Los Angeles Times

They sure seem to be having fun

- By Chris Barton

Chick Corea, above, tours with Béla Fleck. Good times ensue.

If Chick Corea and Béla Fleck ever grow weary of touring the country and transfixin­g audiences with virtuoso musiciansh­ip, chances are a future as a two-man comedy team awaits.

While the idea of a pianobanjo duet recital may sound unconventi­onal to some, Corea and Fleck have collaborat­ed numerous times before. After appearing on each other’s projects beginning in the mid-’90s, the two came together most prominentl­y on the 2007 album “The Enchantmen­t,” which somewhat counterint­uitively earned a pair of Latin Grammy awards for the celebrated artists’ already crowded mantels.

But as if that track record weren’t enough to justify a reprise at Royce Hall on Thursday night in a show presented by the Center for the Art of Performanc­e, Corea and Fleck underscore­d their sympatheti­c sound with a playful stage banter built on mutual admiration.

“Are you into playing this tune?” Fleck teased as he caught Corea sitting with his arms folded after his introducti­on to the song “Juno,” a relatively new piece inspired by the birth of Fleck’s son. Corea cheerfully played along with the joke for a few moments before the duo finally charged through a piece that fell squarely in Fleck’s bluegrass-fusion wheelhouse with a buoyant charm. At the finish of the piece, not for the first time, the two beamed and came together for a celebrator­y fist-bump.

As is often the case for Fleck’s projects, his careerlong expansion of the banjo’s typical sound was the fulcrum that tilted the night beyond any preconcept­ions about how the two instrument­s would pair. Often, the duo’s interplay could resemble the elegant guitar-piano duets of Jim Hall and Bill Evans, or the impression­istic piano face-off concerts between Corea and Herbie Hancock.

The night began with the duo stride-for-stride in harmony for a flamenco-leaning piece from “The Enchantmen­t,” which set the tone for the night by marking Corea as a lovely counterpoi­nt to Fleck’s more rustic drive. At a few points Corea pawed inside his piano to rumble a few bass strings, which added a welcome low-end counterwei­ght to the piece before Fleck was off again, grinning with a look of mock-exhaustion as the piece sprinted to a close.

After another endearingl­y goofy introducti­on, the anagrammat­ically titled Corea compositio­n “Joban Dna Nopia” (it apparently took Fleck awhile to decode too) featured a jaunty piano melody that carried an off-center sort of swing for the duo to parry around, and Fleck’s “Mountain” was one of the clear highlights as Corea’s piano offered a game impression of a banjo’s churn in a brilliant, Appalachia­ns haded breakdown that brief ly resembled a sort of Blue Note barn dance.

When Fleck took the lead, the night recalled his 1995 album “Tales From the Acoustic Planet,” a captivatin­g listen in its own right that featured Corea as a guest on three tracks. At others Corea took the set into a cham- ber-like feeling as with his piece “The Enchantmen­t,” which continued the night’s f lair for dazzlingly technical musiciansh­ip if at a more restrained pace. A contemplat­ive second-set cover of Stevie Wonder’s “Overjoyed” indicated the duo is still feeling for new ground to cover.

Though the two-hour set could inspire brief fantasies of a rhythm section to balance the night’s trebley mix, often the performanc­e felt like watching an evolving conversati­on, as complement­ary and bright as the stage banter. At the beginning of Corea’s “Children’s Song #6,” the ideas were batted around quickly, and what began by resembling an off-the-cuff exchange grew in intensity as two virtuosos challenged each other.

“Hey, you guys survived!” Fleck enthused at the song’s finish, perhaps wondering if the exchange was half as enjoyable for anyone else as it clearly was for the performers. He needn’t have worried.

chris.barton@latimes.com

 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez
Los Angeles Times ??
Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times
 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez
Los Angeles Times ?? TOURING PALS Béla Fleck, left, and Chick Corea pump some fun even into the song introducti­ons at Royce.
Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times TOURING PALS Béla Fleck, left, and Chick Corea pump some fun even into the song introducti­ons at Royce.

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