Jazz breaking news: Sarah Gillespie sings the Shami Chakrabarti Blues in powerful double bill with Get The Blessing at Ronnie Scott's
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Unveiling her ambitious new extended composition ‘The War on Trevor’, Sarah Gillespie and her band featuring Gilad Atzmon opened the first of two double bills at Ronnie Scott's last night, sharing the evening’s billing with mighty Bristolians, Get The Blessing.
At times no nonsense (“this song is dedicated to my former husband, it's called ‘Big Mistake’) or ironic on her “new muse David Cameron” we had to wait until late into the extended set for the 15-minute long ‘The War on Trevor’ based around a partly comic, partly deadly serious take on The War on Terror (geddit) with the hapless Trevor arrested on trumped up terrorist charges in a comedy of errors. Gillespie referred to the case of a British citizen held without trial at Guantánamo as a partial influence for the piece which, in its introductory section, also draws on Brahms’ 'Variation on a Theme of Haydn.'
The piece knitted together nicely, and sat at the bar watching the performance was Liberty director Shami Chakrabarti who is even name checked in the song with her surname rhyming with “twitterati.” Gilad Atzmon also name checked dug in nicely on sax, and throughout the set was effective at the beginning riffing on ‘Flight of the Bumble Bee’ on clarinet, and then switched to apposite accordion, while Ben Bastin on double bass, an energised Enzo Zirilli on drums, fine backing vocals from the preternaturally-still Emma Divine made this all work. Gillespie at times resembles the much missed Kirsty MacColl in the way she gets her songs across, and occasionally even her enunciation draws MacColl to mind while her guitar playing opened up as the evening went on. Gillespie’s mix of jazz (a fun ‘All of Me’) a Bessie Smith blues “for the credit crunch” at the end and her own fine lyrics was a hard act to follow.
Get The Blessing with Daisy Palmer in on drums, the regular replacement for Clive Deamer these days often gigging with Radiohead, were straight out of the gate into 1970s Brit flick mode circa Get Carter from the off. Soft, beautifully harmonised contrapuntal work from trumpeter Pete Judge and a feverish Jake McMurchie on tenor sax remote on the right hand apron of the Ronnie’s stage circled around the laconic Jim Barr’s wondrous bass parables of sonic darkness. Barr and Palmer worked superbly as independent rhythm entities, Palmer a less snarling drummer than Deamer but equally capable of beating out large scale free form triphoppery where required. We had to wait for the epic ‘OC DC’ but it was worth it, with ‘Einstein Action Figures’ another set highlight. Barr was magnificent throughout, and an initially reserved and very polite audience rattled their tables by their clapping along in delight as the monstrous bass figure of ‘OC DC’ unfolded.
– Stephen Graham
The Sarah Gillespie band and Get The Blessing complete their Ronnie's dates tonight. For last minute tickets go to www.ronniescotts.co.uk Further Sarah Gillespie dates include Much Wenlock Poetry Festival, Much Wenlock (13 April); Guildhall, Lichfield (15 April); Ropetackle Arts, Shoreham by Sea (19 April); The Barn, Snailwell Suffolk (solo, 21 April); The Albion Beatnik Bookshop, Oxford (24 April); Command House, Rochester (25 April); Vortex, London (26 April); Wakefield Jazz, Wakefield (27 April); St David’s Hall, South Petherton (28 April); Black Mountain Jazz, Abergavenny (27 May); Strawberry Hill Jazz Festival, Richmond-upon-Thames (3 June); and the Marlborough Jazz Festival, Marlborough (14 July).