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Review
Solo and in duet with Art Themen at the Jazz on a winter's weekend,
Southport February 2009
Bernard McAlinden, Crescendo Magazine
For the first of two evening concerts it was Dave Newton and friends.
The applause that greeted Newton to the stand was that of genuine
admiration for a master. For the first half of the set Dave played
solo piano and played a medley of four songs. He opened with Don't
Blame Me and drew every nuance from this great old tune that
had a freshness about it that one would have thought it had just
been written. Moving seamlessly into Stompin' at the Savoy he
gave it a thourough work-out sculpting out some lovely patterns
at a tempo that was made for this theme. Jobim's Wave was
next and Newton did it full justice as he let his imagination roam
much to the audience's delight. He ended this segment with a lovely
stated Jive at Five. There is a sophistication about Dave's
playing that runs deep, whether ballads, swingers or flag wavers,
it's all there. This was great jazz and the audience let him know
it.
For the second half of this set Newton was joined by Art Themen
and it was as a duo they played. Opening with Like Someone in
Love their interplay, right from the start, was there for all
to hear. Art's sound on tenor, as always, ever distinctive, was
heart warming and their take of The Nearness of You was
top drawer. Total empathy was the key to it all. Themen is just
as distinctive, but more quirky, on soprano as he showed on Darn
That Dream and his sly quote from Holiday for Strings
had the audience nodding their approval at it's impudence. Closing
with You Do Something To Me, Newton played lines rather than
feeding chords to Themen, as though he was playing a solo and Art
reversed the pattern playing counterpoint as Dave soloed. Classic
jazz and thoroughly stimulating, they left to a rousing reception.
David Newton Trio,
Wigmore Hall.
Friday, February 2nd 2007.
Noisy clubs or big concert halls – the lot of most jazz musicians
– necessitate amplification. So it’s treat to hear a jazz trio playing
without being amplified in the natural acoustic of the Wigmore Hall:
the ringing purity of David Newton’s grand piano, the real ‘woodiness’
of Andy Cleyndert’s double bass, and every swish and murmur from
Steve Brown’s brushes, mallets and hands (drumsticks being noticeable
for their near-absence). The gilded cupola over the Wigmore Hall
platform seemed incongruous for a jazz concert: until Newton started
playing his distinctly European brand of chamber jazz, like Enrico
Pieranunzi in its classical lyricism, dreamy introspection, melancholy
and lightness of touch. The two sets consisted mainly of music from
Newton’s latest album, "Portrait of a Woman", and his 2005 release,
"Inspired". The mood of the first set was mainly impressionistic
nocturnes, although one tune (which started with a two-chord vamp
overlaid by a folksy melody on top) was reminiscent of the autumnal
Americana of Ralph Towner. It wasn’t until the fourth piece that
Newton played any overtly blues phrases. Appropriately, Cleyndert’s
bass-playing was generally more contrapuntal rather than walking
bass. Brown’s lightness of touch kept the drums suitably quiet:
only occasionally did he sound too loud, when he was doing that
swishy-brushes-on-the-snare thing beloved of drummers accompanying
singers on ballads. Incidentally, Newton is renowned for accompanying
singers, most notably Stacey Kent, with whom he recorded and toured
for ten years. Perhaps this explains the self-effacing nature of
his playing. The music became more upbeat and swinging with ‘The
Walk’, the final piece of the first set – plenty of blues phrasing,
more rhythmically strident, and a few stabbing unison passages in
the middle. It was literally a foot-tapper, someone’s shoe (Newton’s?)
audible during the quieter passages. Overall the second set was
more straight-ahead jazz, with some standards added. For the encore
the trio played a lively version of ‘Here’s That Rainy Day’, full
of Ellingtonian playfulness. But perhaps the real standout was a
delicate piano solo performance of Joni Mitchell’s ‘Both Sides Now’,
aching with longing and melancholia.
Review
ALAN BARNES & DAVID NEWTON, CITY HALLS, GLASGOW by ALISON KERR
March 10 2009 Star rating: ****
It's a sign of just how highly regarded clarinettist/saxophonist
Alan Barnes and pianist David Newton are that they managed to attract
a full house to the City Halls Recital Rooms on a wet and stormy
Sunday night. It was such an impressive turn-out - especially in
these straitened times - that Barnes was prompted to comment: "There's
quite a lot of you - you do realise it's a jazz concert?". As ever
with the droll saxman, he gave as much value as an entertainer as
he did as a musician. Throughout the concert, he provided plenty
of laughs - reading out the fanciful preview of the gig that appeared
in an Edinburgh paper, introducing the tunes ("This is an original
composition - words that strike fear into the hearts of the British
jazz-going public.") and reminiscing about the 32-year musical marriage
between himself and his vocally silent partner, Newton. That they
have been playing duets for a long time explains the rapport that
was evident from the first bar of the opening number, a dazzling
take on You Do Something to Me. This pair negotiate changes in time
signatures and keys with the greatest of ease and grace; second-guessing
each other's thought processes in the same way that an old married
couple might finish each other's sentences. One of the evening's
highlights was a sublime version of the ballad For Heaven's Sake,
on which the two musicians gently batted the melody back and forth
between them. Also to relish was the beguiling Billy Strayhorn classic
Isfahan, featuring a sumptuous solo from Newton, and some majestic,
Johnny Hodges-inspired, alto work from Barnes.
