Robert Mitchell & Omar Puente - St Cyprian's, 1/4/08
This was the perfect acoustic for such a performance. Mitchell and Puente played a variety of standards, originals and a couple of Spanish songs, on which the Cuban violinist also sang. A highlight was Mitchell's composition 'Envoy,' a tricky piece in seven. The pianist demonstrated his outstanding technique during an extended solo: his left hand would often hold a basic riff while the right took the lead, but he was not afraid to turn things around with the right maintaining fast sequences while the left struck down percussively or elaborated an improvised countermelody.
Puente also displayed the breadth of his technique, frequently switching between arco and pizzicato – the latter often offering provocative interjections during Mitchell solos. When the roles were reversed, Puente took the central position with intense, fiery improvisation that has won him sideman gigs with Courtney Pine, Denys Baptiste and others. His compositions were varied, expansive and occasionally complex, proving he is equally gifted with pen and bow; 'Swings and Roundabouts' is a work of several movements, from cautious overture through to intricately lyrical melodies and sharp bursts of simultaneous percussive co-ordination. 'Somebody Backstage' reflects the same diverse character, but takes more of a relaxed ballad feel.
A finely honed understanding exists between these two musicians, who really bring out the best in each other. It's great that the F-IRE Collective has enabled this wonderful rapport to be captured on CD: Bridges was released in 2006. The partnership is a breath of fresh air for devout jazz fans and accessible enough for lovers of classical chamber music to enjoy.
Published @ allaboutjazz.com, 23/4/08 - click here for original.
Labels: jazz, live, music, portfolio, review, Robert Mitchell
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