Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

An iconic jazz piano now rests in CT

- By Jordan Fenster

In 1963, pianist Thelonius Monk released an album of live music called “Live at the Village Gate.” A year earlier, Nina Simone released a similarly titled album.

The piano both Monk and Simone played on those albums, and many others, now sits dormant at a Westport restaurant.

The pianists who play it are thrilled about the history of it,” said Greg Wall. “I feel a mystical sense. I definitely feel that.”

It’s not surprising that Wall feels a spiritual connection to the instrument. He is, after all, a musician and the rabbi at Westport’s Beit Chaverim Synagogue, which he said may be “the only modern orthodox synagongue in the world where the rabbi is a profession­al jazz musician.”

He’s also the president and artistic director of the Jazz Society of Fairfield County, known as JazzFC, an organizati­on that owes its existence to the iconic piano that now rests, waiting for the pandemic to end, at the Pearl restaurant in Westport.

‘The rabbi thing’

Wall, whose email identifies him as “Greg ‘the Jazz Rabbi’ Wall,” was a profession­al jazz saxophonis­t first.

He has played at some of the best-known jazz clubs in New York, including the Blue Note, the Village Vanguard and Lincoln Center.

He was touring extensivel­y in Europe when he started getting interested in religion.

“The rabbi thing didn’t happen until, I wouldn’t call it a midlife crisis,” he said. “I was doing a lot of touring in the ’90s and the 2000s. I spent a lot of time on trains. A lot of these musicians get high on the train. I decided I’d study medival Jewish texts.”

He ended up rabbi at the 6th Street Community Synagogue in New York City’s East Village, but he didn’t let go of the music.

“I turned the synagogue into the Center for Jewish Arts and Literacy,” he said, and was performing regularly.

But the suburbs beckoned (“My family hated the East Village,” he said) and Wall took up the post as rabbi at Beit Chaverim in Westport.

Connecticu­t gigs

Soon after arriving in Connecticu­t, Wall began playing regular jazz shows at the now-closed 323 restaurant on Westport’s Main Street.

“It basically came out of my frustratio­n at being distant from Manhattan,” he said. “I wanted to have something in Westport.”

At some point, another local synagogue, Temple Israel, was replacing its piano and offered the older instrument to Beit Chaverim. Wall said the synagogue didn’t have the space at the time, but asked if he could use it at 323.

It wasn’t up to the task. It was a fine piano for beginners, but those 323 jazz shows were drawing Grammy-winning musicians, Wall said, and the instrument couldn’t handle it.

“This piano could not stand up for profession­al use,” he said. “It was always going out of tune.”

So he started casting about for a better instrument.

A piano with provenance

Wall’s piano tuner told him that a client in New Canaan had a piano for sale. It was, he learned, the piano used at the Village Gate, a club in New York’s Greenwich Village that has now taken mythical qualities.

The piano had been played by, among many others, Monk and Simone, as well as Mose Allison, Count Basie, Bill Evans, Erroll Garner, Ahmad Jamal, Earl Hines, Milt Jackson, McCoy Tyner and many, many others.

When the Village Gate closed in 1988, the piano was bought by avant garde pianist Misha Mengelberg. It was sold, and sold again, and was up for sale in 2016 when Wall was looking for an instrument that could take the beating his pianists would give it.

Wall called it “a very famous piano, a gorgeous heirloom instrument.”

The problem became, who would buy it? The restaurant at which the concerts were held was not the appropriat­e option, nor was the congregati­on Wall leads.

And so Jazz FC was born.

“JazzFC started in 2016 because the fans of 323 pitched in to buy a piano,” he said. “We needed to know who was going to own the piano, so we started a nonprofit. In a couple weeks we raised the money to buy the piano.” The piano itself, a 1937 Steinway model M, was not in great condition when it was bought.

“They do have a lifespan and that one had met or exceeded its recommende­d lifespan,” said Stamford’s Paul Haller, who restored the piano. Though he said the instrument needed a lot of work, it is now as good as it was when Monk played it. “When you start with good bones you can get it back to good bones.”

When asked how he felt working on such an esteemed instrument, Haller said “It’s a little scary. Not scary, but you better know what you’re doing.”

‘Just the beginning’

Though Wall’s organizati­on began with the piano, it didn’t end there. JazzFC is now focused on advocacy and education.

“Now it’s a very small part of what we do,” Wall said of the regular performanc­es, which had continued at the Pearl (the piano’s current home) after 323 closed down.

In fact, the organizati­on had planned to give out its first-ever scholarshi­p this year. But then the pandemic hit.

“I’m heartbroke­n about this,” Wall said. “We wanted to give our first scholarshi­p this spring and all the schools were closed.”

And that, perhaps, has been the toughest blow to bear, for Wall. Not only has the scholarshi­p been put on hold, but so has the regular concerts. The piano sits quiet. There is an extended rest in the music while Wall and his fellow musicians wait for the pandemic to end.

“I have not played in front of an audience since March 12,” he said.

 ?? Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images ?? American soul singer Carla Thomas performs at the Village Gate in New York City, March 28, 1969.
Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images American soul singer Carla Thomas performs at the Village Gate in New York City, March 28, 1969.

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