One of my friends commented that he was surprised to see me at Vienne this year as the line up for the head line acts was amongst the least original for a long while. A number of artists seemed to make rapid returns with only pianist Chucho Valdes being of interest amongst those which must now be considered staples. There were a number of headline acts which were disappointing such as singer Cyrile Aimee and The Golden Gate Quartet although some like Melody Gardot were better than expected. Once again, the music from the fringes of jazz proved to be the surprise package with an African night including the exceptional Salif Keita and Sting fronting a sextet that left a surprising amount of room open for improvisation by a tight outfit featuring Dominic Miller and David Sanctious as well as a gifted jazz violinist.
The appearance of the odd-Brit barely registered. I missed Soweto Kinch with "Pretty " Purdy but John Taylor's appearance within a young, French soprano led quartet playing themes from "Nouvelle vague" cinema was the biggest let-down with the music being dull enough to nearly send me to sleep in the heat. Strangely, I didn't think that Taylor really stood out amongst the "piano competition" and felt a little bit disappointed that a musician I consider one of our finest jazz exports was over-shadowed. It was a strange set and given that the record has won a poll as best French jazz record of 2014 , the technical brilliance of the music was insufficient to make it a memorable experience. A lot of the French jazz acts were vastly superior to a lot of the British stuff Jazz Line Up has been presenting and Go-Go Penguin's appearance at the after hours clubs was demonstrative to me of little boys trying to play adult's music. It was almost embarrassing listening their minimalist approach that, whilst under-pinned by some good drumming, never actually went anywhere. I suppose the Penguins are a Manchester equivalent of Neil Cowley. Not impressed despite the glowing reference of a fellow Brit.
Hearing groups like Go-Go penguin can make you despair of the current state of jazz however there were some brilliant performances, especially on the free-entry Scene de Cybele where I think both the national and Lyon scenes appeared to be extremely vibrant and original. This varied from sax / guitar duos, big bands, a wonderful all-girl vocal trio called "The Glossy Girls" backed by a Charlie Haden-esque bassist (sophisticated and witty arrangements including elements of fugue and even a cover of "I kissed a girl"), a rap /sax / trombone act that blow everything else off the stage and Guilliuame Naturel's brilliant Latin quartet which featured the leader's exceptional flute before a barn-storming finish on tenor. Naturel has been a feature of the French scene for ages and is evidence of the more orthodox elements of jazz are alive and well. No need to re-invent the wheel as per the Penguins.
There were some terrific concerts. Laurent Cugny's "Gil Evans Workshop" resurrected some neglected scores from the maestro as well as original material and was simply fantastic. Amazing to hear charts like "Day of the Barracudas" performed live. I would have to say that George Benson's tribute to Nat King Cole with an orchestra was professional and extremely enjoyable. The concert then went up a gear when he performed originals like "Give me the night." I've been dismissive of benson in the past but this was a great concert. The best gig was a combination of The Cookers (the brilliant Billy Mitchell, David Wiess, Eddie Henderson, George Cables, Billy Hart, Donald Harrison and the exceptional Cecil McBee) that produced a scorching set including an aggressive version of Hubbard's "The Core" which later cropped up again in the set list of the Jazz Messenger's Legacy Band that had the likes of Craig Handy, Kevin Eubanks and the under-appreciated trumpet hero Brian Lynch , all driven along superbly by the hardly shy and retiring Ralph Peterson ! All the favourites such as "Along came Betty" , "moanin;" and "Blues March" were performed - appropriate as Benny Golson was the featured special guess. As good as these two groups were, they were then over-shadowed by a Quartet led by Chico Freeman that also had Billy Hart on drums. This was one of the best jazz gigs I've heard, Freeman being imperious and backed by a wonderful band. To my ears, this set demonstrated that jazz can still be within the tradition and relevant. Freeman is an amazing musician playing fast and hard one moment, digging deep in to the blues the next and then sounding akin to Ben Webster. This was REAL jazz and made the Penguins look like a comedy act in comparison.
