Showing posts with label Gary Burton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gary Burton. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2011

Review: Gary Burton New Quartet

Gary Burton and Julian Lage
Drawing by Geoffrey Winston. Copyright (c) 2011. All Rights Reserved.

Gary Burton New Quartet
(Ronnie Scott's Club, 5th July 2011. Review by Tony Heiberg)


Gary Burton's  CD from 2009, Quartet Live, featuring Pat Metheny, has durable appeal. I also admire the playing of Julian Lage. So I had eagerly looked forward to this concert, and was not disappointed.

In his opening remarks, Burton recalled his first appearance at Ronnie's and the nervousness he had felt when looking out in to the audience, and spotted Count Basie, Gerry Mulligan and Sarah Vaughan. He then introduced Mongo Santamaria's Afro Blue by mentioning that the composer had had a great fan in Marlon Brando, who frequently sat in on bongos - with limited success.

The quartet established its lush, enchanting, collective sound  from the outset of this number, with intricate ensemble passages and solos from Burton and Lage that were both melodious and virtuosic. The next number, Never The Same Way, by Burton's regular bassist Scott Colley was in a 7/4 model groove set up by guitarist Julian Lage playing chordal arpeggios in a style influenced by John McLaughlin. Jorge Roeder, who is depping for Colley on this tour, later played a bass solo with horn-like dexterity and melodic content with telepathic comping from drummer Antonio Sanchez and Lage.The band then played a delightfully swinging version of I Hear A Rhapsody with Burton playing variations of the melody and Lage using wide intervals and outside phrases. Antonio's drum solo was so melodious that one could plainly hear the tune while he improvised.

Burton mentioned the irony of 1940's and 50's radical Thelonuis Monk being "today's most played jazz composer" before introducing the neglected gem Light Blue, one of Monk's best tunes.

This tune also produced one telling incident. The band was on dazzling form and Julian Lage, whose solo began with a Django-like phrase and garnered an ecstatic response from the young music students at the bar, along with everyone else, was publicly chided by Burton.  The bandleader pointed out that Julian, described earlier by Burton as "today's hot guitarist" had been "dropping six bars from the form during your solo over the last three nights." Lage appeared nonplussed, and Burton apologised.

Burton and Lage's relationship is now that of two colleagues, but they have played together off and on for some ten years, since Julian was thirteen. Unsurprisingly therefore, given their respective ages, and Burton's deep and long experience as teacher and mentor, they can sometimes drift back involuntarily into that of  master and pupil.

The band closed the first set with Antonio Sanchez's Did You Get It? a boppy blues with altered changes that swung intensely. Sanchez also wrote Common Ground, the second set's opening number and the title track for their new CD. Burton's Was It So Long Ago? is a beautiful tune with Lage playing some flamenco type phrases and Vadim Neselovski's Late Night Sunrise took us in to a mystical landscape, particularly during bassist Jorge Roeder's tremolos.

Gary, again recalling the glory days, mentioned how Ronnie Scott got a lot of his gags from regular customer Spike Milligan "a frustrated trumpet player" and from Peter Sellers, ditto, on the drums.

Lage then had a solo spot that sounded like a modern classical guitar etude - state of the art chord voicings along with a steady tremolo - but which turned out instead to be an intro to My Funny Valentine. After the tune Gary pointed out that Richard Rodgers was a stickler for how he wanted his tunes played and "once rang up Ella Fitzgerald to shout at her". Turning to Lage, Burton drifted back into his persona of the wise but stern pedagogue: "so what he would have made of your intro I hesitate to say".

The concert ended with a mesmerising version of Pat Metheny's Elucidation with elegant melodic interplay between the four band members culminating in a standing ovation and an encore of  Bags' Groove,  Milt Jackson's most famous blues.

www.ronniescotts.co.uk

Monday, June 6, 2011

Review: Jay Azzolina



Jay Azzolina
(Pizza Express Dean Street, June 3rd 2011. Review by Frank Griffith)


BACKGROUND TO THIS REVIEW (Ed)

Superb New York guitarist Jay Azzolina blew into Soho for a two-night engagement, accompanied by the internationally recognised rhythm battery of Laurence Cottle on bass, and pianist/drummer, Gary Husband. The sets consisted of an equally balanced mixture of Azzolina originals, 1960s rock classics and jazz standards, such as Dave Brubeck’s In Your Own Sweet Way.

Azzolina is the consummate performer: while his chosen instrument is the guitar, his personal and unique voice would be equally distinctive on anything that he should have decided to hold and resonate with. His tone, his attack and melodic delivery are on the highest level. His language embraces the contemporary side of jazz but he manifestly respects and owns the entire, seventy-year history of the electric guitar.

Never falling victim to flashy virtuosity, he makes every note he plays count- each one is a rich and shiny pearl of sound enriching to the ear.

Highlights included twoo waltzes: the opener Vera Cocha, brisk and funky, and Her First Waltz (dedicated to his now 21 one year old daughter) which sported a slowish but lush melody, with a harmonic sequence to match. This fully brought out by Gary Husband’s piano accompaniment in the opening sections, after which he tiptoed across the stage with the lightness of a cat burglar to finish the tune off on drums. Does Gary Husband get a single fee for this, or the double one he deserves?

Jay’s takes (based loosely on John Scofield’s recent recordings) of The House Of The Rising Sun and Satisfaction provided some familiar sounding material with an updated and much more improvised edge to it. Particularly noteworthy on House was Cottle’s bass solo which was not short on technical finesse but also equally riveting in his clearly elocuted melodic fluidity. Fans of this world-class Welshman will always take delight in his sense of humour that permeates his distinctive soloing.

There was also a completely unscheduled guest appearance by a clarinet-playing member of the audience which included renditions of Summertime and Charlie Parker’s Scrapple for the Apple. The trio acquitted themselves to this with the highest degree of professionality and musicality- resulting in giving these two jazz chestnuts a renewed and refreshing sparkle.

Special plaudits go to the renowned guitarist/composer and longtime friend of Jay’s, Dr Richard Niles, who not only organised this engagement, supplied an amplifier but compered the evening. All in a day’s work to support his old mucker and classmate from Berklee School of Music in Boston.

Now that we have had a brief taster of this great artist, let us please have him back soon. He (and we) were only just getting warmed up.

Dr Richard Niles' interview with Jay Azzolina for LondonJazz