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Figments of My Imagination  
By Javier Antonio Quiñones Ortiz 
FROM "ALL ABOUT JAZZ" 
The Musical Director of the Van Dyke Café, Miami Beach's leading jazz venue, serves the diminutive jazz audiences of South Florida quality music by accompanying various passing guests, as well asperforming with local ensembles, including his own. Figments of My Imagination, his second release under his name, is Don Wilner's latest. Take heed of this Brazilian enthused jazz recording featuring Eric Alexander and Kenny Drew, Jr. 
 

Antonio Carlos Jobim enthusiasts will be happy to find the rest of the compositions in this generously extended release sheathed by four of the noted Brazilian's works. Said four Jobim bookends of the production enclose material from other expected Brazilian authors-such as Ivan Lins and Djavan-as well as not-so-Brazilian ones-such as Leonard Bernstein and Duke Ellington. They all become conduits for hearty jazz à la Brazil rather than syrupy melodic fare-a perennial temptation with the richly melodic Carioca repertoire-at the hands of Wilner and Co. 
Take singer Rose Max. She invigorates the excellent rearrangements in which she participates-unfortunately the credits do not include information about the arrangements or when Drew performs on piano. Those minor quibbles aside, Max's pipes are up to the vocals tasks. On "O Morro Nao Tem Vez" and "Incompatibilidade de Genios" she sings with swinging and matronly cojones. In "Oceano," "Começar de Novo," and "A Felicidade" she's sultry, sensual, romantic and seductive. Her vocalizations reveal tonal strength, humor, fierceness, self-assurance, and beauty. 
 

Bernstein's "Some Other Time" is just to die for. Wilner is simply a superb bass player who is quite adept with "the bowing of love" on this one. Although he knowledgeably uses the bow on other cuts, his performance here is very emotive. Sad yet hopeful. Nostalgic yet caressingly tender. The pianist, whether it is Mike Orta or Drew, might have overplayed his part here, albeit since it is just a duo, it could be taken as a movingly fortified foil to Wilner's playing. The rumbling tail end of the coda slays me! 
 

Kick-ass interpretations characterize this CD, requiring various listenings to take in everything everyone did and how they interpreted the material. 


 
Mysterious Beauty  
From a stimulating Porgy and Bess medley to interpretations of themes by Bizet and Gliere. Pianist Mike Renzi and drummer Grady Tate round out the trio. Guitarist and vocalist Ramiro Sosa, percussionist George Mazzeo, and tenor saxophonist Billy Ross make guest appearances. Wilner's arco perfection and Renzi's impeccable accompaniment on Glier's prelude from Vier Stucke constitute one highlight, his witty plucked solo on Parker's "Dexterity" another. 

Wilner is an astonishing bass player whether bowing, walking, interacting . . . or covering the instrument from top to bottom in his pizzicato solos. His purity of tone and breadth of technique may come from his classical background. They are matched by a time feeling achieved only by musicians with a bone-deep jazz sensibility." 

-Doug Ramsey 


 
Eddie Higgins and Don Wilner- Live at the Van Dyke Cafe


 
 
Raul Midon with the Don Wilner Trio- Upstairs at the Van Dyke Cafe


 
 
Stolen Moments- The Hard Bop Special- (Live) 
Upstairs at the Van Dyke Cafe


 
Annette Sanders- Everything I Love
Eddie Higgins- Picture in Black and White

LeNard Rutledge- Hello World