Villager, St. Paul/Minneapolis, MN
March 28, 2001
Three's No Crowd -- For versatile jazz
pros, personal expression comes in TRIPLICATE
- by Tom Surowicz
My Irish grandmother used to believe that bad
things came in threes. However, she never had the
pleasure of hearing TRIPLICATE, a Twin Cities trio
of experienced, savvy and hip young jazz pros.
Their sound is a decidedly good thing.
TRIPLICATE is composed of guitarist Joel Shapira
of Merriam Park, bass player Bruce "Pooch" Heine
of Minneapolis' Longfellow neighborhood and drummer
Dave Stanoch of Minnetonka. Together, the three
men have enough credits for two movies. They have
worked with garage rock and blues bands, toured
with Broadway musicals and performed on Caribbean
cruise ships. They all teach music, perform in
other combos, do private parties and weddings,
and accompany singers.
Stanoch and his wife, singer-songwriter Katy
Tessman, run their own CD label, Rhythmelodic Records.
Stanoch has also taught at Music Tech in downtown
Minneapolis for the past decade.
Shapira studied at the fabled Berklee College
of Music in Boston and played jazz in the Big Apple
for five years before coming home to roost in Minnesota.
He also teaches guitar at Water Music in Stillwater
and at the Rymer Academy of Fine Arts in Roseville.
Heine drives back and forth to the Granite City
to teach both bass and trombone as a member of
the faculty of St. Cloud State University. He plays
every Monday night with the Cedar Avenue Big Band
at O'Gara's Bar & Grill, is a member of the
hard-bop quintet Move and appears regularly as
a sideman at the Artists' Quarter. He also teaches
at Schmitt Music in Brooklyn Center.
Busy, busy, busy.
Yet nothing fires these musicians up quite like
TRIPLICATE. It is their most personal avenue of
musical expression, their calling card and their
first love. They rehearse faithfully every week,
whether there are a dozen gigs on the calendar
that month or just one. They feel the rehearsals
are their own reward.
"The idea is to utilize the trio format
to its fullest," Shapira said.
"TRIPLICATE is an opportunity for us to get
together, be creative and challenge ourselves," Heine
said. "It's a real musical outlet, as opposed
to backing singers or doing jobbing gigs."
"We pick tough tunes to play to challenge
ourselves," Stanoch said. "The arrangements
are constantly evolving, thanks to those regular
rehearsals. In TRIPLICATE, we try to utilize each
instrument equally. This isn't a guitar trio in
the standard sense. It's not just a soloist and
two accompanists. Everybody gets ample space and
opportunity to shine."
That's apparent from even the casual listen to
TRIPLICATE's self-titled debut CD, released earlier
this year. It may be only April, but it's safe
to say that the 11-track album is one of the finest
local offerings -- in any genre -- of 2001. A mix
of under-exposed jazz classics, crafty original
tunes, Tin Pan Alley gems, confident bebop, post-bop
jazz-rock and ethnic grooves from warmer climes
(New Orleans, Brazil), Triplicate is all
musical meat, no cereal filler. It offers everything
from Thelonious Monk and Bud Powell to John "Mahavishnu" McLaughlin
and Led Zeppelin.
An "in the tradition" jazz disc that
recognizes funk and fusion as part of the tradition, Triplicate is
also an album that is frequently surprising, occasionally
backward-looking, but never stuffy, academic or
retro. Give one listen to Charles Mingus' catchy "Nostalgia
In Times Square," reconceived as a funky sidewalk
strut, and you'll be hooked.
If the trio's album sounds like it was painstakingly
made, that's no accident. "We took a year
to make it," Stanoch said. "The actual
performance time was just eight days in the studio,
but to finance and coordinate it, the project worked
out being a one-day-a-month affair, in eight different
months, averaging about three hours each day in
the studio."
"To complete the record in a year was always
our intention," Shapira said. "We all
teach and we have little common time that's free.
Basically, it's Wednesday afternoons, when we rehearse.
Plus we had to work around (studio engineer) Matt
Zimmerman's schedule. One of the best things on
the record is a first take of 'Webb City' that
we did at 10 in the morning on a cold winter day.
It was the first tune of the session and the first
take of the day and it came out perfect."
Another standout track on the album is "Lament" by
the great and recently late bebop trombonist J.J.
Johnson. Outside of TRIPLICATE, Heine is known
for his able work on slide trombone, but he didn't
pick the song as a Johnson homage. He wasn't even
aware of its genesis.
"I knew 'Lament' from pianist Laura Caviani's
arrangement of the tune, which we play in the Cedar
Avenue Big Band," he said. "I just thought
it'd be a good melodic vehicle for the bass."
Jazz fans can purchase Triplicate or
listen for the album in rotation on KBEM-88.5 FM
to find out just how fine a vehicle "Lament" is
for Heine's eloquent bass.
TRIPLICATE's CD release party at the Dakota Bar & Grill
was a standing-room-only hit in January. The trio's
next appearances locally are at 9:00 p.m. Thursday,
April 5, at the Artists' Quarter in St. Paul and
at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 10 at Jitter's in the
lower level of the Times Bar & Cafe in Minneapolis.
Unless, of course, you count TRIPLICATE's weekly
rehearsal sessions at Heine's house in Longfellow.
That's a date that pays zero, yet one that none
of these talented musicians would ever want to
miss.
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