x
  • 21st Century Dizzy: Danilo Perez and Friends
  • A Night In Treme
  • American Legacies: Preservation Hall Jazz Band and the Del McCoury Band
  • Angelique Kidjo
  • Ann Hampton Callaway
  • Ann Hampton Callaway and Liz Callaway - Sibling Revelry
  • Ann Hampton Callaway and Liz Callaway in Boom!
  • Artie Shaw Orchestra
  • Arturo Sandoval
  • Ashley Kahn: Spoken Moments
  • Béla Fleck
  • Béla Fleck & The Flecktones
  • Béla Fleck / Zakir Hussain / Edgar Meyer
  • Bela Fleck and the Marcus Roberts Trio
  • Bill Charlap
  • Bill Charlap and Sandy Stewart
  • Billy Cobham
  • Blues At The Crossroads
  • Cécile McLorin Salvant
  • Chick Corea
  • Chick Corea & Gary Burton Duets
  • China Moses
  • Christian McBride
  • Clarke/ Duke 4
  • Corea, Clarke & White: Forever
  • Count Basie Orchestra
  • Danilo Perez
  • Dee Daniels
  • Dee Daniels - Great Ladies Of Swing
  • Dee Daniels - The Soul Of Ray Charles
  • Dee Dee Bridgewater
  • Del McCoury Band
  • Delfeayo Marsalis
  • Donny McCaslin
  • Duke Ellington Orchestra
  • Dukes Of Dixieland
  • Ellis Marsalis
  • Ernie Watts
  • Flamenco Hoy by Carlos Saura
  • Fred Hersch
  • Gary Burton
  • Gary Burton / Makoto Ozone Duets
  • Glen David Andrews
  • Jack DeJohnette 70th Birthday Tour
  • Jack Jones
  • James Carter
  • Jane Monheit
  • Jason Marsalis
  • Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra With Wynton Marsalis
  • Jim Hall
  • Jimmy Heath
  • Jimmy Herring
  • John McLaughlin
  • John Pizzarelli
  • Jon Anderson
  • Julian Lage
  • Julie Budd
  • Kurt Elling
  • Liz Callaway
  • Liz Callaway - The Beat Goes On
  • Liz Callaway - Tribute To Broadway
  • Lyle Mays
  • Madeleine Peyroux
  • Maria Schneider
  • Marian McPartland
  • Maureen McGovern
  • Monterey Jazz Festival On Tour 55th Anniversary
  • Oregon With Ralph Towner
  • Ornette Coleman
  • Pat Martino
  • Pat Metheny
  • Pat Metheny Group
  • Pat Metheny Orchestrion
  • Patti Austin
  • Patti Austin & Count Basie Orchestra
  • Pete Seeger
  • POEMJAZZ: Robert Pinsky & Laurence Hobgood
  • Poncho Sanchez
  • Quetzal
  • Ramsey Lewis
  • Ramsey Lewis and Ann Hampton Callaway
  • Ravi Coltrane
  • Red Baraat
  • Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters
  • Rory Block
  • Roy Haynes
  • Rudresh Mahanthappa
  • Simone
  • Sonny Rollins
  • Soul Rebels
  • Stacey Kent
  • Stanley Clarke
  • Taylor Eigsti / Julian Lage Duo
  • Terence Blanchard
  • The New Orleans Bingo! Show
  • Tigran
  • Tinsley Ellis
  • Ute Lemper
  • Wynton Marsalis
  • POEMJAZZ - The JazzTimes Review

    Robert Pinsky & Laurence Hobgood
    Poemjazz
    Circumstantial

    Robert Pinsky, arguably America’s greatest living poet and the only one in history to serve three terms as U.S. Poet Laureate, has maintained a lifelong appreciation for jazz that is evident throughout much of his writing, though never quite to the degree of this tremendous collaboration. Pinsky reads 13 of his poems (plus Ben Jonson’s “His Excuse for Loving”) accompanied by pianist Laurence Hobgood, best known for his long and immensely fruitful musical partnership with Kurt Elling (who, closing the circle, once fitted Pinsky’s “The City Dark” to Wayne Shorter’s “Speak No Evil”).

    If the blending of poetry and jazz conjures images of smoky Greenwich Village coffeehouses where Jack Kerouac wannabes bleat to bongo beats, park that cliché. Pinsky and Hobgood establish a wholly simpatico artistic partnership. On all but two tracks, Hobgood improvised every note in the studio, concurrent with Pinsky’s readings. Pinsky proves himself an equally adept improviser. His are not dramatic interpretations of the poems but musical ones, the focus on cadence and harmony with Hobgood. The poet’s performances are rich with spontaneous touches—repeating phrases, doubling back on words, inserting freshly elucidating text—worthy of Ella, Anita O’Day or, most accurately, Mark Murphy and Elling.

    As for the poems, Pinsky has carefully chosen works old and new that, while exploring wider themes, will resonate with jazz aficionados, particularly “Horn,” his homage to the trumpet and all players who aspire to its mastery; the epic slaveship-to-sax-colossi voyage of “Ginza Samba”; and “The Hearts,” with its doo-wop-dusted examination of love’s all-consuming power, extending from Romeo and Juliet to the equally fatal attraction of Art Pepper and heroin.(6/26/12)

     

    JazzTimes

    POEMJAZZ Robert Pinsky & Laurence Hobgood Artist Page

     

    Bookmark and Share
    Image 01 Image 01 Image 02 Image 03 Image 04 Image 05 Image 06 Image 07 Image 08 Image 08 Image 09 Image 10 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11 Image 11