PENGUIN GUIDE TO JAZZ ON CD, March 1999

. . . this is a co-operative effort among three like-minded and accomplish thinkers . . . it is a set of deferential improvisations on notable chord changes. The music will sound familiar to the Warne Marsh/Peter Ind sessions of the 1950s or to anything by Sal Mosca. Bluth hints at these melodies without realizing them . . . Messina plays a modest roving virtuosic line and Chattin sets up the quietest of swinging grooves. This is an agreeable and satisfying set by three men playing for the music rather then for themselves.

 Richard Cook 



STEREO REVIEW 

Cohesion and elegant execution characterize the trio comprising Larry Bluth, Don Messina and Bill Chattin. They have, in a most eloquent way, captured the essence of jazz to come up with a fresh, thoroughly musical approach that favors post-war styles, but has about it a preposessing timelessness. While it is uncommon to find a relatively obscure group of such superior quality, I would say that the odds of keeping this trio hidden from the public are even greater. 

 Chris Albertson 



JAZZ CANADIANA, September 1997 
http://www.idbt.com/jazzcdn/ppsept97.htm

 Pianist Larry BLuth, bassist Don Messina, and Drummer Bill Chattin appear here on "their first commercially available recording," live performances from the Orfeo club in Manhattan's East Village, recorded in November 1991 and January 1992, respectively. Ten of the twelve selections are composed by members of the trio, a cohesive group obviously well acquainted with one another's stylistic nuances. Though they capture, at times, an Ahmad Jamal ambience in understating melodic lines or in abandoning explicit melody for the suggestive only ("I'll See You In My Dreams/Tell'n Tales"), Bluth's strong Lennie Tristano/Sal Mosca connection soon dispels that comparison. Spare, angular, elastic, he swings the trio through numbers such as "The Dumbwaiter" or "Liana", almost skirting the melody, invading it fleetingly, playfully interjecting familiar bits from recognizable standards. Balancing an active explorative right hand against an intermittent chordal left, he improvises freely on boppish pieces like "Empathy" and "For Dean," or builds around the ballad-like melodic cores of "Francine" and "A Song For Lauren." The tightness of group dynamics contributes significantly to his ability to do that. An enjoyable first outing!.

 Jonathan Sutherland 



DOBBIN's DEN, August, 1997
http://www.cityvu.com/jazz/den17A.html-ssi

Live at Orfeo (Zinnia) is a trio outing led by pianist Larry Bluth, a musician in the Lennie Tristano/Sal Mosca tradition. His trio of Don Messina on bass and Bill Chattin on drums was recorded live in 1991 and 1992 at Orfeo, a music venue in Manhattan East Village. The oldie "I'll See You In My Dreams" and Bird's "Dewey Square" are here, along with ten by the members of the group, and, in the best Tristano tradition, based on the changes of some first-rate standards. 

Len Dobbin 



THE BOSTON PHOENIX, July 1996 

This trio have worked together in relative obscurity since 1982, but their dedication pays off handsomely in this intimate debut, a live set of heady music played from the heart. Students of Lennie Tristano's music with its emphasis on uncluttered swing, attention to linear coherence, and harmonic sophistication, they play with relaxed assurance, warmth, and total involvement. Pianist Bluth, probes and pushes his lines, sometimes chopping them into interlinking snippets of melody, at others rolling out lines in breathtaking length. His left hand is just as tricky as his right. injecting harmonically dense accents that aternately buoy his lines, goad them forward, or add weight or color to notes. Bassist Don Messina is also a marvel of offhand vituosity. Throughout the album, he maintains continuity in his walking-bass lines, keeping their contours varied and interesting melodically without sacrificing swinging momentum. Drummer Bill Chattin shows admirable attention to dynamics, never upsetting the natural balance of sound within the group. He also displays a telepathic rapport with soloists, shadowing the accents of Bluth's lines with eerie accuracy. This is music made for the love of it. 

