Lafayette Gilchrist

Three

June 13, 2007

 
 
Related Stories: Lafayette Gilchrist
Article Tools

Baltimore pianist Gilchrist taught himself to play at age seventeen while working as a maintenance man at the University of Maryland. He says he spent the bulk of his workday noodling on a Steinway Grand in the campus' Fine Arts building. He says he's never taken lessons and still doesn't own a piano, but somehow gets by practicing eight to ten hours a day on, uh, other people's property. Yeah, it sounds suspect. But when you listen to his first two albums — 2004's The Music According to Lafayette Gilchrist and 2005's Towards a Shining Path — you can tell they're the work of someone with an amazing ear and no classical training. The rhythms are jagged, the articulations percussive and truculent, the melodies unpolished and usually unfinished — a combination of Gilchrist's hodge-podge influences (hip-hop, funk, Washington go-go, and whatever jazz records he filched from the university library) and his scrubby personality (he eventually got fired from maintenance work for flooding a second-floor dorm). In this year's Three, however, the pianist's chops finally caught up to the ideas in his head. Overall, it's a more patient album. Gilchrist has learned how to take a lick or phrase to its resolution, even if he's still fond of jamming as many notes as possible in the space of a single bar. Moreover, he's finally started engaging his bass player and drummer — or at least allowed them to serve as more than just a solid anchor or groove. Most importantly, Gilchrist has a much better rapport with his instrument on this album. It's as though he's finally learned that you can pound and pound and pound an 800-pound piano, but the piano will always win. So in the end, it's better to be less battering.

YOUR COMMENT


RECENT ARTICLES BY RACHEL SWAN

Live 2009: 6th Annual Concert Tour
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Jaime Guerrero turns his inner-city past into art.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Tourettes' 10th anniversary features the greatest rapping pastry alive.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009

MUSIC SEARCH

Select One or More Criteria
From    To 

MUSIC BLOGS

Ear Bud

10:48 am, Friday November 6
5:08 pm, Thursday November 5
10:47 am, Thursday November 5

THIS WEEK IN MUSIC

Escape 2 Mars 
In and Out of Control
Live 2009: 6th Annual Concert Tour
This week, we review Disgust of Us, The Downer Party, Birds & Batteries, and Sweedish.
Dick Valentine of Electric Six wants to put the fun back in rock 'n' roll.
Amiri Baraka celebrates his new essay collection at Yoshi's.

MOST POPULAR MUSIC STORIES

VIEWED E-MAILED COMMENTED
Bringing on the heartaches: David Cantwell has country's number.
Dick Valentine of Electric Six wants to put the fun back in rock 'n' roll.
Tartufi's Thread collective weaves like-minded acts into one promotional draw.
How Jaz Sawyer made good on his name.

THIS WEEK'S FEATURE


Rock 'n' roll image guru Miles Hurwitz helps turn young local bands into something that sells.

SPECIAL REPORTS

Out & About, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, and Summer Arts
Music, film, and art at this year's festival.
Learning to Live with Less

RECENT ISSUES


Nov 4, 2009

Oct 28, 2009

Oct 21, 2009

Oct 14, 2009

Oct 7, 2009

Sep 30, 2009