When Brad Plays The Beatles It's Not a Cry For Attention
he's been doing it on (not in) the road
Often it's a cry for attention or money when a veteran jazz artist releases a Christmas album or one of Beatles covers. Brad Mehldau's latest, an album of the latter with Bowie's meloncholic "Life on Mars" serving as a sort of denouement (or encore, as this is a live album recorded at the Philharmonie de Paris), is neither of those.
Mehldau, 52, has been covering rock music without apology almost from the beginning of his recording career. His first as bandleader, Introducing Brad Mehldau (it wasn't on Vee-Jay because his label didn't think he had commercial potential), featured Christian McBride, Brian Blade and Larry Grenadier and included originals and covers of older "standards" but he later "crossed over" into rock with Radiohead Neil Young and The Beatles covers that brought him a new audience without diminishing enthusiasm for his playing among the jazz cognescenti.
This live recital recorded late summer 2020 in Paris features an intriguing mix of Beatles songs, ranging from among the unique and enigmatic ("I Am The Walrus", "She Said She Said") to the mundane ("I Saw Her Standing There"), to the "frumpy" "Maxwell's Silver Hammer", "Your Mother Should Know), to the memorably melodic ("Here, There And Everywhere", "Golden Slumbers").
By the time Mehldau was born, the Beatles had already broken up, so he points out in his excellent annotation that his formative musical experiences were with next-gen artists like Billy Joel and Supertramp. Only later did he discover The Beatles and that helped him tie together his early musical introductions.
In his notes that will illuminate an understanding and appreciation of The Beatles even for the group's most ardent fans, Mehldau touches upon McCartney's "music hall" upbringing, the musical means by which Beatles songs "swing", the similarity of dotted 8th note rhythmic approaches utilized by Beatles, Beach Boys and Zombies—Mehldau references the "under-appreciated" Odyssey (SIC) and Oracle—and how that gives the songs a unique "lilt" and "swing". He also does an excellent job explaining The Beatles' universality and longevity.
Really, even if you don't play the record—even if you buy and hang on the wall as some surveys ridiculously suggest up to half of record buyers mostly do—it's worth buying for the notes alone, which also make clear that Mehldau is unapologetically enthusiastic about this music and how deeply embedded it is in his own compositional DNA.
But of course you will play this record, and it's one I found myself repeatedly playing as each spin delivers new insights and unexpected pleasures even within the most familiar tunes. For the most part Mehldau delivers the melody with his right hand and the counterpoint and embellishment with his left, producing a rich, "high thread count" tapestry and using minor key construction to create an approach to these songs that's both forward looking and nostalgia laden. Obviously, McCartney's music hall songs work well with that approach but so do the more enigmatic Lennon tunes.
The arrangements work so well because Mehldau's approach is to not "jazz them up" too much (though there's stride piano inflections referenced throughout and even some "funky" moves), but rather to use his harmonic and rhythmic skills to produce a high wire act that keeps drama and surprise alive throughout, even on the most familiar material. That the audience sat suspended "mid air" was clear as each song ended and it broke into applause tinged with a kind of palpable but appreciative relief (though "I Saw Her Standing There" has weak "lift off). Repeated plays always deliver new insights and pleasures, like (for me) the way on "I Am the Walrus" he quotes and recreates the string arrangement.
In the notes Mehldau gives a "shout out" to Rick Wakeman for his unforgettable keyboard contribution to "Life on Mars". Though I don't think he was trying, Mehldau's version sans vocals takes the pianistic embellishments and drama to a new level of "Also Spruce Zarathustra" finale heights!
The sound here, the on-stage piano bathed in natural hall reverb but remaining solidly fixes in space, matches the performance. The soundstage is huge and three-dimensional, the piano sound, rich and both timbrally and texturally spectacular as well as dynamically full-bodied.
Joe Nino-Hernes' cut—whatever he did or did not do with the file he received— is as huge as the big 70's era land yachts he likes to drive, but thankfully your cartridge will handle the grooves better than his favorite cars do twisty roads.
Get this record. It's addictive for both music and sound.