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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
John Fordham

Stefano Bollani: Variations on Jesus Christ Superstar review - jazz virtuosity driven by teenage love

Hugely entertaining ... Stefano Bollani.
Hugely entertaining ... Stefano Bollani. Photograph: Francesco Prandoni/Getty Images

Stefano Bollani, the technically dazzling and hugely entertaining pianist, composer, broadcaster and writer from Milan, was once a classically trained piano prodigy with an unexpected teenage obsession. When he was 14, Bollani saw the movie of Jesus Christ Superstar, immediately bought the album that had launched the epic rock-opera in 1970, and fell helplessly in love with Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s story and its genre-busting, pop/classical score. Three decades later, Bollani - who has partnered stars from Bill Frisell and Chick Corea to Brazilian singer-songwriter Caetano Veloso, and tends to treat all musical holy writ as ripe for deconstruction - has returned to his youthful muse, not as a cast-of-thousands extravaganza, but as a heartfelt solo piano tribute.

Piano Variations on Jesus Christ Superstar album art work
Piano Variations on Jesus Christ Superstar album art work Photograph: Publicity image

The fuel for all Bollani’s work is spontaneity and this is no exception – but the pianist has rarely treated his source materials with more respect. His inventiveness soon bursts out with the pounding vamp and pop-melody invitation of Heaven on Their Minds, its intertwined piano lines building to swing and stride-piano euphoria. Strange Thing, Mystifying is a country/gospel ballad with a Keith Jarrett feel, the darting attack of This Jesus Must Die deftly catches the original’s speech rhythms, Pilate’s Dream is hauntingly pensive and troubled, while the taunting King Herod’s Song (“walk across my swimming pool”) uncorks a swaggering Bollani’s affection for Fats Waller. The only vocal is the pianist’s deep-whispered, preoccupied recitation of the opera’s famous title lyrics. An exceptional piece of jazz virtuosity driven by a transformational childhood memory, this is a bountiful celebration of a great Italian artist’s love of music’s life-affirming powers, too.

Also out this month

Freya is the internationally admired Dutch saxophonist Tineke Postma’s first release in six years, but all her qualities of elliptical thinking and improv agility reappear in its celebrations of influential women of myth and history (all the way up to the late great pianist Geri Allen), with a fine band including trumpeter Ralph Alessi and pianist Kris Davis. Forever insightful and quirky vocalist Ian Shaw warmly celebrates timeless songwriters from Bernstein to Bacharach with ideal foils in saxophonist/composer Iain Ballamy and piano rising star Jamie Safir on What’s New, and vocal star Kurt Elling and pianist Danilo Pérez intimately interpret composers from Wayne Shorter and Jaco Pastorius to Django Bates with a compelling slow-burn intimacy, and a step-change in repertoire boldness on Secrets are the Best Stories.



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