Hey Rim Jeon Trio at Birdland Jazz Club
by Nick Fernandez
With dim red lighting and a small but attentive crowd, Hey Rim Jeon's pre-dinner set at the Birdland Jazz Club Wednesday night could have easily been confused with an after-hours jam session downtown. The audience, however, told a different story: While appreciative of each clever phrase or cross-bandstand connection, the gathering of friends and family held their applause until the conclusion of each number and refrained from the vocal outbursts that often occur as the hours pass. To Jeon’s credit, instead of a meandering mélange of impromptu arrangements, she and her trio were our guides on a carefully planned musical exploration celebrating her U.S. album release party.
Introducing Hey Rim Jeon musically reflects the multinational and eclectic experience of the pianist who, born in Seoul, Korea, went from classical prodigy to jazz and popular devotee while at the Berklee College of Music. The album includes standards (“Softly as in a Morning’s Sunrise” and “Autumn Leaves”), impressions of “places you wish to visit, but haven’t yet” (“Prague”), and even a Korean folk song (“Arirang”).
After a slightly rocky start marked by timid playing and delayed communication, the trio found its bearing in “Prague,” the third song of the evening. Ms. Jeon came to life in a rubato introduction that offered panoramic views of imagined beauty—skirting the edges of the city to paint rural greenery and folk dancers. Bassist Luques Curtis and drummer Richie Barshay, high school friends who Ms. Jeon met while at Berklee, joined her in traveling into the city’s center. Mr. Curtis took over Jeon’s lyrical melodies while Barshay offered march-like accompaniment.
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