
I actually picked up Skylark mainly to give a listen to Hungarian-born guitarist Gábor Szabó, who in the CD liner notes is attributed with “all solos.” I think that I own Szabó’s album Mizrab on vinyl, but it is buried in the basement (and I don’t currently own a turntable), so he has not really been part of my aural landscape in recent years; still, I was able to recognize right away his distinctive tone—a bit “thin” and at times a bit wavering—in his single-string soloing. But the real surprise and the real treat of the album is not the playing of Szabó but of the “second” guitarist for the session, Gene Bertoncini: while he may not be given the nod by Taylor and Sebesky to stretch out in linear fashion like Szabó, his simpatico comping behind both Desmond and Szabó really lends the album its defining texture. I have to admit that on a first listen I did not attribute that rich and expressive background chording (and occasional chord soloing) to Bertoncini; but seeing his name in the liner notes, I was prompted to drop him an email and he wrote back to explain: “Actually, Gábor is only on a couple of things. . . . That’s me on the tune ‘Skylark,’ which turned out to have some nice interplay between Paul and myself.”
But, really, I should have known without being told; for while Bertoncini plays electric guitar on the album—not his signature sound of recent years, which is mostly nylon-strung acoustic—his contribution to Skylark has the “architectural” consistency that many listeners would identify as his truly defining musical signature: lines that move simultaneously both horizontally and vertically—both melodically and harmonically—thanks to his subtle and tasteful chord voicings in the left hand and his deft righthand finger-picking. Referring to Bertoncini’s playing in terms of architecture—he received his degree in Architecture from the University of Notre Dame back in the late ’50s—might seem a bit too obvious, but it really does seem like an apt metaphor to describe not only his spatial conception of musical arrangement but likewise his approach to the guitar as what Hector Berlioz referred to as “a little orchestra.” I have several of his albums on my iPod—including a solo outing titled Body and Soul and a set of duo arrangements, Two In Time, with bass player Michael Moore. In each case, his exquisite playing on his nylon-strung Buscarino ensures that distinctive Gene Bertoncini sound.
Coincidentally, right around the same time that I picked up Skylark, I found in my office mailbox Compass Rose, a newly-minted CD by my friend and colleague Peter Janson,

Having given a nod to Buscarino, the maker of Gene Bertoncini’s guitar, I would be remiss in not acknowledging that on Compass Rose Peter Janson plays guitars made by Bill Tippin of Marblehead, Mass. and by Ted Thompson of Vernon, British Columbia.