Bolling sees his suites, 
                which make use of musical methods from 
                both classical and jazz traditions, 
                not as examples of fusion but of dialogue 
                between musical idioms. The 1973 Suite 
                was the first of a whole series of such 
                works and was composed for performance 
                by Jean Pierre Rampal – later ones have 
                been written for, amongst others Yo-Yo 
                Ma, Pinchas Zukerman and Maurice André. 
                The original recording of the 1973 suite 
                had a considerable commercial success 
                – though if one listens to it now, and 
                listens to it in the light of recordings 
                such as this by Laurel Zucker and, to 
                a lesser extent, the Naxos recording 
                by the Roselli Quartet, Rampal’s playing 
                of jazz seems rather bookish, as it 
                were, something he has learnt from records 
                rather than a language he speaks at 
                all naturally. Bolling’s own playing, 
                on the other hand, is exemplary in all 
                respects. 
              
 
              
Bolling is, of course, 
                a considerable jazz pianist. He made 
                some marvellous duet recordings with 
                the trumpeter Roy Eldridge at the very 
                beginning of the 1950s and a few years 
                later featured on important recordings 
                with Lionel Hampton. Recordings under 
                his own name, as a solo pianist and 
                the head of a trio, include – amongst 
                many others - an excellent tribute to 
                Duke Ellington (Claude Bolling Plays 
                Duke Ellington, 1959). His writing 
                for the piano in these suites is that 
                of a man utterly at home in many different 
                jazz styles; alongside, and in interplay 
                with, his comfortable jazz phrasing 
                and rhythm is an informed awareness 
                of important aspects of the language 
                of classical, particularly baroque, 
                music. Joe Gilman is a fine pianist, 
                who sounds totally at ease in Bolling’s 
                music and who is admirably supported 
                by Neighbor and Rokeach. Both have extensive 
                experience as jazz men and as freelance 
                musicians working in the studios of 
                California ... and in Neighbor’s case 
                with the San Francisco Symphony and 
                San Francisco Ballet and Opera orchestras. 
              
 
              
Laurel Zucker is altogether 
                more convincing than Rampal. Only an 
                insensitive, unlistening musician – 
                and Zucker is most categorically neither 
                of those things – could be based in 
                California without developing an ear 
                for the language of jazz. Zucker’s expressive 
                playing, as for example in her bending 
                of notes as appropriate, carries absolute 
                conviction. Where it is fitting she 
                can also produce a ‘classical’ tone 
                every bit as burnished as Rampal’s. 
              
 
              
The piano writing seems 
                to me at least as important as that 
                for flute in these suites and it is 
                good that the balance of this Cantilena 
                recording resists the temptation to 
                give Zucker excessive prominence. 
              
 
              
These four musicians 
                really work together as a group and 
                the results are highly enjoyable. Bolling’s 
                music is happy and witty, melodically 
                fluent and consistently charming – all 
                qualities that Zucker and her colleagues 
                communicate directly and unaffectedly. 
              
 
              
In the first suite 
                ‘Sentimentale’ is played with informal 
                grace and in ‘Fugace’ the pastiche of 
                Bachian fugue is handled with a precision 
                which isn’t merely pedantic. In the 
                opening ‘Baroque and Blue’ the switches 
                between rhythmic patterns are presented 
                with elegant conviction. Like any good 
                jazz musician, Bolling doesn’t forget 
                the great standards – ‘Sweet Georgia 
                Brown’ underlies the last movement, 
                ‘Veloce’. In the second suite, ‘Amoureuse’ 
                is a beautiful ballad which reminds 
                one of how much good film music Bolling 
                has written; ‘Vagabonde’ is a fugue 
                which surely nods to Jacques Loussier 
                as well as to his original; ‘Jazzy’ 
                is a furiously fast test of technique 
                and musicianship – Zucker and her colleagues 
                pass the test with flying colours. I 
                have picked out only a few movements 
                which are at present in the forefront 
                of my mind; many of the other movements 
                (the first suite is in seven parts, 
                the second in eight) are just as attractive. 
              
 
              
Though this isn’t music 
                which digs very deep emotionally speaking, 
                it is chamber music of a distinctive, 
                intelligent subtlety, full of twists 
                and turns; it reveals more, indeed, 
                with every hearing. 
              
 
              
Laurel Zucker strikes 
                me as the well-nigh ideal performer 
                for this music and in Joe Gilman and 
                his trio she has found absolutely perfect 
                partners. They give the best performance 
                I have yet heard of Bolling’s two Suites. 
                Strongly recommended. 
              
              
Glyn Pursglove 
                 
              
see 
                also review by Patrick Gary