Pianist Jordan Williams makes a confident and deeply musical first statement with Playing by Ear, his debut album as a bandleader and his first release for the storied Milan-based Red Records label. The project announces a new voice grounded in jazz tradition yet unmistakably contemporary, balancing intuition and form with a quiet authority that belies Williams’ early stage in his recording career. Anchored by a rare and formidable ensemble—Jeff “Tain” Watts on drums, Nat Reeves on bass, and Wallace Roney Jr. on trumpet—the album captures the essence of listening as both discipline and instinct.
A native of Philadelphia, Williams comes from a lineage steeped in jazz history. He began picking out standards by ear at the age of six, long before he had the language to name chords or analyze harmony. Those formative experiences shaped not only his technique but his philosophy: music as something felt first, understood later. That sensibility runs throughout Playing by Ear, where Williams blends the exploratory lyricism associated with Herbie Hancock and the grounded swing of Mulgrew Miller, filtering those influences through a modern lens that values space, narrative, and touch over flash.
Across eight thoughtfully curated tracks, Williams leads with patience and clarity, allowing the music to unfold organically. The album opens with Horace Silver’s “Peace,” rendered with reverence and restraint. Each phrase is given room to breathe, setting a contemplative tone and establishing Williams’ commitment to nuance. His comping behind Wallace Roney Jr.’s trumpet feels conversational rather than reactive, guided by empathy and an intuitive sense of balance.
That balance shifts on “Ms. Baja,” the Kenny Garrett composition where the quartet leans into a more kinetic energy. Jeff “Tain” Watts injects sharp rhythmic accents and asymmetrical bursts that challenge the pulse, while Williams’ left hand provides architectural grounding. The result is a dynamic tension that feels alive and unforced, driven by collective listening rather than individual display.
A standout moment arrives with “Tayamisha,” composed by Buster Williams, where Jordan Williams nods to the stride piano lineage of Fats Waller and James P. Johnson. Those early jazz roots surface in his right-hand flourishes, connecting past to present with warmth and intention. The piece also carries deep personal meaning. Williams dedicates “Tayamisha” to his late grandparents, Ralph and Dorris Williams, who were avid fans of records featuring Buster Williams and owned a chicken shop called Wings n Things in Camden, New Jersey—Buster Williams’ hometown—in the 1960s. The dedication adds another layer of memory and lineage to a performance already rich with history.
Bassist Nat Reeves contributes two original compositions, “Waltz for Ellis” and “Blue Ridge,” which further ground the album in unhurried elegance. Reeves’ lines function as both anchor and invitation, offering steady support while encouraging melodic exploration. His presence brings a calm authority shaped by years of experience, including his work with Jackie McLean’s later ensembles.
The chemistry among the four musicians is quietly electric. Reeves provides ballast and steadiness, Watts introduces sparks of disruption that force deeper listening, and Roney Jr. navigates legacy and curiosity with a tone that is both searching and assured. Williams sits at the center, not as a dominating force, but as a facilitator—someone who understands when to lead, when to respond, and when to let silence speak.
Playing by Ear arrives as both a culmination and a beginning for Williams. A recent graduate of The George Washington University, he has already shared stages with artists such as Branford Marsalis, Jazzmeia Horn, Camille Thurman, and Curtis Lundy. That apprenticeship is evident throughout the album, not in imitation, but in the maturity of his choices and the confidence of his musical voice. His interpretations find grace in tension and swing in stillness, revealing an artist more concerned with meaning than momentum.
For Williams, the album’s title reflects a broader philosophy. Playing by ear, he explains, is how he learned not only to listen to music, but to life itself—understanding that silence, memory, and even mistakes shape what comes next. With this debut, Jordan Williams demonstrates that careful listening, when paired with courage and curiosity, can yield music that feels timeless and immediate all at once.