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Andres Vial - Plays Thelonious Monk: Sphereology, Vol. 1 (2018) [Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz]; FLAC (tracks)

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Andres Vial - Plays Thelonious Monk: Sphereology, Vol. 1 (2018) [Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz]; FLAC (tracks)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 04 Feb 2026, 12:13


Artist: Andres Vial
Album: Plays Thelonious Monk: Sphereology, Vol. 1
Genre: Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz
Label: Chromatic Audio
Released: 2018
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
[.b]Tracklist:[/b]
1. Bluehawk 00:06:32
2. Coming on the Hudson 00:04:25
3. Think of One 00:06:00
4. Ugly Beauty 00:05:19
5. Green Chimneys 00:06:20
6. Light Blue 00:04:15
7. Ask Me Now 00:06:44
8. Introspection 00:05:48
9. Work 00:05:16
10. Functional 00:08:16

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Personnel:
Andrés Vial - piano
Peter Bernstein - guitar
Dezron Douglas - bass (1-6)
Rodney Green - drums (1-6)
Martin Heslop - bass (8-10)
André White - drums (8-10)

Pianist Andrés Vial has been working on this Sphereology project since 2005, when he organized a Thelonious Monk music festival in his Montreal hometown. "My band played four nights of Monk's music there," he recalls. "I transcribed about fifty of his tunes for those gigs, and the festival ran for four years."

"Even though Monk is a hugely important part of the jazz canon, musicians usually only play about a dozen of his tunes. There are another sixty tunes that are very infrequently performed."

Vial builds Volume One entirely upon these "(an)other sixty tunes," scaling some of Monk's craggiest heights with grace, power, and a whole lot of rhythm. He's joined on his climb by guitarist Peter Bernstein, an expert interpreter of Monk's often curious muse-ic, and two different rhythm sections: New York City jazz linchpins Rodney Green (drums) and Dezron Douglas (bass), and the Montreal-based rhythm section of André White (drums) and Martin Heslop (bass).

"I consider Peter one of the leading interpreters of Monk's music today," Vial explains. "He's one of the rare people who, if we're on a gig together, I can call a bunch of practically esoteric Monk tunes and he'll know them."

Sphereology Volume One appropriately begins and ends in the blues, opening with "Bluehawk" (which Monk recorded only once, as a solo piece) and closing with an eight-minute bump-and-grind through "Functional."

Pianist and guitarist shape their introductory duet to "Ugly Beauty" around Monk's solo introduction to his original 1968 recording, then smooth out the lilting rhythm of the only waltz Monk composed into a blues tempo and tone, gloriously aglow with all the unresolved contradictions of Monk's music.

Vial and his ensembles deftly navigate through the curiously metered (18.5 bars) "Coming On The Hudson," the up-tempo toe-tapper "Green Chimneys" and the delightfully curious, childlike wonder of "Introspection." Vial and Bernstein duet for more than seven minutes on "Ask Me Now," which suggests Monk's romantic take on "My One and Only Love."

It sounds like such a small or even curious thing, but in Monk's music it's so important: On Sphereology Volume One, Vial profoundly demonstrates the importance of silence and space (structural, harmonic and melodic) in Monk's music. "Monk tunes are already perfect," Vial concludes. "It's impossible to separate the melody from the rhythmic concept and chord voicings in each composition."

Vial, Bernstein and the rhythm sections make what they do sound so easy (almost effortless), that you can sometimes lose appreciation for how amazing it is—painting a portrait of one of the most monumental composers in jazz, in the colorful brushstrokes of their own ideas. If there's a better way to honor Monk, help me "Think of One."
By Chris M. Slawecki

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