Josh Nelson Is On Another Planet - LA Weekly
This summer, the Mars rover Curiosity will finally reach its destination
after a nine month journey. Tomorrow, while the space module prepares
to roam the Red Planet looking for dust, signs of life and a perhaps a
good place to put our stuff once the Earth is destroyed, pianist Josh
Nelson will be at the Blue Whale in downtown, leading his quintet in tribute to this costly mission.
For the last decade and a half, Josh Nelson has been an indispensable
part of the Los Angeles jazz scene. He put out his first record in the
late '90s as a teenage undergraduate at Cal State Long Beach and has
criss-crossed the Earth with regularity since. His deft ear and nimble
sense of swing has landed him a long-running gig with Natalie Cole; he
also rivals Vardan Ovsepian for most notes played on the Blue Whale
piano. He is a first-call sideman for musicians like Anthony Wilson and
Jennifer Leitham but also has plenty to say on his own, and he's
presenting those ideas in ways that few jazz musicians have dug into.
Last year, Nelson released an album of original material entitled Discoveries.
The disc is a lushly composed, small ensemble homage to the
technological mysteries proposed by writers Jules Verne and H.G. Wells
that highlights Nelson's abilities with a pen and a piano. Following the
album's warm reception, he began incorporating elements of video art
into his performances, transforming the Blue Whale into a Tesla-esque
laboratory for two sold out nights late last year.
"I had done something off the cuff and not really planned," says
Nelson. "Since then I've only done it at Vitellos in Studio City.
Technically, this is going to be my fourth official show, but it's going
to be a little different."
When he performs tomorrow he'll aim for the future with a suite
dedicated to our planetary neighbor. "The first set will be completely
new music, specifically written about the Mars landing. The idea is that
it will play as one long extended piece, but with a spontaneity and
freeness about the whole thing."
He'll be bringing the projections back but with an intent to interact
with them a little more. "We're trying out some more ambitious visual
elements this time. I want to kind of create a vibe in there, a modern
museum look. Last time, we played to the video, but this time I thought,
'Let's have a dialogue between the video and the musicians.' "
Video artist Travis Flournoy will be displaying his art alongside
Nelson. Flournoy was given a handful of mid-century film references like
Forbidden Planet and the definitive radioactive ant film, Them! and told to interact with the music like a sixth member of the band. "Have you seen H.G. Wells' Things to Come?" says an excited Nelson. "It came out in 1936 but has these incredible models. You have to check it out!"
Jazz musicians put so little effort into the visual component of
their shows; if you can get one to smile you should feel lucky. It is
refreshing to see Nelson embrace this machinery and put it to engaging
use. His musical abilities easily stand alone, but his desire to take
his shows to the next level sets him even further apart.
Josh Nelson @ LA Weekly
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