Louis Rastig announcing the program |
By Martin Schray
First the good news: The seats are back. They were gone last year and it was a real problem to stand and remain concentrated for a complete festival. And there’s something else which has changed: The location was equipped with a quadruple sound system, so the audience sits around the stage, which creates an atmosphere like in the 1970s - only with a better sound.
Compared to the day before the audience has also changed. Hardly hip Berghain people anymore, it’s the usual free jazz festival crowd again. Actually this is a sad fact, the young people brightened up the atmosphere considerably. On the other hand, the program for the day sounded very exciting.
The start was made by a solo performance of Slovenian pianist and composer Kaja Draksler. Her style is characteristic of finding ways to combine composition and improvisation by working with different structures and sounds, for example New Classical Music and Slovenian folk songs. Louis Rastig announced an “army of drops“. In her set she started somewhere between Erik Satie, Japanese influences and French film noir references. Her music was full of space, she let the chords breathe freely, and the fact that she didn’t use the piano pedals gave her music a dry effect. In the second part she switched to prepared materials and there were the raindrops against the window Rastig mentioned. She revealed shifted rhythms, which made her music sound like a warped David Sylvian record (in a positive way). At the end of the set she picked up motives again which structured her improvisation and made it quite dynamic.
Kaja Draksler |
Dell/Lillinger/Brecht/Westergaard |
New Roots Trio |
So, the expectations were high and to cut a long story short: the band even surpassed them. The composition was were tightly structured, the horns started and ended the set with fanfares that sounded like the band in the Roman Circus Maximus. Then the piece was built up bit by bit, first with a wall of sound by the vibraphones and the trumpet, then the violins came in and the piece had the drama of a Gorecki symphony. But that wasn’t enough tension, the orchestra created a real vortex of classical fragments, sound collages and explorations and free improv, fiercely pushed by the two drummers. Wooley was steering the ship like a first mate giving orders to his crew. At the peak of the show the atmosphere was so tight, it was hard to endure. The composition ended like it began, with fanfares and minimal vibraphone notes, the light show emphatically dimmed the lights.
It’s hard to believe that there will be a more impressive set, in the best moments it reminded me of Cecil Taylor’s European Orchestra as to emotionality and compositional strictness. So far the best show in 2017. A perfect ending to a great festival day.
Seven Storey Mountain |
The musicians:
- Nate Wooley (US) trumpet
- C. Spencer Yeh (US) violin
- Samara Lubelski (US) violin
- Liz Allbee (DE) electronics
- Steve Heather (DE) vibraphone
- Emilio Gordoa (DE) vibraphone
- Ryan Sawyer (US) drums
- Chris Corsano (US) drums
- Marc Unternährer (CH) tuba
- Chris Heenan (DE) contrabass clarinet
- Henrik Munkeby Nørstebø (DE) trombone
- Matthias Muche (DE) trombone
- Matthias Müller (DE) trombone
- Hilary Jeffrey (DE) trombone
- Lina Allemano (CAN/DE) trumpet
- Nathan Plante (DE) trumpet
- Nils Ostendorf (DE) trumpet
- Damir Bacikin (DE) trumpet
1 comment:
it’s the usual free jazz festival crowd again.
Oh, you mean musicians and baby-boomer aspie bachelors?
Post a Comment
Please note that comments on posts do not appear immediately - unfortunately we must filter for spam and other idiocy.