Consider Valery Ponomarev, the Russian émigré trumpeter who immediately
preceded Wynton Marsalis in the Jazz Messengers. Abandoning the land of
giant steppes for the Harvard of hard bop should have made Ponomarev something
of a celebrity . . .. [On Trip To Moscow] Ponomarev is writing relaxed lines
with inviting twists that are straight out of the Blakey/Silver axis. He
is also blowing with a wide, cozy sound and ideas that . . . never outstrip
his technique.
The Boston Phoenix
. . . a major new soloist . . . from the Soviet Union. Listening to Valery
Ponomarev on a blindfold-test basis, you could not possibly distinguish
him from one of the more inspired and authentic of America's great black
trumpeters in the driving, hard-bop jazz genre that is his chosen idiom.
Leonard Feather, Los Angeles Times
. . . he's the most biting trumpet player Art Blakey has had since Lee
Morgan.
Tim Price, Reading, PA News
But the most provocative soloist in the group is Valery Ponomarev, a Russian
trumpeter who combines bristling attack with dazzling execution and a very
neat, compact, controlled development of his solos.
John S. Wilson, The New York Times
The star of the show is the amazing Ponomarev, With a gritty yet clean
sound a neo-bop style, the trumpeter suggests the approach of his idol,
the immortal Clifford Brown.
Chuck Berg, Lawrence Journal-World
Ponomarev is a force to be respected . . . his musicianship, long evident
as a trumpeter, extends to composition and arranging as well.
Stuart Troup, Newsday
On the ballad I Remember Clifford, Ponomarev adds both guts and a sense
of grandeur to the classic melody, stretching out long languid lines, then
spewing tongue-twisting notes and shaping them into graceful phrases.
Stephen Israel, The Times Herald Record
. . . an outstanding young trumpeter . . . who has mastered a classically
straight-ahead, Clifford Brown-inspired style distinguished as much by the
pin-point accuracy and logic of his ideas as by its unwavering beat.
Thomas Albright, San Francisco Chronicle
And Valery moves all over the music with a multitude of cadenzas each more
brilliant.
Nighthawk, The Gazette, Montreal
Ponomarev plays powerfully, with a staccato brilliance and burnished tone
modeled upon his trumpet heroes-Clifford Brown, Lee Morgan, and Fats Navarro.
Hollie I. West, The Washington Post
Russia's contribution to the jazz world is an unassuming chap named Valery
Ponomarev who blows trumpet like a man possessed and who can write with
the best of them.
Maria Klemen, Aquarian
Ponomarev is a fine, bright-toned trumpeter of considerable ability whose
misfortune was to be succeeded in Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers by the younger
son of Ellis Marsalis. As a result, Valery's subsequent activities have
attracted less attention than they might have deserved. A symptom of this
is that it has taken so long for his band, Universal Language, to make this,
its recording debut [on 'Means Of Identification']. Ponomarev's bristling
originals have a jaunty martial kick . . . ["Means Of Identification" is]
an exhilarating hard-bop outing.
George Kanzler, The Newark Star-Ledger
Ponomarev is now a solid hard bopper and he more that holds his own in
the stalwart company of Henderson, Barron and the rhythm section. His tone
is crisp, clean and has a welcome coating of mellow smoothness on slow numbers.
His inventive phrases and bright, melodic attack mark him out as an original
trumpet stylist . . . Ponomarev's glowing choruses on Time make this the
jewel in the album's crown, although the entire CD is full of bristling,
biting mainstream jazz.
Derek Ansell, Jazz Times
. . .The first great jazz trumpeter to emerge from Soviet Union is an exciting
hard bop player with a wide range and a powerful sound, Valery Ponomarev
(who is currently playing at the peak of his powers) has led Universal Language
and recorded regularly for Reservoir. But it is surprising that he is not
getting greater exposure and winning jazz polls, for there are few hard
bop stylists on his level today.
Scott Yanow, Trumpet Kings
With Duke Ellington in Moscow