Some jazz musicians aren't documented nearly as much as they should be; one could write a book about all the talented improvisers who made it to 60 or 65 without ever recording an album, or even being featured as a sideman on someone else's album. But
Hiromi, thankfully, has been recording frequently ever since she emerged in the early 2000s, and she has been wise enough to record in a variety of settings.
Hiromi has recorded unaccompanied, as well as in duos and trios; she has played in both electric groups and acoustic groups, and she has provided straight-ahead post-bop as well as fusion.
Voice is best described as an electro-acoustic effort that is more post-bop than fusion but has its rock-influenced moments. Forming a trio with
Anthony Jackson on electric bass and
Simon Phillips on drums,
Hiromi is heard on both acoustic piano and electric keyboards but pays more attention to the former. And while this 2010 recording may not be ideal from the perspective of a rigid jazz purist or a bop snob,
Hiromi's outlook is very much the outlook of a jazz improviser; the fact that she,
Jackson, and
Phillips bring some rock muscle to some of the material doesn't negate that.
Hiromi is undeniably imaginative on an intriguing performance of
Ludwig van Beethoven's
Piano Sonata No. 8 in C Minus, Opus 13, aka
Sonata Pathetique, which goes back to 1798. Or course, there was no jazz in
Beethoven's time; if one agrees that jazz started when cornetist
Buddy Bolden formed his first band in New Orleans in 1895, then jazz was a little over 100 years away from being created when
Beethoven composed
Sonata Pathetique. But
Hiromi has no problem bringing
Beethoven's piece into the jazz world of the 21st century; she is no less an improviser on
Sonata Pathetique than she is on free-spirited originals such as
"Labyrinth," "Flashback," "Delusion," and
"Now or Never." The
Hiromi/
Jackson/
Phillips trio might display more rock muscle on some tracks than they do on others, but rock muscle or not, this 66-minute CD never loses its jazz mentality.
Voice is yet another absorbing effort from this capricious acoustic pianist/electric keyboardist. ~ Alex Henderson