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Henry Johnson -
Photo by Andrea Canter The 2005 Twin
Cities Hot Summer Jazz Festival hit a few snags
before the first set: Long-running sponsor KBEM
Radio has been struggling financially since
winter, when its major funding source (Minnesota
Department of Transportation) announced it would
drop its contract. With a revised, downsized
contract negotiated this spring, the station is
alive but has significantly curtailed
operations, including the elimination of live
broadcasts during the festival. The next blow
was the recent and sudden closing of the local
Copeland’s franchise downtown. Copeland’s has
provided a key venue throughout the festival as
well as serving as a major sponsor. Undaunted,
festival producer Steve Heckler found
last-minute support from Dixie’s. Somehow, it
all came together again, and the 2005 festival
drew good crowds throughout its two-week,
multi-venue run. The rains of May and June
stopped in the nick of time; suburban audiences
had more opportunities than ever before to hear
the best of regional and national artists; young
lions and old cats tangled and jammed in the
great free and open spirit that defines jazz.
The only
frustration that accompanies this festival is
that one can’t do it all; especially during the
final four days when the festival takes over
three blocks of Nicollet Mall in downtown
Minneapolis, you have make some tough choices.
Overlapping start times gave the fleet-footed
some chance to catch the end of one set and the
beginning of another, but at times four or even
five stages were engaged simultaneously. Yet
there is no better demonstration of the vibrancy
of the local jazz community! The following
reflections are but a glimpse of the immense
range of talent and styles celebrated during the
festival.
Hot
Saxophonics
Over a ten-day
period, the HSJF offered more than a half dozen
sax virtuosos in leading roles, from a
17-year-old prodigy to a 75-year-old legend. At
the Dakota, local saxman/educator Doug
Little led his quartet through two
nights of high spirited, mostly original
compositions, celebrating not only the festival
but the long-awaited release of Little’s new
recording, Phoenix. With visiting Italian
piano master Giacomo Aula, the ever-elegant
bassist Jeff Bailey, and explosive drummer Kevin
Washington, the Doug Little Quartet sizzled
through new compositions and original
contributions from Aula. A highlight was
Little’s medley, starting out on solo tenor with
“The Nearness of You” that morphed into a duet
with Aula; he then moved into a duet with a
brilliant bass from Bailey (“Dancing Cheek to
Cheek”); Washington entered with a solo burst
yielding to a sax/drum duet on “No More Blues,”
with the quartet finishing with a hard driving,
tempo-shifting Brazilian tune. Little was hardly
done for the festival, however, as he brought
his other working band, the Cuban tinged Seven
Steps to Havana, to the stage at Peavy Plaza a
few days later.
Charles McPherson
Photo by Andea Canter Across the
river in St. Paul, one of the torch bearers of
bop saxophone played the weekend at the Artists
Quarter as well as an outdoor set at Mears Park
Saturday afternoon. At 65, alto virtuoso
Charles McPherson shows no sign of
slowing down, blowing his horn sweet and cool
and turning standards into intricately
embroidered tapestries, always accessible,
always soulful. And he could not have asked for
a better supporting cast than Peter Schimke
(piano), Tom Lewis (bass), and Kenny Horst
(drums). Seems like a good ensemble for a new
“Live at the Artists Quarter” recording!
Back at the
Dakota, the week of June 20 was filled with
great music, much of it coming from tenor sax
artists. Andy Farber and
Jerry Weldon are mainstream
tenorists deserving of far more recognition.
Farber is a hard swinging horn
player with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra as
well as a prolific arranger and composer. And as
he proved Monday night, he is also a first-class
entertainer, providing humorous commentary
throughout his sets. The audience was rather
sparse but the arrangements were anything but,
and with the classy local rhythm section of
Laura Caviani (piano), Gordy Johnson (bass) and
Phil Hey (drums), the quartet roared through
blues and bop standards, Farber picking up his
alto on “Come Fly With Me” and rendering a
soulful “Body and Soul” on tenor.
Photo by Andrea
Canter
A few nights
later, Jerry Weldon returned to
the stage where he stunned the audience
attending Joey DeFrancesco’s May gig with the
Heatin’ System band. With a hybrid band
featuring Chicago-based keyboard genius Jon
Weber (seen throughout the festival in all sorts
of formats) and hometown heroes Gordy Johnson
and Joe Pulice, Weldon swung his ax with more
power than Paul Bunyan, exuding joy and passion
in every note (especially a very hot “Falling in
Love With Love”). And Weldon was just getting
underway during this Thursday “Jazz Night
Outing”, taking apart the Peavy Plaza stage with
the same band on Friday night, then strolling
down the block to sit in with Patty Peterson’s
ensemble, which this weekend featured cousin
Tommy Peterson of the Tonight Show
Band on tenor. The two tenors sparred through a
superlative reading of “Embraceable You.”
Although I missed it, I heard later that Weldon
walked down to the Millennium and jammed into
the night.