 Ed Hazell 



OTTAWA CITIZEN , March 1997 

Many live recordings strive to recapture the frisson of the original club setting; however, the closest most come is the sound of glassware and audience chatter. Recorded at a small Manhattan club on two afternoons in the winter of 1991/92, . . . this trio steeped in the music of Lennie Tristano and Bud Powell puts you in the room, in the moment. Much of the energy is supplied by pianist Larry Bluth, who communicates the joy he takes in prodding the components of songs like Charlie Parker's "Dewey Square," or in discovering that Chattin's pretty ballad "Francine," resolves well into "What's New?"  He might have made that connection a thousand times before, but he makes it sound fresh, and that's what this trio is all about. 

James Hale 



THE NEW REVIEW OF RECORDS, Autumn 1994  

Live at Orfeo -- Selected as "Critic's Choice Jazz CD" 

This brilliant three-piece is exciting, beautiful, and stirring: simultaneously loose and tight. All three instruments—Bluth's piano, Messina's bass, and Chattin's drums—are played with such tenderness that the disc has an intimacy bordering on the erotic. Though all three men are obviously seasoned players—as illustrated by the intricacies of their improvisations—the spirit is fresh and alive.  

Paul Semel 



SOUND VIEWS, January 1995  

Live at Orfeo -- Selected as "Jazz Pick, 1994" 

Easily the most involving and passion-filled jazz album released in a long time... Their playing has such a supple tenderness that the music has an intimacy best likened to the Cookin'/Steamin' albums recorded by the Miles Davis Quartet in the mid-'50s. 

 Greg Edwards 



JAZZ NOW, June 1995 

This sounds like that kind of music [Tristano, Marsh, Mosca], bebop piano with an admixture of things like Schoenberg's twelve-tone scale... modern classical influences against a steady rhythmic framework... many interesting things going on... references to Monk . . . far-out block chords. The bass has a warmer sound than it does on most recordings . . . Be warned... buy this for serious listening. 

 Robert Tate 



VICTORY REVIEW, Acoustic Music Review Magazine 
October 1996  

With the ambience of a live to tape recording, this trio is warm and complement each other well. Bill Chattin on drums and Don Messina on bass hold down the rhythm as Larry Bluth weaves a melodic thread on grand piano. Light and refreshing and never predictable. Fans of piano jazz will enjoy this CD, the background noise is almost a plus as you become a member of the audience.  

Allen Morales 



CADENCE, The Review of Jazz & Blues: Creative Improvised Music, 
August 1994  

You can tell the school the trio in [Live at Orfeo] comes from fairly quickly. A constant pulsing rhythm, long-lined piano improvisations, new melodies built on the chords of standards, this is definitely Lennie Tristano country and these men do it right. Larry Bluth is a fluid and lively improviser and Don Messina and Bill Chattin keep a good beat flowing as well as contributing attractive, easy-riding solos. Tristano isn't the only touchstone here. The insistent deconstruction of "I'll See You In My Dreams" owes as much to Bud Powell and the slow "A Song For Lauren" sounds like a variation on "Monk's Reflections". The main course though is rippling, slippery music wrapped around familiar chords. Bluth . . . is excellent, the linchpin of a fine piano trio. 

 Jerome Wilson 



New England PERFORMER Magazine, August 1994

This improvisational, live jazz tape is influenced by the likes of Louis Armstrong, Roy Eldridge, Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Warne Marsh, and Bud Powell. These guys perform music that is never predictable but always enjoyable. 

 Recorded live at a Manhattan jazz bistro, this tape is a fine representative of what jazz is all about. The feel is both authentic and nostalgic. These guys take jazz very seriously and they bring much dedication and preparation to the performance and if you're into powerful and introspective music, or, if you're just a jazz fanatic and want a masterful tape for your collection, pursue this CD and get many hours of red hot jazz interpretations. A fine performance captured forever on CD.  

A.J. Wachtel