Sunday, March 16, 2025

YOU DON’T HAVE TO EXPERIENCE AN ENTIRE WILLIAM HILL III CONCERT TO KNOW HE’S THE REAL DEAL

Pianist William Hill III

I owe the young jazz pianist William Hill III a heartfelt apology for only staying for half his trio set Friday evening at the Friday Night Live concert series at the Christ Church Cranbrook. Hill’s trio includes drummer Samuel Melkonian and bassist Langston Kitchen. Hill is a Detroit School of the Arts graduate who now studies at the Manhattan School of Music and performs regularly around New York. I left midway through the set because my partner’s seasonal allergies flared up, causing her eyes to swell. Fortunately, the four compositions I heard convinced me that after hearing him for the first time as part of the Detroit Jazz Preservation concert series, my initial impression of him as a force to be taken seriously was accurate. His trio opened Friday night with his original “Keep It Moving,” showing he’s a gifted composer, and the trio is as polished as any professional trio currently working. They followed the opener with a hip take of Thelonious Monk’s classic “’ Round Midnight.” Pianistically, he runs lines with the sophistication and aplomb of a veteran sharpshooter like Cyrus Chestnut, and Hill possesses the piss-and-vinegar swagger of the late Jaki Byard, who could touch on the history of African American music in a single solo. Hill denies that Chestnut and Byard weren’t immediate influences. He attributes that to Wynton Kelly and Oscar Peterson. After the trio’s modernized rendering of the Monk classic, Hill cast the spotlight on bassist Langston Kitchen on the goose-bump-inducing “Alone Together.” Kitchen has a mean left hook and his soloing on the tune was awe-inspired. Melkonian drumming could’ve made the devil blush. Hill didn’t announce how long his trio had been together. The trio is professional from top to bottom. I appreciated that William required his bandmates to wear suits. He understands the significance of first impressions. So many of his peers don’t care how they look on stage, but not Hill. He treated the bandstand as if it were sacred ground. I hated that I couldn’t stay for the entire concert, but what I experienced was top-notch enough to convince me the sky is the limit regarding Hill’s future.

 

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