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January 2018 – Henry Lowther

All About Jazz – January 2018

Henry Lowther: can’t believe, won’t believe

If any jazz ensemble can be said to define the word “prolific” it’s
not Henry Lowther’s Still Waters. The band’s debut album, ID,
appeared in 1997. can’t believe, won’t believe is its second release, just 21 years later. Good things, as they say, come to those that wait.

Bandleader, composer and trumpeter Lowther has been a busy
professional musician for over 50 years. He played at Woodstock in 1969 with Keef Hartley, was associated with the bands of John
Dankworth, Gil Evans and George Russell and has a long history as a session player, a performer with classical ensembles including the London Philharmonic and a free improvising musician.

The pervading mood on can’t believe, won’t believe is relaxed and calm—the calmness that comes from a confidence in one’s talent, the knowledge that there’s nothing to prove. This is, after all, a quintet featuring some of the finest jazz musicians on the scene. Saxophonist Pete Hurt (Carla Bley Very Big Band, Andy Sheppard), pianist Barry Green (Ingrid Laubrock, Charles McPherson, Brigitte Beraha), bassist Dave Green (Sonny Rollins, Stan Tracey) and drummer Paul Clarvis (Herbie Hancock, John Taylor, Kenny Wheeler) are as masterful as their bandleader. The band is well-named: to quote a second cliche, still waters run deep and beneath the calm there’s plenty of musical passion.

Alongside the quiet beauty of “Can’t Believe, Won’t Believe,” “Mateja Sleeps” and “Amber,” a song dedicated to Barry Green’s baby daughter that quite rightly opens with the pianist’s delicate
and optimistic playing, sit the slightly brasher “Saippuakauppias,” the jagged “Lights Of The North Circular”—a tribute (if that’s the word) to a north London highway, driven by Clarvis’s insistent, darting, drums—and the more up-tempo “Something Like,” Dave Green’s bass pulse and Clarvis’s drums crafting a rhythm subliminally inspired (according to Lowther’s notes) by
Morrocan Gnawan percussion.

These six Lowther compositions are followed by the band’s elegant take on “Some Other Time.” It’s a gorgeous version, an object lesson in “less is more,” with Lowther’s performance of the melody underpinned by precise, low-key, backing from the rhythm section. The album closes with the brief “For Pete,” Hurt’s elegy for Pete Saberton, the original Still Waters pianist who died in 2012.

So, 2018 opens with the excellent can’t believe, won’t believe, from the equally excellent Henry Lowther’s Still Waters. The bar is set high. If the rest of 2018’s jazz albums get close to the quality of this truly delightful work then it’s going to be a vintage year.

4.5 stars

https://www.allaboutjazz.com/cant-believe-wont-believe-henry-lowther-village-life-review-by-brucelindsay.php

BBC Music Magazine – January 2018

CD Review: Henry Lowther’s Still Waters – Can’t Believe, Won’t Believe
Review by Roger Thomas

Henry Lowther

Running deep

Henry Lowther’s band Still Waters releases a second album after a 20-year pause.

Henry Lowther (trumpet & flugelhorn),  Pete Hurt (tenor sax), Barry Green (piano), Dave Green (double bass),  Paul Clarvis (drums)
Village Life 171013VL 46:56 mins

Trumpeter Henry Lowther has been a creative mainstay of British jazz for half a century and he’s as happy playing mainstream standards as he is duetting with a computer musician in free improvisation. He’s the man who reassured Miles Davis (Dave Holland introduced them) that yes, playing jazz trumpet in a rock context was perfectly possible.  Now, a couple of decades since 1997’s ID, Lowther’s band Still Waters, formed to explore his compositional interests, has released a new album of gorgeous, limpid tunes that make for thoroughly seductive listening. This impeccably recorded music is by turns playful, elegant and ingenious, with Lowther’s legendary warm, rich tone very much to the fore. The band is highly empathetic, with saxophonist Pete Hurt as the perfect fellow frontman and drummer Paul Clarvis knowing exactly when to give the music a cheeky prod. One to cherish.

5 stars