Saturday Night Jazz at kj's hideaway

Dave King Trio in Home Territory– at the Dunsmore Room, May 15-16

TCJF Twin Cities
Dave King Trio © Andrea Canter

© Andrea Canter

We will have to forgive Milwaukee’s Jazz Estate for their excitement in welcoming “from New York City” the Dave King Trio, which plays there immediately after the band’s two-night stand (May 15-16) in the Dunsmore Room at Crooners Lounge in Fridley. Of course, that’s the Twin Cities, and home to Dave King and Billy Peterson, and native territory for Michigan-based Bill Carrothers. But the trio has played at the Village Vanguard and certainly each member has a reputation that suggests the Big Apple. The trio recorded their debut CD in a Twin Cities-area church in 2012 and has been accumulating accolades world-wide ever since, with multiple appearances at the Dunsmore Room.

Dave King © Andrea Canter

Although Dave King might be best known for his long-standing work with The Bad Plus and Happy Apple, his affiliations hardly end there. In fact, at any given moment, King is likely involved in at least ten projects ranging from his jazz-oriented Dave King Trucking Company, Bad Plus, Happy Apple and his duo with JT Bates, Real Bulls, to rock bands like Halloween Alaska and impossible-to-define electronic outfits like Gang Font. Whatever the band of the moment or decade, King remains the Energizer Bunny of drummers, both in terms of his frenetic musical wizardry and his simultaneous association with numerous and diverse projects. Traditional approaches to percussion have never appealed to King, whose technique was described by Matt Peiken (St. Paul Pioneer Press) as relying “on incredible finger control to nuance his fills, which often defy the neat subdivisions of typical beats.”

Dave King © Andrea Canter

King grew up in the Twin Cities, starting off on piano at age four before switching to drums in fifth grade. As a teen he forged his early music connections with fellow Golden Valley residents Reid Anderson and Craig Taborn, whose paths would intersect again and again. He attended Cooper High School and the MacPhail Center for Music, studying jazz and rock. At 19, King headed west, working as a session musician in LA in the early 90s before returning to the Twin Cities to find his own voice. “I always wanted to be in the mix,” he told the Pioneer Press some years ago, “to help design and define the sound of the ensemble rather than just be the guy who plays drums.” Soon he helped design and define the sound of Happy Apple, the trio that came together in 1996, ultimately complete with saxophonist Michael Lewis and electric bassist Eric Fratzke and straddling avant garde jazz and alternative rock. In addition to his discography with The Bad Plus and Happy Apple, and his recent tours and recording with the Dave King Trucking Company, King appears on a long list of other recordings. In 2010, he released a solo album combining his skills as drummer, pianist and composer, Indelicate (2010). Dave was featured at the Walker Art Center in 2010 with “Dave King for Two Days,” a two-night showcase featuring The Bad Plus, Happy Apple, The Bad Apple (combining the Bad Plus and Happy Apple), Buffalo Collision, Golden Valley Is Now and the inaugural performance of the Dave King Trucking Company.

Dave King Trio © Andrea Canter

Formed about five years ago, the Dave King Trio joins the drummer and two native Minnesota collaborators–pianist Bill Carrothers and bassist Billy Peterson, a configuration that is Bad Plus-familiar. Their music is anything but. Dave brought Peterson and Carrothers together as trio with a goal of recreating the feel of the dark, moody standards of the Bill Evans and Paul Bley trios, as well as recording some favorite ballads.  To capture that sound, he rented a neighborhood church for the musicians’ first collaborative moment, a four-hour recording session yielding I’ve Been Ringing You (Sunnyside).  Back in December 2015, the Dave King Trio  officially opened the intimate, listener-friendly Dunsmore Room at Crooners Lounge, putting Carrothers at the 9-foot Bösendorfer with King and Peterson in close proximity… along with the audience in the transformed dining room overlooking Moore Lake. The trio performed a few months later at Vieux Carré in St. Paul, and returned to the Dunsmore Room twice in 2016.

