Lenny Breau is a
jazz enigma. He never really caught on with the public, yet was recognized by his peers as a major guitar innovator. Add to this a mysterious and still unsolved death in a Los Angeles swimming pool at the too-young age of 43. This is the way a cult figure is born. Former student
Randy Bachman has been meticulously and methodically issuing
Breau material through his
Guitarchives label. This one is a 1977 live session at a Nashville, TN, club where
Breau teams up with
Richard Cotten, with whom he played frequently when visiting the capital of
country music.
Country music and Nashville notwithstanding, the album play list is a mix of classic and
jazz standards. One of the classic
standards is a moving, flowing, highly lyrical
"Stella By Starlight." "On Green Dolphin Street" has
Breau starting off quiet and unassuming before he leaps off into a series of scintillating
improvisational runs, during which you never hear anything played the same way twice. He pays tribute to one of his influences,
Bill Evans, with the
Evans pieces
"The Two Lonely People" and
"La Funkallero." Breau made no bones about it that his unique single-string voicings were due in no little part to his transformation of
Evans' piano technique to the guitar.
Cotten is a fine guitarist, although here he pretty much plays rhythm to
Breau's melody. One of the more engaging moments comes with the coda, where for almost seven minutes
Cotten's daughter
Darci Cotten shares personal recollections, peeling away some more of the mystery surrounding this fine guitar innovator. Indications are that this CD is the first of
Breau's Nashville performances that
Bachman intends to get to market. One hopes that this is more than a rumor. Recommended. ~ Dave Nathan