STEREO REVIEW, November 1997 

Here is a close-knit group that continues to produce splendid chamber jazz but somehow manages to elude the big spotlight. Five Concerts and a Landscape was recorded at appearances in and around New York between 1992 and 1995. Pianist Larry Bluth, bassist Don Messina and drummer Bill Chattin move authoratively through a program of nine familiar selections and a Messina original, "The Dean's List."
 Chris Albertson 


JAZZ EDUCATORS JOURNAL, May 1998 

An extraordinary trio suffused with glowing passion and caringness in its fresh, spirited music. Devout disciples of legendary pianist Lennie Tristano's unconventional music, this trio also reflects some traces of Bud Powell. The three thread their own attractive melodic contributions to the long, ranging lines of improvisations characteristic of Tristano . . . Like the trio's impressive debut on Live At Orfeo, they chose the ambient live New York-area settings to precipitate a true blue genuine CD. For example, tap the sheer purity of their oeuvre by listening to "You Go To My Head," "You Stepped Out Of A Dream," or "Darn That Dream." What a joyful groove to hear how very familiar tunes and chord progressions are fluidly redeveloped! Discover refreshment in open turf. Experience the striking equilibrium between looseness and tautness. Be mindful this is authoritative music played by musicians who insist on propagating swing. The triangle of Bluth, Messina, and Chattin is rare excitement.

 Dr. Herb Wong 


JAZZ TIMES, March 1998 

These two CDs of live recordings [Live at Orfeo and Five Concerts and a Landscape] represent a team approach in many respects, ncluding the recording style: The Masters were prepared using a stereo pair of microphones, and the full ambiance of the setting pervades each track. More importantly, the musical balance is a matter of the sensitvities of the musicians in the moment. Such a recording makes a statement as to the intentions of the artists that should not be ignorned in assessing their work. The results support the statement . . Messina and Chattin are solid and sensitive accompanists to Bluth... Bluth's harmonic sense dominates the arrangements, creating shadows that seem to put even the most familiar chord progressions in a new perspective - an effect that's heightened by the somewhat muted ambiance of the recordings. As to the material, Live At Orfeo is mostly originals, Five Concerts mostly standards, but even the standards seem created to sustain the trio dynamic established in Live At Orfeo's opener: Empathy.

 Bill Bennet 


WIRED, November 1997 

It's one thing to play classic jazz, something sadder to replay it. Yet while this three-some's sound may recall celebrated acoustic triads of the . . . '50s, the inventive improvisations keep their music from feeling like a retro trip. Bluth peps ups Miles's "Little Willie Leaps" with some playful piano while Messina intricately solos over Chattin's trancey rhythms in "Lover Come Back To Me." Just as they did on their equally wonderful debut, Live at Orfeo, Bluth, Messina and Chattin make music as classic as the guys who inspired them.

 Paul Semel 


GREEN MOUNTAIN JAZZ MESSENGER, April 1998 

The selections on Larry Bluth's second Zinnia album, Five Concerts and a Landscape were recorded live in concerts over a three year period around New York City. (The landscape, reproduced as cover illustration, is a painting by Annette Bluth-Lukemire to whom the CD is dedicated in memoriam)... Interpretations are very much by the rules of the Lennie Tristano school. Lengthly linear exposition and improvisation, maintenance of a steady medium to up-tempo pace by a rhythm section, mininimal inflection: all add up to an even-tempered approach to the material. Such a technique for better or worse, can operate as a sure safeguard against emotional excess, yielding for example a "You Stepped Out Of A Dream" devoid of romance, or a relatively dry "Get Happy." ... Formal perfection, immaculate phrasing and tight ensemble work are here in abundance, perhaps most strikingly on the more relaxed numbers, "You Go To My Head" and "Darn That Dream." And throughout, Messina and Chattin demonstrate rare compatibility, particularly noticeable on the fours. Collectively, these tunes mirror the subdued colors, distinct lines, and cool beauty of the Bluth-Lukemire landscape on the cover. Given its virtues, this release is sure to please devotees of the piano trio format and encourage listeners to check out this group's earlier Live At Orfeo.
 Lou Kannenstine 


