Saturday, May 14, 2011

Steve Davis Quintet at Smalls

Last night the Steve Davis quintet played two sets to an absolutely packed house at Smalls in the Village. I stood in the back talking to an Australian guy visiting New York on business. We kept laughing because no matter where we stood our feet seemed to be in the way of people trying to get in. The space is tight and personal. You walk down a steep flight of stairs, and come into one small room. It feels like a church, with chairs lined up in rows facing the stage, and people treat it that way in the best sense. Early in the set they played "Vibration Blues" by McCoy Tyner. Mike LeDonne opened the tune with a kind of mind blowing precise attack on the piano, then the rest of the band came in and kept it up all the way through, Tyler Mitchell on bass, Mike DiRubbo on sax, Steve Davis on trombone and Willie Jones III on drums. It was thrilling to watch these guys navigate the demands of the song and give it everything they had. Then Steve announced that they were going to slow it down and DiRubbo came in with his sweet, melancholy sax on "You've Changed." I love that song and DiRubbo, a very souful, interesting dude, did it up just right. I rode the melody all the way with him and never wanted it to end. Josh Bruneau, a young trumpet player, sat in later on the first set and he was so good the crowd gave it to him at the end of his first solo. His solo on "Spirit Waltz" in the second set was heart-wrenching in the way the trumpet can express a voice teetering on the edge of something painful, dangerous, exciting, but never giving in or letting up . . . no matter what the cost. This is the first time I heard Willie Jones III on drums and he had a rigorous, exacting, right on the edge of control style that I really liked.

I don't know Steve Davis well, but from the first time I met him I felt his genuine, open, welcoming spirit and that comes across in his playing. His trombone has an honest, effortless, warm tone. He reached out into the crowd and held us there note by note all evening as he told his story. They will be at Smalls again tonight, don't miss it.

No comments:

Post a Comment