Review by Dave Gelly Sunday October 30, 2005 The Observer
David Newton Trio 'Inspired'. (BND Records) David Newton's urbane
and resourceful piano has been absent from Britain's jazz scene
for some time while he has been away on a world tour with Stacey
Kent. Meanwhile, this immaculate set, with bassist Matt Miles and
drummer Steve Brown, fills the gap nicely. There is always more
to Newton's playing than first meets the ear. The surface may be
smooth, but there are all kinds of clever, subtle things going on
beneath. The variety he manages to dig out of Cole Porter's 'So
in Love' is astounding. Newton's choice of material is often surprising
- from Tadd Dameron to Joni Mitchell - but he explains the point
of each one in his very illuminating notes.
Review by Ray Comiskey The Irish Times
DAVID NEWTON Inspired BND **** This is as good an example of straight
ahead, swinging mainstream jazz piano trio as you'll find. Its virtues
are those of superior craftsmanship and material that offers the
players something to chew on melodically and harmonically. If that
means standards - and it does here - then it has to be said that
Newton, Matt Miles (bass) and Steve Brown (drums) unequivocally
bring out their possibilities in the style espoused. Newton has
been so consistently good at it for so long that perhaps he's taken
for granted, but this is quite possibly his best trio album yet.
In a finely honed trio, Brown demonstrates, yet again, that he's
almost unequalled in this idiom and context. And Newton signs off
on the disc with a superb performance of Joni Mitchell's Both Sides
Now.
Return Journey ~ Ken Dryden, All Music Guide
David Newton chose to focus exclusively on original works for this
1992 solo session. Although there are no liner notes, one can't
help but wonder if he lost someone very dear to him prior to the
making of this CD. The pianist's thoughtful opener is the hauntingly
beautiful and bittersweet "Stolen Time," a complex piece that avoids
a strict ballad structure, while taking the listener through an
emotional roller coaster. "While You're Away," at just over 11 minutes,
is actually a mini suite. It begins as a jig, though it soon grows
more hesitant, as if the player is having second thoughts about
his celebration. After a brief pause, Newton switches to a more
reflective mood, with a touch of pensiveness. The second half of
the disc, which is subtitled Return Journey, includes the constantly
probing post-bop "Into Somewhere" and the gorgeous ballad finale
"Gone Forever." David Newton is well known in his homeland (Great
Britain) for his extensive for radio, television and films, as well
as his numerous recordings. This brilliant release on Linn merits
greater attention from jazz fans across the Atlantic Ocean.
Eye Witness ~ Ken Dryden, All Music Guide
Unlike his previous session for Linn, this trio CD (with bassist
Dave Green and drummer Allan Ganley) strikes a balance between well
played standards and upbeat catchy originals. "Angel Eyes" is almost
a mandatory ballad for a pianist to play at some time -- Newton's
very soft approach would hush the nosiest audience. A lengthy workout
of Mal Waldron's "Soul Eyes" and a brief take on the nearly forgotten
showtune "Stars in My Eyes" merit praise. Among Newton's works,
the strutting opener "Ol' Blue Eyes" and the turbocharged title
track stand out.
Biography
Growing up in Renfrewshire, Scotland, Newton had a musical upbringing
with the piano trio sound of Peterson, Tatum or Garner an ever-present
feature in the Newton household. After graduating from Leeds College
of Music in 1979 David Newton freelanced around Yorkshire and eventually
became a resident musician at the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough
for two and a half years. A move to Edinburgh followed where theatre
work using local musicians quickly led to an established position
on the Scottish jazz scene but after some four years there, his
old roommate from college, Alan Barnes, persuaded him to move to
London where he rapidly became a much sought after pianist teaming
up with Barnes, guitarist Martin Taylor and saxophonist Don Weller.
Newton's recording career had begun in 1985 with Buddy De Franco
and Martin Taylor and his first solo album was released in '88 in
association with producer Elliot Meadow who oversaw the next nine
years of recording for Linn Records followed by Candid Records.
Once again, in 1997, David Newton and Alan Barnes teamed up and
together with Concorde Label agent Barry Hatcher, made four CDs
for that label. By 2003, Newton had learned a great deal of the
ways a record company operated and he set up a business partnership
with former pupil Mike Daymond and they established "Brightnewday
Records" initially as a vehicle for Newton's own music but
with an eye to opening up the catalogue to other artists later on.
In the first five years of the nineties, Newton's reputation as
an exquisite accompanist for a singer, spread rather rapidly and
by '95 he was regularly working with Carol Kidd, Marion Montgomery,
Tina May, Annie Ross, Claire Martin and of course Stacey Kent, with
whom he spent the next ten years recording and travelling all over
the world. While all this was going on, Newton was composing music
which he would record on his own CDs as well as writing specifically
for Martin Taylor, Alan Barnes, Tina May or Claire Martin and Newton's
music can now be heard on many television productions, especially
in the United States where over twenty TV movies benefit from Newton's
haunting themes. In 2003, after a twenty year gap, David Newton
was reunited with playwright Alan Aykbourn having been involved
with eight world premiers in Scarborough and London back in the
early eighties, and he was asked to write the music for two new
productions, 'Sugar Daddies' and 'Drowning on Dry Land'. Currently,
with the release of a new CD called "Portrait of a Woman",
on the 'Brightnewday' label, David Newton is relishing the musical
freedom of his Trio and the special sound it makes whilst working
on two other new recording projects, as an arranger and a composer.
David Newton has been voted best Jazz Pianist in the British Jazz
awards for the ninth time in 2009 and was made a Fellow of Leeds
College of Music in 2003.
If a current-ish photograph is required, www.davidnewton.net/pr%20photo.htm will get you one. It is a JPEG at the moment but after some
homework and I've found out the best format, it may change.
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