Lewis Porter and Phil Scarff Group

Three Minutes to Four

2017-11-26

While musical tourism is something to be wary of, pianist Lewis Porter joins Phil Scarff’s trio to create an elegant and lively entry into the often-dusty annals of modern jazz. The songs are experimental, but never draggily so. The well-traveled compositions of Porter and Scarff are strongest because they embrace melody. Anchored by the rhythm section of Bertram Lehmann and John Funkhouser, both professors at Berklee, the music wanders freely but rarely gets lost. Even the jarring chromatic looseness of the Skies of South Africa Suite that makes up tracks seven and eight somehow seems to hold up.

Pros: Melodic diversity, strong musicianship.

Cons: Very tough to get through the album’s 73:25 runtime in a sitting.

Primest Cuts: “Long Ago” “Three Minutes to Four”

review by Kollen

More reviews tagged #Jazz

  • reviewed 05/2009

    NOMO
    Invisible Cities

  • reviewed 02/2007

    JACK DEJONETTE AND BILL FRISELL
    The Elephant Sleeps But Still Remembers

  • reviewed 03/2008

    Panthelion
    Life After 339

  • reviewed 03/2016

    The U.S. Army Blues
    Live At The Blues Alley

  • reviewed 05/2008

    THE BRUBECK BROTHERS QUARTET
    Classified

  • reviewed 12/2013

    DEWA BUDJANA
    Joged Kahyangan

Compiled by the WYCE Journalism Club

The opinions expressed in these reviews are those of the individual volunteers that submitted the article and do not necessarily reflect the views of WYCE or GRCMC; nor its staff, donors, or affiliates.