Geoff sits down with American Grammy-winning pianist, composer, arranger and former Jazz Messenger Geoffrey Keezer who is in London for a series of concerts.
He begins by describing playing jazz clubs as a teenager, playing piano for Art Blakey at age 18 and touring alongside Benny Golson and Ray Brown while still in his 20s.He shares how he came up through Aebersold play-alongs, the early Real Book, and constant record collecting, sharpening his language through relentless transcription.
Transcribing sits at the centre of his method, starting with advice he received as a teenager: “Transcribe, transcribe, transcribe”, beginning with Thelonious Monk. He describes writing on the grand staff so the left hand is not ignored, even when the right hand dominates, because the harmony and rhythm in the accompaniment explain the language. The value is not completing twelve choruses for bragging rights; it is extracting usable information: how a master navigates a ii–V–I, how a line breathes, and how the time sits. Then comes the real practice: transpose ideas into all keys, reshape them, and place them into your own lines so they do not sound like isolated licks. That approach builds jazz vocabulary while protecting originality.
The conversation also digs into repertoire choices for recordings and gigs, including the balance between jazz standards and new compositions. His duet work with jazz singer Gillian Margot leans on standards because audiences connect instantly, and because the songwriting is often extraordinary, harmonically and lyrically. He also makes a strong case for covering pop songs when the connection is genuine, pointing to projects that include artists like Peter Gabriel and Alanis Morissette. A useful practice tip emerges here: lyrics matter even for instrumentalists. Knowing what a song is about changes tempo, articulation, and emotional intent, and it can stop you from playing a tragic lyric like a cheerful jam!
Geoffrey’s stories are just as rich: Ray Brown stopping a tune to demand “pocket”, Herbie Hancock giving him a private harmony lesson on stage at the Blue Note, and Wayne Shorter walking over to the piano and saying “zero gravity”.
He also treats us to a stunning improvisation of the 1950s Benny Golson/Jon Hendricks standard ‘Along Came Betty’ (alongside the Quartet app).
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Presenter: Geoff Gascoyne
Series Producer: Paul Sissons
Production Manager: Martin Sissons
The Quartet Jazz Standards Podcast is a UK Music Apps production.