Great jazz on this side of the river:
The Bob DeVos Trio
Star-ledger SPOTLIGHT
,
Monday, July 19, 2004
BY Jazz Writer ZAN STEWART
Guitarist
Bob DeVos exemplifies what to look for in a mainstream jazz artist.
First, he possesses an
appealing sound, based around a glowing center that spreads out to a
winsome fullness, recalling such masters as Jim Hall but much more
personal than derivative. Second, everything DeVos plays has an assured
rhythmic bounce, a hearty swing. Third, the guitarist is a creative
thinker who seeks the best notes for a given situation, and who executes
them seemingly without effort. And fourth, he chooses top-rate material
and presents it in a way that is both inventive and accessible.
All
these aspects were evident in abundance from DeVos' first tune on Friday.
The world-class guitarist who's performed with such notables as organists
Charles Earland, saxophonists Sonny Stitt and Eric Alexander and bassist
Ron McClure did not need a warm-up. He came out cooking.
The
West Orange-based DeVos (pronounced dee-VO) was joined by his regular,
powerhouse Jersey-based trio mates: Organist Dan Kostelnik (pronounced
kaw-STELL-nick) of Newton and drummer Vince Ector of Paterson. This is a
compact, intuitive, empathetic band that delivers.
The
opening number, "Driftin'," was a moderately-paced Herbie
Hancock song with a blues bent but that is not a blues per se -- contained
on the leader's recent CD on the New Jersey-based Blues Leaf label,
"DeVos' Groove Guitar." As DeVos improvised, playing one good
idea, then another, Kostelnik set up a buoyant, translucent pad with
deftly-placed chords; Ector added crisp drum work. Then, when Kostelnik
soloed, offering blues riffs, lines that ran to high, almost crying tones,
and a lot more, DeVos played complementary, rhythmically charged chords,
pushing his colleague and fleshing out the sound.
"Angel
Eyes," usually a slow ballad, was a percolating Latin number in
DeVos' hands, with Ector adding pleasing percussive chatter. Kostelnik's
appealing ideas led to DeVos, who scored with several statements composed
of few notes but with high rhythmic impact, and with extended lines that
unfurled leisurely. At points, he moved from linear ideas to chunky,
gleaming chords -- a winning contrast. All in all, a pleasure to listen
to.
The
set also included the heartfelt ballad, "But Beautiful," the
fast-paced "I've Never Been in Love Before," a "burner
groove" look at "Walk on By," and the leader's shuffle
blues, "Breaking the Ice," from his same-titled CD (Savant).
Here, Ector soloed, working from light hits to roaring press rolls….
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