Robert Glasper’s album release party was a study in the dynamics of
contemporary jazz. Flexing the genre’s malleability as well as his
own, Glasper showed off his abilities as both trio leader and
experimental hip-hop group collaborator. As he often does on his new
album Double Booked, Glasper would either seize each ensemble’s
melodic reins or demurely diffuse his harmonies into the underlying
cadences, as led by drummer Chris Dave and bassists Vicente Archer
(acoustic) or Derrick Hodge (electric) depending on the outfit. In
fact, Glasper receded too regularly into the background while playing
in the trio but it’s a tendency whose success depends on taste. For
fans favoring the Experiment, it allowed Dave to take commanding solos
that inverted the possibilities of his small kit. For fans favoring
Glasper’s prominence, there were never enough moments of aleatory but
refined solos. Everyone, however, appreciated Glasper’s disarming
approach to both sets (one with each setup.) Not unlike le Poisson
Rouge’s own dressing down of classical music and jazz, it was a
reassuring approach to an ostensibly imperious art.