harmonic foundations of Largo's songs sabotages the linear, single-note approach. The best known linear players - Bud Powell, and Lenny Tristano, for instance - thrived in the harmonic labyrinths of bebop. They built excitement fighting through the maze. Applied to pop chord progressions, linear playing too often degenerates into noodling. Mehldau throws some outside note choices and tricky turns into his lines, but doesn't develop these into anything memorable. At times, he just taps out a close paraphrase of the melody. There's nothing intrinsically wrong with improvising over harmonically simple music with pop rhythms and textures, but Mehldau's approach doesn't work. More riffs and patterns, more distinctive musical ideas and more sense that Mehldau can feed off of and influence the other musicians might have led to a compelling record. As it is, Largo is an interesting failure. With luck, the next experiment works better."
The way ahead
Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 03/12/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"When an artist as young, accomplished, and highly regarded as Brad Mehldau strikes out on a new path, he's bound to be criticized. And he's gotten his fair share of dissing on this site and elswhere.Let's get a few things straight. First, Mehldau has lost none of his pianistic brilliance. If you think so, give a listen his outro solo on "Dropjes." Secondly, he most certainly does know how to inject his unique pianism into Jon Brion's soundscapes. Check out how integrated and wonderful-sounding his piano is on "Paranoid Android," which showcases everything that's great about this record--the seemless integration of jazz and pop elements, the extraordinarily clear piano sound, the discrete use of electronics, the perfect translation of a pop sensibility into an authentic jazz setting. Third, there's noting wrong with Melhdau's vibes playing. It's a little naive and ideosyncratic, but so what?Mehldau has always been a master of moods. Nothing has changed here; what he's done, in my view, is just brilliantly expand his musical/emotional palette. This, quite naturally, doesn't sit well with everyone. Tough luck. If you're down with Dave Douglas' Freak In, The Bad Plus, Happy Apple, Chris Destrin, etc., you'll dig it. Otherwise, probably not."
Our boy's left home . . .
Luciano Pedota | 08/15/2002
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Several months ago, I saw the Brad Mehldau Trio perform at Chicago's Old Town School of Folk Music. The music was as wonderful as it was familiar. He covered Radiohead's
"Everything in Its Right Place," (how my favorite jazz trio started covering this band I'll never know but will always be thankful for) and he dazzled us with a new composition, "Boomer." I was wowed and I left thinking that Mehldau's jazz trio system would perpetually expand and innovate. I was unprepared for it to halt in its tracks, at least for now.With "Largo," we now have to be specific about which Brad Mehldau we're talking about. If subsequent albums follow suit, you may now have to qualify whether you like "all of Mehldau" or "back when he played straight jazz." This isn't Herbie Hancock's "Rock It," by any stretch, but it heralds a sea change in the direction of Mehldau's music. Fans may have to tread carefully over the selections here. The first song, "When it Rains" magically evokes a sorrowful warmness that turns a listener inward. The piano is unmistakably Mehldau, but there's a background buzz and a snare drum you can't place. It introduces a new direction by playing just enough of what you know from Mehldau to follow along. It's hello and goodbye. Following compositions hasten the pace of the transition. So, when you reach "Sabbath," led by a buzzsaw electric guitar reined-in just enough to co-exist with Mehldau's sound, you may decide there's not enough remaining of what you loved about his music to follow down this fork in the road.It's unfair for me to want to keep Mehldau boxed-in for fear that he'll drift into the fusion/lounge catalog never to return. There's no mistaking that "Largo" is consistent with the quality of work we expect from Brad Mehldau. But the sound is too far gone for me. I hope that there's enough in the jazz trio work he finds sustaining so that he'll come back...."
Song: Alvarado
Luciano Pedota | Venezuela | 03/17/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I am very surprised none of the reviewers below mentioned anything about the song "Alvarado"; it is so well accomplished that I found it equal to the performances of great pianist such as Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Keith Jarret and Danilo Perez. Also, be carefull when judging sounds that our ears are not YET used to hearing. How many CD's have taken a few rounds of listening before getting to love them? If you are a true music lover, who is always seeking for new and different music, I know the answer is"many".Is "Largo" one of those CD's that require several listenings due to its innovations? Listen to "Alvarado" and find your own answer."
One of the year's best
Christopher Ingalls | Massachusetts | 11/11/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Brad Mehldau is undoubtedly one of the most original and continuously inventive voices in jazz music. He fuses his improvisational jazz playing with interesting covers (only Brad Mehldau could make Radiohead's "Paranoid Android" sound like a jazz standard), unique arrangements (treated piano, woodwinds), and odd instrumentation (he switches to vibes for a spirited take on the Beatles classic "Mother Nature's Son"). While he's doing all this rule-breaking, he never forgets the fact that he's a truly gifted pianist with a great band, playing and mprovising his heart out. The original songs are also amazing. The opener, "When it Rains" has a lovely melody and a breathtaking arrangement reminiscent of early Randy Newman. When I first heard the song I had to check the liner notes because it sounded like a standard. The entire album is like that -- beautiful songs and unique arrangements that sould so exquisite, you wonder why nobody else thought of them. Producer Jon Brion -- better known as a pop producer for artists like Aimee Mann and Fiona Apple -- brings a distinctive sound to this album, one of the years' best and another chapter in the amazing career of Brad Mehldau."