By Don Phipps
    The jazz world was devastated to learn  that Keith Jarrett had suffered two
    strokes in October of 2020 and  would no longer be able to perform.
    Primarily a pianist (but also  skilled on other musical instruments),
    Jarrett’s astonishing sixty  plus year career ran from brief stints with Art
    Blakey’s Jazz  Messengers and Miles Davis to filling halls around the world
    for his  solo piano concerts. He received accolades for his efforts such as:
- 
Near hour-long free form piano improvisations that flowed 
 in great arcs of spontaneous consciousness.
- 
Forming two simultaneous quartets that had distinct musical 
 styles and focused on original compositions centered on
 improvisations:- 
An American quartet featuring Ornette 
 Coleman alums Dewey Redman, Charlie Haden, and Bill Evans
 Trio alum Paul Motian on drums.
- 
A European quartet featuring Norwegians Jan 
 Garbarek (sax) and Jon Christensen (drums) and Swede
 Palle Danielsson (bass).
 
- 
- 
A series of classical music albums (in which he performed 
 the music of Bach, Handel, Shostakovich, and others) and
 his own orchestral compositions.
- 
Explorations of the “great American songbook” with a long 
 running “standards” piano trio (the Standards Trio) that
 performed from 1983 through 2014 and featured bassist Gary
 Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette.
    Jarrett’s long association with the  ECM label meant that his works were
    recorded to the highest  standards. (Note:  I would argue that Eicher’s
    production  techniques resulted in superior recordings of piano that date
    back to  the 70s – at that time a notoriously difficult instrument to
    capture due to its overtones and extreme range of notes – and that  much of
    Jarrett’s output benefitted from this expertise – but I  digress).
    The standards trio mentioned above  recorded exclusively for ECM. So, it was
    something of a surprise to  see the label issue a live Jarrett recording of
    a trio in 1992 (At  The Deer Head Inn) that substituted Paul Motian for
    Jack  DeJohnette on drums. Motian and DeJohnette have distinctive styles of
    drumming – though both are (were) excellent drummers. On The Old  Country,
    the Jarrett/Peacock/Motian trio covers Monk’s classic  “Straight No Chaser.”
    A year earlier, the  Jarrett/Peacock/DeJohnette trio covered the same song
    on their album Bye Bye Blackbird. On Blackbird, DeJohnette offers up a
    characteristically bubbling and effervescent beat that fits perfectly  with
    Jarrett’s roaming and bluesy improv. On Country,  Jarrett’s rendition of
    “Straight No Chaser” is lively but  cooler, and Motian skips along behind
    Jarrett’s musical touches  while Peacock walks the bass. Think sunglasses
    instead of sunshine.  Motian keeps the beat light and only comes forward
    during the drum  breaks, as his concern appears more with color and texture
    than with  exposition.
The Old Country is a second  release of material from the 1992 concert
    Jarrett, Peacock and Motian  gave at the Deer Head Inn – and it should be
    noted this performance  was the first and only time the
    Jarrett/Peacock/Motian trio played  together.
    The Inn is a venue situated in  Pennsylvania’s Delaware Water Gap Region
    (Allentown, PA), and,  according to ECM, it has presented live music
    continuously since  1950, making it one of the oldest jazz clubs in the US.
    Furthermore,  the venue held a special place for Jarrett. He says in the
    liner  notes that he was sixteen when he got a call to join a house trio for
    one night at the Deer Head Inn: “So, the Deer Head Inn was my first  serious
    trio job on piano.”
    At the time of this concert, Jarrett  had not played the Inn for 30 years
    and had not played with Motian  for 16 years. Call it happenstance, call it
    what you will, but the  three, Jarrett, Peacock, and Motian, came together
    to make not one,  but now two, marvelous records. Yes, marvelous is as good
    a word as  any to describe the music on The Old Country (as well as the
    original At The Deer Head Inn). The “standards” explored on Country all
    come to life and are shaped anew, from the  champagne opening and rolling
    closing on Cole Porter’s “Everything  I Love” to the bluesy repose of the
    title cut (composed by  trumpeter Nat Adderley).
    Jarrett’s touch is distinct, and this  is what makes his playing on Country as well as other  recordings so unique. It can glide, dance, or
    bounce, but regardless  of the technique deployed, there is a singing
    quality to it. One can  sense Jarrett is playing accompaniment to what he
    hears in his head  as much as what he is hearing from his bandmates. Another
    thing – his  phrasing. It is like he always knows just when to enter and
    exit, and  precisely what notes or combination of notes work. His lines are
    never filler. Instead, they engage and reward repeated listening. All  these
    qualities are exhibited on the eight songs explored on “The  Old Country,”
    from the Art Tatumesque opening to Cole Porter’s  “All of You” to his
    melancholy romanticism on Gershwin’s “How  Long Has This Been Going On.”
    Has sadness ever sounded so sweet?
    Peacock puts on quite a show as well.  He seems to intuitively understand
    Jarrett’s moods and mimics them  with an exactness that demonstrates their
    long-standing relationship.  Check out his solo on “Straight No Chaser,”
    where he exhibits an  all over technique that is rhythmically diverse and
    sonically complex  (think Dave Holland). Or his joyous offering on
    “Everything I  Love.” Peacock offers a dynamic and sincere bottom to the
    numbers,  giving Jarrett the space to take the music far and wide. Motian
    too  lays low, using the high hat to great effect, and adding just enough
    trap set work on the breaks to generate heat when called upon.
    It saddened the jazz world when Gary  Peacock and Paul Motian checked out of
    this reality. And it saddens  many in the jazz world (including this
    reviewer) to realize that  Jarrett will never again play in public. We now
    have only albums such  as this to remind us of what was real and happening
    in the  not-too-distant past. Such is life. As Vladimir Nabokov put it in
    his  memoir, Speak Memory, “The cradle rocks above an abyss, and  common
    sense tell us that our existence is but a brief crack of light  between two
    eternities of darkness.”   Even Jarrett waxed on life’s  momentary flicker.
    As he put it in his poem “The Death of a  Flower”: “We live between birth
    and death, or so we convince  ourselves conveniently, when in truth we are
    being born and we are  dying simultaneously every eternal instant of our
    lives.”   Well,  that may be, but with this album, a living document of a
    past  instant, the light shines on. Enjoy! 


 
                                    