Dec 6 2013
Bill Frisell Big Sur Quintet at the Clifton Center (Louisville, KY; 12/04/2013)
I got to see Bill Frisell perform the other night. He was in town with his Big Sur Quintet, putting on a show at Louisville’s Clifton Center, a nice multi-purpose venue in the Clifton neighborhood. The concert was held in a theater setting… stage, auditorium seating, balcony, big curtains, and the kind of variable lighting that kind of joint has available to it.
It’s the second time I’ve seen Frisell there. The first was a solo show, and the intimate setting worked perfectly for that kind of set-up. It also worked great with Frisell’s new line-up. The Big Sur Quintet, so named after the 2013 recording Big Sur recorded by the same crew, named after the California coastal region where Frisell did a residency and became inspired to write the compositions for the recording.
It was a packed crowd. Very few empty seats. Not a many decent jazz acts come through Kentucky, and I’m often embarrassed by the number of empty seats for those rare shows that do come through town, but tonight was a very nice turnout. This is, no doubt, in part due to Frisell’s crossover appeal. He plays a kind of music that transcends genre, perhaps, even, is its own genre (Frisellian is a word I’ve used to describe music similar to his own. Americana Jazz is the phrase most often associated with his music. My dear friend Zachariah once referred to (early, ECM-days) Frisell as ‘voodoo jazz,” which I thought apropos at the time). Another reason for the big crowd might be the fact that Frisell does stop often in Louisville, and when an artist makes a city a frequent tour stop, that artist tends to develop a big following. Of course, the biggest and best reason that Frisell draws crowds… his unique style of music is a joy to hear.
Your show personnel: Bill Frisell (guitar), Jenny Scheinman (violin), Eyvind Kang (viola), Hank Roberts (cello), and Rudy Royston (drums).
The Quintet performed several tracks from the recent Big Sur release.
The musicians were seated in a semi-circle at the front of the stage. Scheinman, then Kang, then Roberts, then Frisell, who directly faced the audience, and the Royston and his drum set on the other side, completing the semi-circle.
“Going to California” opened the show. It began as a skittering of strings, scratching at the surface of the ears. It then grew into the melodic force of nature that’s represented on the album… bold thick brush strokes by Kang and Scheinman, bright notes from Frisell matching up well with the crackle of Royston’s drums. Cellist Hank Roberts often carried the weight on this tune in providing some deeper resonance to give the melody a sense of permanence and root.
“The Music of Glen Deven Ranch” was given enhanced rhythmic qualities as compared to the studio version. That was an element that manifested throughout the show. “A Beautiful View” had an expansive feel, the melody sounding BIG, drums buffeting it further skyward. Royston was exceptional on drums. He has such an expressive style, but never seems to step over anybody’s lines or toes. His style is different than that of Roy Haynes, but the way their approaches mesh with their collaborators is very similar. On a few tracks, Royston spurred the quintet on to faster speeds, taking tunes from a languorous pace to something far swifter… gone, just like a train.
“The Big One” had the same rock ‘n roll disposition live as it does in studio, though Royston’s presence on drums is that much more intense hearing his drums live. It’s always nice to hear Frisell accentuate his guitar’s twang, something that is only alluded to on many studio performances.
“Song for Lana Weeks” was one of those songs that an ensemble can just hop onto the melody and take off into flight. Roberts’ cello was at the steering wheel of this particular song, and the quintet seemed to feed off his energy. The crowd did, too, and it was nice to hear them repeatedly express their appreciation.
Just a great show. I highly recommend checking them out if they come through (or near) your town. Here’s the Tour page on Frisell’s site.
And here’s A LINK to my review of Frisell’s 2013 release Big Sur.
Aug 29 2016
A 2016 Chicago Jazz Festival preview: James Sanders Proyecto Libre
This Is Jazz Today: A 2016 Chicago Jazz Festival preview, in sound & vision.
James Sanders Proyecto Libre
Some of the previews you’ll read around the internet about this group will immediately highlight how James Sanders, as a jazz violinist, fits into the pantheon of predecessors on that instrument. A few might mention some current names of the scene, too. That’s all well and good, nothing wrong with that, but the lifeblood of this music, and its interest to you as a festival goer, is how Sanders’ ensemble meshes a Latin Jazz sound and a classic free jazz form of expression. I hear this music and the first thing that comes to mind is how saxophonist Gato Barbieri launched into a similar synthesis of sound on his 1967 ESP’ Disc recording In Search of the Mystery. This is where the inviting cadence and percussion of Latin Jazz attains a magical synchronicity with musicians who seem perpetually in conflict with the concept of form and structure… and yet it grooves and it flows and it’s wild and untamed and it’ll either freeze you in your seat in astonishment or it’ll compel you jump up from your seat and shout… maybe both, probably.
The show is happening at 12 noon on Friday, September 2nd in the Von Freeman Pavilion.
Listed as performing with Sanders are bassists Harrison Bankhead and Joshua Abrams, drummer Avreeayl Ra and percussionist Jean-Christophe Leroy. You can’t go wrong with any of those musicians on stage. Note: A traumatic event has Avreeayl Ra in recovery and may not be performing at the festival. If you’d like to donate to his cause, here’s a link to a Gofundme page.
Here’s a couple live tracks from a 2015 performance at Lewis Achenbach’s Jazz Occurrence…
Read more about this band and this upcoming show on the Chicago Jazz Festival site.
And here’s a cool short video of what it all looks like…
*****
The 38th annual Chicago Jazz Festival is taking place in (and around) Chicago’s Millennium Park, Wednesday August 31st – Sunday September 4th.
Read more about why you should be a part of the audience by visiting the official Chicago Jazz Festival site
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By davesumner • Live Jazz • 0 • Tags: Chicago Jazz Festival