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  <body>Who said three&#8217;s the charm? There&#8217;s a lot to be said for those moments when the John Patitucci Trio isn&#8217;t acting alone on &lt;I&gt;Remembrance&lt;/I&gt;, an intimate studio session that primarily finds the veteran bassist-composer-bandleader collaborating with reedman Joe Lovano and drummer Brian Blade. 

Take &#8220;Scenes From an Opera,&#8221; for example. It&#8217;s a performance that wouldn&#8217;t be nearly as evocative or soulful without the inspired input of cellist Sachi Patitucci, the bassist&#8217;s wife. Or &#8220;Meditations,&#8221; one of four arrangements on &lt;I&gt;Remembrance&lt;/I&gt; deftly accented by percussionist Rogerio Boccato. Then, too, there&#8217;s the album&#8217;s title track to consider, a solo homage to the late Michael Brecker that makes haunting use of Patitucci&#8217;s six-string electric bass and six-string electric piccolo bass.  

Of course, that&#8217;s not to say that the teaming of Patitucci, Lovano and Blades doesn&#8217;t deliver on its promise. Remembrance may be dedicated to, as Patitucci puts it in his liner notes, &#8220;fellow musicians who have inspired us that have recently and not so recently departed this world,&#8221; but it&#8217;s scarcely a solemn affair. The trio performances capitalize on the ensemble&#8217;s great chemistry, each in a different light, starting with  the rhythmically and harmonically skewed &#8220;Monk/Trane&#8221;; the insinuating stroll &#8220;Sonny Side,&#8221; a splendid showcase for Lovano&#8217;s robust and restless tenor; and &#8220;Blues for Freddie,&#8221; a jaunty postbop salute composed, like all the tunes here, by Patitucci. When it comes to regional flavoring, though, nothing proves tastier than the Boccato-augmented quartet performance of &#8220;Messaien&#8217;s Gumbo.&#8221; 
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  <created-at type="datetime">2009-11-04T22:40:53-05:00</created-at>
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  <summary>Who said three&#8217;s the charm? There&#8217;s a lot to be said for those moments when the John Patitucci Trio isn&#8217;t acting alone on Remembrance , an intimate studio session that primarily finds the veteran bassist-composer-bandleader collaborating with reedman Joe Lovano and drummer Brian Blade. Take &#8220;Scenes From an Opera,&#8221; for example. It&#8217;s a performance that wouldn&#8217;t be nearly as evocative or soulful without the inspired input of cellist Sachi Patitucci, the bassist&#8217;s wife. Or &#8220;Meditations,&#8221; one of four arrangements on Remembrance deftly accented by percussionist Rogerio Boccato. Then, too, there&#8217;s the album&#8217;s title track to consider, a solo homage to the late Michael Brecker that makes haunting use of Patitucci&#8217;s six-string electric bass and six-string electric piccolo bass. Of course, that&#8217;s not to say that the teaming of Patitucci, Lovano and Blades doesn&#8217;t deliver on its promise. Remembrance may be dedicated to, as Patitucci puts it in his liner notes, &#8220;fellow musicians who have inspired us that have recently and not so recently departed this world,&#8221; but it&#8217;s scarcely a solemn affair. The trio performances capitalize on the ensemble&#8217;s great chemistry, each in a different light, starting with the rhythmically and harmonically skewed &#8220;Monk/Trane&#8221;; the insinuating stroll &#8220;Sonny Side,&#8221; a splendid showcase for Lovano&#8217;s robust and restless tenor; and &#8220;Blues for Freddie,&#8221; a jaunty postbop salute composed, like all the tunes here, by Patitucci. When it comes to regional flavoring, though, nothing proves tastier than the Boccato-augmented quartet performance of &#8220;Messaien&#8217;s Gumbo.&#8221;</summary>
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  <title>&lt;span class="name"&gt;Remembrance&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="artist"&gt;John Patitucci Trio&lt;/span&gt;</title>
  <updated-at type="datetime">2009-11-06T12:17:23-05:00</updated-at>
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