Night
for Day was among the first CDs that came out on Brooklyn
Jazz Underground Records when New York City's BJU launched
the label in April 2008. This disc, which was recorded in
December 2007, finds guitarist Will Bernard forming a quartet
with acoustic pianist Benny Lackner, bassist Andrew Emer
and drummer Mark Ferber; all four of them are given co-leader
credit, and the musicians have a healthy sense of camaraderie.
Except for Billy Strayhorn's "Heaven," Night and Day is
devoted to original material--and that material essentially
falls into the post-bop category. Tracks like Bernard's "Nothing
to See," Lackner's "Pianohaus" and Emer's "Waltz" are on
the cerebral side, although not to the point of venturing
very far into the avant-garde. If one wants to look at Night
and Day as an inside/outside project, the playing is about
95% inside and 5% outside. But despite the intellectual
nature of the performances, Bernard's guitar solos often
have a bluesy quality. The feeling of the blues, of course,
is an essential ingredient of all jazz, be it hard bop,
swing, avant-garde, Dixieland, cool jazz, post-bop, third
stream, soul-jazz or fusion; so in that sense, all jazz
is bluesy to a degree. But Bernard comes across as someone
who has seriously studied the techniques of blues guitarists,
and the interesting thing is the way he manages to sound
bluesy and abstract at the same time. Despite the bluesiness
in Bernard's playing, no one will mistake this 50-minute
CD for a Howlin' Wolf or Magic Sam session. Instrumental
post-bop is definitely the focus of this quartet, which
paints an attractive picture of Brooklyn Jazz Underground
Records on Night for Day. - Alex Henderson
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