No one can accuse
John Bunch of having a short career; born on December 1, 1921, the veteran pianist was 81 when he recorded
Tony's Tunes for Chiaroscuro on May 12, 2003. What's the secret to
Bunch's success? In addition to having impeccable chops and an inherent sense of swing and melody,
Bunch is smart enough to realize that a musician needs to be true to himself. All these years,
Bunch has been a swing-oriented pianist along the lines of
Teddy Wilson and
Nat King Cole; that's his turf, and he has excelled by sticking with what he does best. This CD is called
Tony's Tunes because all 14 of the songs are ones that
Bunch played with
Tony Bennett in the '60s, when he was the singer's music director -- familiar gems that range from "Street of Dreams" and
Harold Arlen's "I've Got the World on a String" to
Neal Hefti's "Girl Talk."
Tony's Tunes is a tribute to
Bennett, but it's a tribute on
Bunch's own pianistic terms; there are no vocals at all, and
Bunch maintains an improviser's mindset whether he is interpreting "Chicago" (that toddlin' town!) or "Put On a Happy Face." When Chiaroscuro president
Hank O'Neal (who produced this release) first came up with the idea for
Tony's Tunes, he seemed to envision an album of unaccompanied solo piano. But
Tony's Tunes ended up being a trio session -- not a traditional piano trio (piano, bass, and drums), but a drummer-less trio uniting
Bunch with frequent companions
Bucky Pizzarelli (guitar) and
Jay Leonhart (bass). That piano/guitar/bass format is, of course, the same format that
the Nat King Cole Trio favored in the '30s and '40s, and it's a format that works pleasingly well for
Bunch throughout this fine CD. ~ Alex Henderson