Bill Carrothers © Andrea Canter

Nominated for the French “Grammy” equivalent, Les Victoires du Jazz, pianist Bill Carrothers spends much of his playing time in Europe and most of his down time in rural Michigan. The Excelsior, MN native has garnered rave reviews throughout the U.S. and Europe for his diverse recordings, including  Keep Your Sunnyside Up, Home Row, Joy Spring, the solo spontaneous improvisation set, Excelsior, the 2-volume A Night at the Village Vanguard (his first live recording with his European trio), and his solo release, Family Life, dubbed a “blatantly intimate” disc displaying a “tender, evocative soulfulness” (Britt Robson, Jazz Times). Bill was a frequent draw at the Artists Quarter, and recently has performed at Studio Z, Vieux Carré and in solo and duo (with saxophonist Pat Mallinger) at the Dunsmore Room. He also appears with the trio Red Planet (Dean Magraw, Chris Bates, Jay Epstein) on their new recording (Red Planet With Bill Carrothers), and helped celebrate the CD release last month in the Dunsmore Room. When not performing, Bill also teaches at the Lawrence Conservatory in Appleton, WI.

Billy Peterson © Andrea Canter

From Minnesota’s “First Family of Music,” bassist Billy Peterson sang in commercials with sister Linda at age 9 and played bass and drums in his father’s ensembles while in junior high. He played in a variety of combos and big bands throughout his high school years, including a summer tour with the Righteous Brothers and a stint with the Lawrence Welk All-Stars. After graduation, Billy played three years with Billy Wallace (Clifford Brown’s pianist) and co-founded the band Natural Life with saxman Bob Rockwell. He has recorded with Leo Kottke and performed or recorded with BB King, Johnny Smith, Lenny Breau, and the late Les Paul. Due to tour commitments, he passed on an invitation to join the Bill Evans Trio (Marc Johnson’s good fortune!). In 1975, he appeared on Bob Dylan’s acclaimed Blood on the Tracks, and a few years later began a long-standing collaboration with Ben Sidran, which led to his 20+ year association with the Steve Miller Band. Billy continues to tour with Bob Rockwell in Europe, appearing in the Twin Cities with The Peterson Family, How Birds Work, and other ensembles.

I’ve Been Ringing You presents a subdued mood, but such a gorgeous mood it is! We can find much delight in the (mostly) somber tones that recall Bill Evans and Fred Hersch, but leaning farther outside. From start to finish, the recording carries the unmistakable signature of the maverick pianist Carrothers, pleasingly the best jazz sensibilities of bassist Peterson, and surprisingly, a side of Dave King we hope to know better. Seven standards, from jazz classics (“Lonely Woman”) to songbook gemstones (“So in Love”) to Broadway charms (“People Will Say We’re In Love”) are given unique reworkings, while the set ends with the title track, a collaborative invention that offers a perfect summation of the whole.

More than one reviewer has noted that Dave King is one of the most underappreciated drummers in jazz despite the high profile of The Bad Plus. The same can be said for each of these musicians—the prolific Bill Carrothers is recognized far more often in Europe than in his home territory; Billy Peterson was so long associated with Steve Miller and such that many do not realize he is one of the premier jazz bassists on earth.  Perhaps in this trio format, each will finally get that well-deserved recognition for his individual talents as well as finding their place as one of the most elegant jazz trios working today. (Their recent Village Vanguard gigs are surely a step toward such recognition!)

Perhaps it’s a sign of their recognition that some think of the Dave King Trio as “from New York City.” We can hear the Dave King Trio this week in the Dunsmore Room (May 15-16), shows at 7 and 8:30 pm. — that’s live, from the Twin Cities.

The Dunsmore Room at Crooners Lounge is located in Fridley, MN at 6161 NE Highway 65 (Central Av NE), just north of I-694 and about 15 minutes north of downtown Minneapolis. Reservations at www.croonersloungemn.com