Record Review
HARVEY DIAMOND/JOHN LENTZ
how strange the road should be so easy
Diamond, piano; Lentz, vocals
Orchard of Pomegranates 006 (CD). 2025.
Ayelet Rose Gottlieb, prod.; Craig Welsch, eng.
PERFORMANCE 🔸🔸🔸🔸🔹
SONICS🔸🔸🔸🔸🔹
If there was ever a sleeper album, this is it.
This is John Lentz’s recording debut, at 76.
He has been involved with music his whole
life but has never quite had a professional
career until now. Harvey Diamond makes
his recording debut as a leader, at 82. He
was one of Lennie Tristano’s last students
and has been an underground figure on the
Boston jazz scene for decades.
You don’t hear singers like Lentz these
days. Hundreds of vocalists out there have
powerful pipes and undeniable chops.
Few get under your skin the way Lentz
does. “Detour Ahead” has always been an
ambivalent love song. Lentz’s dead-slow
version sounds like someone in a conver-
sation with himself, searching for under-
standing. His voice is gentle, contemplative,
and patient. He does not make every note,
and sometimes he seems to hesitate over a
phrase. But his voice is so disarming, hon-
est, and human that you trust its emotional
authenticity. Even when he sings simpler,
happier songs, he lingers over them, turns
them inward, and reveals unsuspected
nuances in their stories. Who knew that
“Ain’t Misbehavin’” was a poignant tale of
unrequited love?
As for Diamond, who is this guy? Why
isn’t he famous? Four of the 11 tracks
are piano solos, and each is stunning.
“Somewhere Over the Rainbow” reveals
Diamond’s gift for getting deep inside a
great song and elaborating and enlarging it
without ever abandoning its essence. “You
Don’t Know What Love Is” is another time-
less classic that Diamond makes his own.
He marks out the familiar theme in firm
chords and then begins to add digressions,
decorations, and variations all around that
melodic core. By the time he is done, it feels
like he has left nothing in that song unsaid.
This album has a quality that’s rarer than
perfection: irresistible charm.
—Thomas Conrad, Stereophile Magazine
Latest Track
Shows
Good Music Makes Good Neighbors (aka The Montague Music Fest)
— —
First Congregational Church of Montague, Off the Green, Montague Center, MA
An all-day music festival located in various homes and buildings all over historic Montague Center MA;
The John Lentz Trio w/ Wes Brown, bass & Bill Winslow, piano perform live in the Church at 3:15pm
Free outdoor concert in three acts: Steph Marshall, Pat & Tex LaMountain and The John Lentz Trio (with Wes Brown, bass & Bill Winslow, keys)
John Lentz Trio, with Genevieve Rose, bass and Bill Winslow, keys
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Luthier’s Co-Op & Backstage Bar, 108 Cottage Street, Easthampton, MA
Lots of fun; who knows what's gonna happen?