Good to also see the Stanford University big band led by Fred Berry and featuring Jon Faddis dust off some amazing Thad Jones scores which were still sounding resolutely modern fifty years after they were written. Rhoda Scott made a number of appearances but her organ jam session with the organist from Snarky Puppy and a 15 y.o. "New Talent" winner from the Apollo Theatre drew a maximum crowd and much enthusiasm. There were three generations of organists and the music swung like Count Basie on steroids.
The appearance of the odd-Brit barely registered. I missed Soweto Kinch with "Pretty " Purdy but John Taylor's appearance within a young, French soprano led quartet playing themes from "Nouvelle vague" cinema was the biggest let-down with the music being dull enough to nearly send me to sleep in the heat. Strangely, I didn't think that Taylor really stood out amongst the "piano competition" and felt a little bit disappointed that a musician I consider one of our finest jazz exports was over-shadowed. It was a strange set and given that the record has won a poll as best French jazz record of 2014 , the technical brilliance of the music was insufficient to make it a memorable experience. A lot of the French jazz acts were vastly superior to a lot of the British stuff Jazz Line Up has been presenting and Go-Go Penguin's appearance at the after hours clubs was demonstrative to me of little boys trying to play adult's music. It was almost embarrassing listening their minimalist approach that, whilst under-pinned by some good drumming, never actually went anywhere. I suppose the Penguins are a Manchester equivalent of Neil Cowley. Not impressed despite the glowing reference of a fellow Brit.
Hearing groups like Go-Go penguin can make you despair of the current state of jazz however there were some brilliant performances, especially on the free-entry Scene de Cybele where I think both the national and Lyon scenes appeared to be extremely vibrant and original. This varied from sax / guitar duos, big bands, a wonderful all-girl vocal trio called "The Glossy Girls" backed by a Charlie Haden-esque bassist (sophisticated and witty arrangements including elements of fugue and even a cover of "I kissed a girl"), a rap /sax / trombone act that blow everything else off the stage and Guilliuame Naturel's brilliant Latin quartet which featured the leader's exceptional flute before a barn-storming finish on tenor. Naturel has been a feature of the French scene for ages and is evidence of the more orthodox elements of jazz are alive and well. No need to re-invent the wheel as per the Penguins.
There were some terrific concerts. Laurent Cugny's "Gil Evans Workshop" resurrected some neglected scores from the maestro as well as original material and was simply fantastic. Amazing to hear charts like "Day of the Barracudas" performed live. I would have to say that George Benson's tribute to Nat King Cole with an orchestra was professional and extremely enjoyable. The concert then went up a gear when he performed originals like "Give me the night." I've been dismissive of benson in the past but this was a great concert. The best gig was a combination of The Cookers (the brilliant Billy Mitchell, David Wiess, Eddie Henderson, George Cables, Billy Hart, Donald Harrison and the exceptional Cecil McBee) that produced a scorching set including an aggressive version of Hubbard's "The Core" which later cropped up again in the set list of the Jazz Messenger's Legacy Band that had the likes of Craig Handy, Kevin Eubanks and the under-appreciated trumpet hero Brian Lynch , all driven along superbly by the hardly shy and retiring Ralph Peterson ! All the favourites such as "Along came Betty" , "moanin;" and "Blues March" were performed - appropriate as Benny Golson was the featured special guess. As good as these two groups were, they were then over-shadowed by a Quartet led by Chico Freeman that also had Billy Hart on drums. This was one of the best jazz gigs I've heard, Freeman being imperious and backed by a wonderful band. To my ears, this set demonstrated that jazz can still be within the tradition and relevant. Freeman is an amazing musician playing fast and hard one moment, digging deep in to the blues the next and then sounding akin to Ben Webster. This was REAL jazz and made the Penguins look like a comedy act in comparison.
Good to also see the Stanford University big band led by Fred Berry and featuring Jon Faddis dust off some amazing Thad Jones scores which were still sounding resolutely modern fifty years after they were written. Rhoda Scott made a number of appearances but her organ jam session with the organist from Snarky Puppy and a 15 y.o. "New Talent" winner from the Apollo Theatre drew a maximum crowd and much enthusiasm. There were three generations of organists and the music swung like Count Basie on steroids.
Comment