Showing posts with label jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jazz. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 July 2014

Mostly Jazz Festival at Moseley Park July 2014

Lucky to be able to go to this, not everyone an afford these festivals.  Practically on the doorstep, or at least two short bus trips from home, and such an enjoyable time with the sun coming out for a while and lights beside the lake and the trees all around.
Lots of superb bands who together would cost rather more than the £40 day ticket although I know that's a lot for some people.
Ginger Baker and Jazz Confusion a real highlight, driving percussion and saxophone colour and bass to complete. 
"I need a p¥€s. I'll be back.". Exit left and back in a few minutes. 

Courtney Pine, a cut or several or above average players, the apparent effortlessness inr producing astounding solos around well-known tunes such as the classic Take Five.

Such an enjoyable event, wonderful music, beautiful location and relaxed atmosphere.






Sunday, 6 February 2011

When Jazz gets too loud!

"Uri Caine's Gustav Mahler - Primal Light is a modern masterpiece," went the blurb from jazzloft.com on the flyer for the concert "Uri Caine meets Mahler", at the Town Hall, Brum, 5th Feb.
Indeed, the first half - including this reworking of themes from Mahler's 5th Symphony - was intriguing, impressive, energetic. Plenty of enjoyable Jewish-folk-tune flourishes, and not too many bursts of 'jazz noise' and odd sound-effects from the turntablist accompanying the band (bass, trumpet/clarinet, drums (and then some), violinist, pianist (Uri Caine himself)).
The second half: well, I wish I'd have left by then. Where in the first half, drums and sound-effects were kept within reason to keep the band together and add some (albeit odd) extra colour, after the interval they dominated, driving the instrumentals to the margins and drawing the trumpeter to painful, screeching solos more like the sound of fingernails scraping on metal - amplified beyond the bearable - than anything offering aural pleasure.
If you want to catch this ensemble, take your ear-plugs. Or just leave at the interval.