VICTORY REVIEW, November 1997 

Their performances of these jazz standards have the welded-together feel that only comes from long experience with the intimacy of playing together live. Bluth breathes life into "My Melancholy Baby" and "Get Happy." The only complaint is that there isn't enough of Messina's graceful bass. His solo on "Lover Come Back To Me," and his intro to "The Dean's List," a Messina original, whet our appetite for more.
 Todd De Groff 


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

In their second release, a compendium of five concerts, . . . the trio restricts itself almost exclusively to a range of standard material; however, there is nothing stale about the musical treatment of familiar tunes in the hands of this threesome. Many of the selections begin in a straightforward manner, establishing the recognizable melody, then fragmenting it, or toying around its periphery, seemingly pursuing it before drawing it back for the closing, "My Melcancholy Baby," "Lover Come Back To Me," "Darn That Dream." Here, too, the bass and drums are given more prominent roles, most noticeably on the final cut, "I'll Remember April" . . . It's a trio I would like to see in performance.
 Jonathan Sutherland 


CADENCE, September 1997 

If you favor solid bebop - as an idiom for ideas and musical invention . . . try this document of a working band going about their business. Selections from live concerts showcase this trio at their most limber and inspired. As an ensemble, they really click in "I'll Remember April" and bass player Don Messina's "The Dean's List," featuring him in a series of exchanges with drummer Bill Chattin. Messina and Chattin are sturdy, dependable soloists. A real delight is Larry Bluth's inventive piano . . . there's a refreshing sense of engagement with the idiom, a commitment to fresh ideas that shows how he's absorbed primary lessons from such very different players as Powell and Tristano. Recommended.
 David Lewis 


Jazz Central Station

Opening of "My Melancholy Baby" sets the pace on this wickedly well-played and surprising live trio date from pianist Larry Bluth, bassist Don Messina and drummer Bill Chattin. An ensemble group which has played together for over ten years, recording is jazz for the serious jazz fan: intricate, original and consistently swinging. An evolution from the Lennie Tristano-style, Bluth's piano styling consists of what could be called a traditional bebop style inflected with surprising, deceptively complex musical fantasies and atypical directions from chordal predictability. Just when you think you've got it figured out, the ensemble slips into a different gear, playing harmonic mind games and leading the way to musical mazes. Repertoire consists of jazz standards throughout, daring to find meaning in "Get Happy," "Love Me or Leave Me" and "Darn that Dream" astonishingly, without cliches.
 Rick Marx 


OTTAWA CITIZEN, May 1998 

Pianist Bluth, bassist Messina and drummer Chattin... know how to express themselves as individuals and as a unit... this trio burrows deep inside the songs, finds the essence andmakes the listener hear the compositions in new ways. Five Concerts and a Landscape... offers satisfying reassurance that communication on a deep level is still alive and well in jazz. and surprising live trio date from pianist Larry Bluth, bassist Don Messina
 James Hale  


ALL ABOUT JAZZ, August 1998 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/index.html

The title to this one derives from the five concerts where these ten selections were recorded; the landscape, by the late Annette Bluth-Lukemire, to whom this disc is dedicated, is on the front cover. Most of the cuts are the sorts of standards favored by Tristano-school players like Warne Marsh and Lee Konitz; pianist Bluth, backed by the bass of Messina and the drums of Chattin, plays them in Konitzian manner, sweetly and brightly, but with daring and piquant harmonies that might slip right by you if you're not paying attention. This sort of playing transfixed performers like Anthony Braxton, who emulates it on his standards recordings and shows marks of it in all his work. Braxton once described the effect of listening to a new Warne Marsh record after a steady diet of Coltrane, Ayler and Coleman: he said that coming from that perspective, he couldn't hear it, but that Marsh was playing things that were just as "out" as these outcats.

That's what this disc is like. From one angle, it's a pleasant collection of songs like "My Melancholy Baby," "You Go to My Head," "Lover Come Back to Me," "You Stepped Out of a Dream," "Darn That Dream," and "I'll Remember April." As if the world needed more interpretations of those. But Bluth, Messina, and Chattin lay down grooves that reward those who take the time to listen attentively. On every track, Bluth takes the songs into uncharted waters, sounding harmonically a bit like Martial Solal, who has recorded some memorable standards with Konitz, over the rhythm section's cool and upbeat background all the while.

On the basis of Bluth's adventurous but never grating playing, this disc is worth hearing. The sound quality of these live club tracks leaves much to be desired, but the music is there for anyone who listens.

 Robert Spencer