Irving Fields Trio - My Yiddishe Mama's Favorites (2007)
Artist: Irving Fields Trio, Greg Cohen, Irving Fields, Roberto Rodriguez
Title: My Yiddishe Mama's Favorites
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Tzadik
Genre: Jazz, Afro-Cuban Jazz, Latin
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:35
Total Size: 210 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: My Yiddishe Mama's Favorites
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Tzadik
Genre: Jazz, Afro-Cuban Jazz, Latin
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:35
Total Size: 210 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Sholom Aleichem (02:18)
2. Ose Shalom (02:50)
3. Di Grine Kuzine (02:51)
4. Oifin Pripitchik (03:04)
5. Mir Zol Zein Far Dir (02:47)
6. Tzene Tzena (02:01)
7. My Yiddishe Mama (02:10)
8. Ba Shana (01:57)
9. Hamavdil (02:55)
10. Oi Mama Bin Ich Farliebt (02:23)
11. Melody For Moses (03:41)
12. Un Az Der Rebbe Zingt / Shashtil (03:16)
13. An Emese Eshes Chayil (02:29)
14. Hava Nagila (03:13)
15. Rumania, Rumania (04:09)
16. "Yankel" Doodle (03:21)
Personnel:
Greg Cohen: Bass
Irving Fields: Piano
Roberto Rodriguez: Percussion
Almost 50 years after Bagels and Bongos, 91-year-old Irving Fields is still up to the same tricks: playing a swinging Jewish/Latin hybrid with his piano trio. My Yiddishe Mama's Favorites is a collection of mostly traditional tunes recorded in early 2007 with the masterful Greg Cohen on bass and Roberto Rodriguez on percussion with Fields at the piano. Fields has a very sprightly style, and age has apparently done nothing to diminish his fleet-fingeredness, as these pieces just sparkle with wonderful playing (just check the accelerating "Hamavdil," one of several solo pieces). Cohen and Rodriguez are a perfectly complementary rhythm team, giving Fields the support he needs so he's free to embellish the tunes. With all his Masada experience, Greg Cohen could probably sleepwalk through an album of this stuff (don't worry, he doesn't) and Fields and Rodriguez played together on one of Rodriguez's own Jewish/Latin releases (Oy Vey! Ole!), giving the trio a very cohesive sound. The performances here are so focused that very few of the 16 tunes crack the three-minute mark, yet one never feels any given song was given short shrift by the players and the playing is excellent from top to bottom. My Yiddishe Mama's Favorites is a thoroughly swinging album that should appeal equally to fans of the downtown Jewish sound (especially those who liked Rodriguez's albums or Steven Bernstein's Diaspora series) as well as the proverbial elderly Jewish grandparents. Well done. © Sean Westergaard