|



Guitar and piano is one of those duo combinations
that really shouldn't work at all, given that the
two instruments play mostly in the same range and,
in a trio setting, fill the same harmonic and melodic
roles. And, in fact, piano/guitar duos often do
fail, for just those reasons. But when they succeed
-- as they did, most famously, in the hands of
pianist Bill Evans and guitarist Jim Hall -- the
results can be spectacular. Guitarist
Bob Sneider and pianist Paul Hofmann have a similar
kind of chemistry to that demonstrated by Evans
and Hall on their 1960s albums Undercurrent and Interplay,
but their style is their own, and it comes out
most clearly on their original compositions. Hofmann's "Jazz
Suite for Guitar and Piano" is much more warm
and organic-sounding than its title might lead
one to expect, and Sneider's bluesy "Rumblin'" is
every bit as good. But their interpretations of
others' pieces are hardly any less exciting, and
if their arrangement of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Desafinado" is
just a touch brisk and cool, they bring a sweet
elegance and insightful arrangement to Duke Ellington's "Mood
Indigo" and to George and Ira Gershwin's strutting "Bidin'
My Time." Very nice.
— Rick Anderson
© 2004
All Music Guide
|