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2008 marked the 30th anniversary of Rodney Jones' recording career as a leader. It was in 1978 that a 22 year old Jones recorded his debut album, Articulation and 30 years later in August 2008 around the time of his 52nd birthday, the guitarist recorded A Thousand Small Things. If the 30 years between Articulation and this 59 minute CD taught us anything about Jones, it is that even though he is not a jazz purist or a bop snob, he loves straight ahead jazz and has no desire to give it up. So not surprisingly, A Thousand Small Things is a mostly straight ahead album that contains a few pop flavored offerings here and there. Jones makes some popcrossover moves on Grace and the title track, but if those tunes qualify as smooth jazz, they are edgier and much more substantial than the mindless schlock and fluff that American smooth jazzNAC radio stations were playing in 2008. And given the album's lineup Jones is joined by alto saxophonist Donald Harrison, pianist Michael Kanan, bassist Lonnie Plaxico, and drummer Carl Allen would anyone expect A Thousand Small Things to contain any outright elevator music Obviously not. Even the disc's more pop minded tracks have integrity. But again, straight ahead jazz some of it hard bop, some of it post bop dominates A Thousand Small Things. Jones is in very good form on Thelonious Monk's 'Round Midnight, John Coltrane's Naima, and Oliver Nelson's Stolen Moments as well as on Jones originals that include the impressionistic Morning's First Light, the insistent The Lost Blues, and the Wes Montgomery ish Blues Nexus. From hard bop and post bop to crossover material, A Thousand Small Things is a solid way for Jones to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his recording career as a leader.
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