Photo by Andrea
Canter
At 17,
Alex Han
wasn’t quite the youngest sax player to appear
at Peavy Plaza, but his Saturday night set
demonstrated why many regard this Arizona high
school senior as the Young Lion of the future.
Already a veteran of Lincoln Center (with
Paquito D’Rivera), the Blue Note in New York,
and the Montreux Jazz Festival, Han played with
amazing poise and youthful energy, backed by—who
else but Jon Weber on piano? along with Gordy
Johnson and bass and the equally busy Kevin
Washington on drums. His range was well
demonstrated, from his spiraling cadenza on
Footprints to his sweetly melodic “You’ve
Changed,” while he also introduced us to his
composition chops with “Triadic,” a funky tune
with all the hip-hoppy exuberance of his
generation.
From adolescent to
septuagenarian, Saturday night’s bill on Peavy
Plaza ended with a set from the grand tenor
master Benny Golson. Backed by Jon
Weber, Tom Lewis, and Phil Hey, Golson proved to
be quite a storyteller, with and without his
horn, entertaining the overflowing audience with
tales of musicians and compositions, and with
his mellow tone. His solo intro his I Remember
Clifford was a workshop on how a memorial
tribute should begin, and Weber’s solo showed
his sweet and gentle side.
Photo by Andrea
Canter Kathy Jensen
provided the closing sax set on Peavy Plaza on
Sunday afternoon, backed by her Kathy J
Band—Dave Jensen on trumpet, Chris Lomheim on
piano, Jay Young on bass, and Joe Pulice on
drums. Playing mostly tenor, she took “My One
and Only Love” solo, transitioning into “I Mean
You” with the full quintet. Calling on her
student, 16-yaer-old alto player Owen Nelson,
Jensen grabbed her alto and the two engaged in
some effective repartee on “Straight, No
Chaser.”
There were other
fine examples of saxophone throughout the
festival—Dave Karr on baritone
with Mulligan Stew, and on tenor with The Five;
Doug Haining on sax and clarinet,
leading the Twin Cities Seven; Dan
Kusz’s smooth tenor on Peavy Plaza;
Josh Brinkman’s funky horn in the
company of Chill 7 and Chris
Thomson’s tenor/soprano bringing
engaging improvisations to the Kelly Rossum
Quartet, both at Mears Park; and countless sax
players with the Big Bands and Minnesota
Talented Youth jazz bad.
Keyboards
–Grand and Portable
The HSJF always
showcases local pianists, many of whom provide
back-up duties for other bands and vocalists
throughout the festival; and usually there’s at
least one or two Hammond B-3 sets as well.
Photo by Andrea
Canter
Three “imports”
provided multiple opportunities to re-acquaint
audiences with their talents during the
festival. Jon Weber plays this
festival so often and in so many capacities that
he has unofficially earned the title of House
Pianist for HSJF. Based in Chicago and with a
list of credits and compositions that goes on
and on, Weber first played the suburban stage in
Plymouth on June 22, twice appeared with Jerry
Weldon, later backed Alex Han and Benny Golson,
led jams at the Millennium Hotel lounge after
hours Friday and Saturday, and on Sunday filled
an open slot with a rollicking solo on Peavy
Plaza, taking requests and demonstrating his
unmatched ability to play any tune, any style,
and in most cases, rattle off birthdates and
other trivia about the composer or composition.
His “Sweet Georgia Brown” with Benny Golson may
have even out-Oscared Peterson.
From Berlin by way
of his native Italy, the Twin Cities again
welcomed Giacomo Aula, playing
multiple venues with his Midwest Trio (featuring
several pairings of bass and drums), holding
keyboard duties for the Doug Little Quartet, and
teaching at the Twin Cities Jazz Workshop,
culminating in a performance by student
musicians at the Dakota on festival Sunday. Aula
first appeared in the Twin Cities last year
during the HSJF, with the Doug Little Quartet,
and is the featured guest performer on Little’s
newly released recording, Phoenix, as
well as one of the four pianists on Gordon
Johnson’s recent Trios Volume 3.0. At the
Dakota last week with Gordon Johnson and Jay
Epstein, Aula played many of his own
compositions, including “Augusta” and “Canzone
Per Nina Rota”; his style is clearly informed by
a Romantic, classical foundation, yet, unlike
many European pianists/composers heard here
recently, Aula truly swings and suppresses none
of his passion. His touch can be delicate or
raucous, his layered improvisations seem to meld
a combination of Tyner, Evans and Mehldau into a
unique voice.
Also back for a
return visit—at two separate venues a few hours
apart—was Shahin Novrasli, an
engaging pianist from Azerbajian whose lyrically
spiraling phrases were remininscent of the
acoustic sides of Esbjorn Svensson and Tord
Gustavson—cerebral, melodic, almost lulling.
While this style seemed to get lost in the air
currents of the expansive Peavy Plaza, the
intimate Millennium Hotel lounge seemed a
perfect context to relax and let Novrasli’s
mellow explorations sink in.
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