By
Martin Schray
For the fourth time, Stefan Winkler and his team succeeded in organising an
exquisite free jazz festival in Saarbrücken (located on Germany’s border to
France and Luxembourg). Last year they were supported by the Bundesstiftung
Kultur with 20,000 Euros and there was a feature article in the big
German weekly newspaper DIE ZEIT, which also drew attention to the
festival. This year, it was more difficult to raise money because the
federal funding was cancelled and local and private donors had to secure
the financing. There were also other imponderables to overcome in the
run-up to the event. First of all, the Lithuanian guitarist Juozas Milašius
had to cancel his appearance in a duo with Sabir Mateen. However, the festival
organizers were quickly able to find a very suitable replacement
with Portuguese guitarist Luis Lopez. But when two days before the festival
start Charles Gayle had to be hospitalized, it became difficult*. The fact
that the FMP legend Michel Pilz could be engaged for the festival program
spontaneously speaks for the improvisational talent of the organizers,
because the actual motto of the festival (“Celebrating the 80th birthday of
Charles Gayle, Trevor Watts & Joe McPhee“) could at least partly be salvaged - Pilz is actually already 83.
As always, the festival began with some preliminary events, among others
with the wind quartet of Nils Fischer (baritone saxophone, bass clarinet,
double bass clarinet), Hartmut Oßwald (tenor saxophone, bass clarinet),
Frank Paul Schubert (soprano and alto saxophone) and Andreas Krennerich
(sopranino, soprano and baritone saxophone), and the NuBand, the quartet
around the legendary 83-year-old saxophonist Mark Whitecage, with Joe Fonda
(bass), Lou Grassi (drums), and Thomas Heberer (trumpet).
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Trevor Watts quartet
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The festival properly began on April 5th with Trevor Watts' quartet with
Veryan Westan (piano) and the rhythm twins John Edwards (bass) and Mark
Sanders (drums). And to anticipate it: the first concert was already one of
the highlights of the festival. In addition, a leitmotif of the presented
music became clear, namely the eventful playing with intensities. Watts'
quartet intensified their improvisation just to let it go again,
something which happened almost imperceptibly. Above all, Mark Sanders was
the driving force here, he almost playfully shifted up a gear and then back
again. Watts, on the other hand, was leading the improvisation towards
small highlights that worked like cliffhangers - the audience was always
curious to see where the whole thing would go. Even quiet passages were
extremely intense because the rhythm section literally disassembled the
melodic and harmonic material. Especially Edwards’s springy double
pizzicati (he plays them on the upper and lower part of the bass neck
simultaneously) harmonized excellently with Westan's tonal clusters and
Watts' squeezed runs. The whole set resembled an accumulation of mass,
which was then taken apart again. Here, European Free Jazz tradition became
transparent, capturing a state of the art moment of music situated between new
classical musical influences and traditional free jazz.
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Luis Lopez (g) and Sabir Mateen (s) |
Next on the agenda were Sabir Mateen and Luis Lopez. Before the concert
started it was almost sad to see that Mateen is almost completely blind and
depends on help with orientation. However, while playing there’s hardly
anything to be noticed, he still has an impressive power. At the beginning
of their set Lopez reflected Mateen's blues- and gospel-soaked runs with
isolated chords. The juxtaposition of elegance and monotony worked well,
only towards the end, when Lopez switched to Thurston-Moore-like sounds
including the use of extended techniques, the tension eased.
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Michel Pilz (b cl), Stefan Scheib (b), Frank Paul Schubert (s),and Klaus Kugel (d) |
The day ended with a newly arranged quartet with the aforementioned Michel
Pilz (bass clarinet), Frank Paul Schubert (saxophone), local bassist Stefan
Scheib, and Klaus Kugel (drums). Pilz and Kugel already had a trio with
Christian Ramond on bass (there is a CD from 2003), but haven't played
together for a long time. Nevertheless, the chemistry between the musicians
worked surprisingly well. Pilz's lyrical playing connected very well with Kugel's
meditative rhythms. The music had some outstanding moments, e.g. when
Schubert's overblown lines met Pilz's relaxed drone. The different playing attitudes of the two wind players collided directly with each other and here again it was striking how structural contrasts were used to force intensity. Schubert's solo in the first, long piece of the set was a highlight of the festival.
