
Steve Shapiro has been on the scene for 20 years
playing vibes and marimba, composing, arranging,
accumulating TV scoring credits and keeping a low
profile as sideman with top names in jazz and pop.
With guitarist Pat Bergeson as coproducer, Shapiro
has issued his third album as leader, Low
Standards (Sons of Sound). This
is unpretentious, straightahead combo swing. Shapiro
sculpts his solos well; his
best efforts come on "Days of Wine and Roses" and
Wes Montgomery's "Four On Six." But his
frequent four-mallet comping doesn't go unappreciated, and
neither does the firm, melodic walking of bassist
Doug Weiss.
Bergeson shines on "How Deep
Is The Ocean?" and on Shapiro's moody jazz waltz
"End of the Road." Tenor player Scott Kreitzer's
smoothest moments come while playing over drummer
Jeff Williams' tom-tom effects during Ellington's
neglected 1954 gem "Reflections in D." Perky
vocalist Annie Sellick, an original with her own
way of phrasing that allows
her tongue-in-cheek personality to emerge, sings
"Ocean," "Wine and Roses," and "Everything Happens
to Me" over diaphanous backing by just Shapiro
and Bergeson. She toys with time and takes risks
playing catch-up but never sacrifices enunciation,
breaks up vowels a la Anita O'Day and boasts a
remarkable range. Shapiro's
sharp, but keep your ears on Annie.
— Harvey Siders
© JazzTimes, June 2005
|