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Jan Garbarek – RFH, Sunday 18 Nov – London Jazz Festival

As the man whose icily austere sound has a better claim than most to epitomise the sound of long-time label ECM, one would expect to apply many adjectives to a Jan Garbarek performance. “Funky” is not one of them. 

Yet that most double-edged of terms could be applied to a significant quota of Garbarek’s London Jazz Festival appearance – the result, one presumes, of the young blood that has recently arrived in his quartet. Following stints with Sting and Peter Gabriel, Manu Katché now occupies the drumstool, while Yuri Daniel’s five-string fretless has been taking care of the low end since the stroke suffered by upright bassist Eberhard Weber. 

The virtuosity of each is beyond doubt, but together they lend Garbarek’s glacial, almost spiritual sound a frequently upbeat groove that more closely resembles 70s fusion. That’s not a problem in itself, but the accompanying lack of subtlety certainly is.

The heavy handed Katché bears the brunt of the responsibility here, but the painfully dated keyboard sounds of long-standing group member Rainer Bruninghau don’t help. It’s all the more galling when he is sitting next to a grand piano that remains almost untouched.

Garbarek himself almost takes a back seat, failing to address the audience at all, his sole concession to showmanship the sporting of a dark red shirt when the others are in uniform black. All of which is fine, and entirely in character. Unfortunately, however, he takes a similarly low-key musical role, curiously, the only quartet member not to take a lengthy unaccompanied solo. 

His trademark, treated tone remains a joy to hear, and there are certainly moments – often when one or more musicians drop out – which stab right to the heart. Yet overall it’s a disappointing show from a man who rightfully bears the crown of Europe’s leading saxophonist.


Marcus O’Dair

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Jan Garbarek – RFH, Sunday 18 Nov – London Jazz Festival
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Neil Cowley Trio – Cargo, London 2/4/08

Neil Cowley Trio – Cargo, London 2/4/08Last night The Neil Cowley Trio launched their new album Loud…Louder…Stop! at trendy Shoreditch club Cargo, not usually the kind of venue you’d expect to find a piano trio playing. But then they aren’t your typical piano trio. As the audience files in there’s a building sense of excitement and by the time Cowley and Co. take to the stage the room is jammed full. “Aren’t you going to cheer us on?” Cowley quips wryly. This sets the tone for the evening to follow, music matching Cowley’s playful, fun and excitable personality.

Portico Quartet plus Basquiat Strings - Union Chapel, London Friday 22 February

Portico Quartet plus Basquiat Strings - Union Chapel, London Friday 22 FebruaryBasquiat Strings take the starkness of modern classical music and wrap it around a subtly pervading jazz beat.  But while they maintain the haunting quality of classical string music, they generate an atmosphere which is constantly disconcerting and pleasantly surprising.

Dave Liebman/Phil Robson Quartet, RNCM, 31 January 2008

Dave Liebman/Phil Robson Quartet, RNCM, 31 January 2008With the raw expressionism of John Coltrane, the punchy ballistics of Michael Brecker, the harmonic invention of Wayne Shorter: saxophonist Dave Liebman tells the story of the modern jazz saxophone. Particularly memorable was his meditative rendition of Coltrane’s ‘India’. As engaging as any solo was his magnanimous stage presence; the hunched shoulders, the facial contortions and the limp. You could feel the blood and sweat of an artist truly committed to what he really believes is important.
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