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Kay Lübke (d), Jan Roder (b), Christoph Thewes (tb), and Anna Kaluza (s) |
As in previous years, the festival has always been an opportunity to
present local musicians. In the saxophonist Anna Kaluza's quartet this was
trombonist Christoph Thewes, supplemented by the Berlin musicians Jan Roder
(bass) and Kay Lübke (drums), the latter two also the rhythm section in
Silke Eberhard's trio. Kaluza founded the Berlin Improvisers Orchestra and
regularly plays with international guest musicians. Compared to the partly
harsh free jazz outbursts of the previous day, the quartet's music was
almost tender, especially at the beginning of the set. Nevertheless, they
could be found here as well, mainly pushed by Thewes. Kaluza endured this
almost calmly, she contrasted them in a very controlled way and remained
focused on her improvisations. A decent start to the day, no
more, but no less either.
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Klaus Kugel (d), Joe McPhee (s), and John Edwards (b) |
The expectations for Joe McPhee, John Edwards, and Klaus Kugel were
high, and McPhee immediately issued a call to arms on his pocket trumpet. From the
first minute the music was also a statement: 1960's soul power, accusation,
blues, melancholy, anger, devotion, attitude - all in one! McPhee made the
audience freak out with spiritual blues riffs on the tenor saxophone,
mercilessly driven by Kugel and Edwards. This band also represented
intensity - namely through contrastivity. At a moment when this intensity
was almost impossible to increase, McPhee let his emotions out, he sang, he
screamed, he howled, and answered himself with little melody lines -
typical, classic call-and-response, a proverbial rollercoaster ride.
Moreover, McPhee, the last great man of pain in free jazz, was congenially
supported by John Edwards, who scattered several incredible solos, in which
he attacked the bass more than actually playing it, and Klaus Kugel, the
wonderful mystic behind the drums (in contrast to the day before with his
whole arsenal of cymbals and gongs). As if that wasn't enough, McPhee
addressed the audience at the end of the regular set and reminded them of
Albert Ayler, who said that “music was the healing force of the universe“.
He then wanted to send this healing force out to Charles Gayle, so that he
could get well again. In the last part of the set he let the audience chant
Gayle's name again and again. That was close to kitsch, but McPhee never
let the whole thing fall over, on the contrary, it was a moment of goose
bumps. The set was a single triumph.
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Dominik Blum (o), Marino Pliakas (b), and Lucas Niggli (d) |
Actually, nothing could come after this concert, but nevertheless it was a
wise decision of the festival management to let Steamboat Switzerland play
after McPhee (originally the were scheduled before him), because the band
represented a complete contrast to all the other formations. Dominik Blum
(Hammond organ), Marino Pliakas (bass), and Lucas Niggli (drums) are
something like a heavy metal/improv version of Emerson, Lake and Palmer,
their music is characterized by an uncompromising spirit. As usual, the
trio made no compromises. Out of this clear attitude their specific sound
developed: a mix of prog-rock, new classical music, noise and metal,
energetically charged and virtuosically interpreted. For their set the band
had a strict form and dramaturgy: pulling it through without interruption
and without breathing. Several pieces were woven into this sound bath,
composed works alternated with improvisations. As you might imagine, the
reactions in the audience were very mixed. The hall emptied itself
constantly.
The organisers are making plans for another festival next year, even though the
financing is not yet certain. Names mentioned in the game are Ken
Vandermark and Akira Sakata. Two suggestions for improvement could be
considered: the festival definitely presents too few women, this year just
one with Anna Kaluza and younger musicians could also be interesting. There were also some sound problems this year, especially on the first day.
Despite the precarious financial situation one should work on it. But all
in all the festival was excellent. It remains to be wished that it can take
place again next year.
*Gayle collapsed on the way to the plane to Europe but he has been
released from hospital in the meantime. He's on the way to recovery.
2 comments:
Very cool, Martin! A bit odd that the the birthday boys didn't do a duo. And hope Gayle is doing well. Did anyone have any thoughts on why the festival lost funding?
The application for the funding has to be renewed every year. On the other hand, there were a lot of local institutions that helped out, as well as private donors. And the SR, the public broadcasting station of the region, recorded it (which means money, too). The organizers have founded an association through which they hope to raise the necessary capital. Hopefully, they are lucky.
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