ZZCD 9817 - Undiminished
Jazz Rag July/August 2000 issue
From its opening moments, this release (the second by the trio) sets a creative
pace which barely lets up throughout its considerable duration. Gordon's original Bluesli
goes like a train, buoyed up on Ole Rasmussen's impactive bass and the energetic
clatterings of drummer Paul Cavaciutti. Much is made in the notes of the trio's four-year
working association, although the fact that Gordon lives in London, Rasmussen in Denmark
and Cavaciutti in the US, must make their gigs seem more like family reunions.
Anyway, perhaps these dislocations mean that their encounters are all the more meaningful,
for they certainly play with animation and enthusiasm here. I've heard Gordon a couple of
times in London, enough to realise that he is
yet another talent of real worth, fit to be ranked alongside other newer voices like, say,
John Donaldson or Tom Cawley. He can suggest the delicacy of Bill Evans on a tune like My
Romance, all filigree patterns but with a percussive undertow, before setting off on a
couple of tricksy originals, sounding like Wynton Kelly at speed. Caravan receives
interesting treatment, Gordon interpolating moments of stride piano before Rasmussen takes
his chance to show that NHOP isn't the only great Dane when it comes to the bass. Gordon
then impresses on a sensitive treatment of Sometimes it Snows in April before the trio
romp merrily through Just One Of Those Things. If your tastes run to trio jazz, with an
emphasis on sterling individuality and well considered treatments of standards and
originals, then this is the one for you. Recommended.