Category Archives: Jazz Booth

Profiling Jazz

How many bands does it take to make a Zoot Suit Riot ? Three!

The Director of Music reflects on last week’s titanic band-clash…

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St Edmund’s School Hall was packed out last week for the annual music extravaganza that is Big Bands 3, masterminded and conducted by Ian Swatman. The evening began with the massed ranks of the University’s Concert Band, playing a selection of this year’s repertoire including a selection for ‘Wicked’. Equally wicked was the impressive playing of the St Edmund’s Big Band which brought the first half to a bewitching close!

Refreshed by a glass (or two) of wine, the audience was then treated to the sensational sounds of the University’s Big Band, featuring student vocalist, Ruby Mutlow, and guest appearances from two St Edmund’s pupils, Alex Gibson and Tom Lowen. The concert then came to an ear-splitting, foot tapping climax as School and University Bands combined for one final number, Zoot Suit Riot.’

The concert was in aid of the Jacob Barnes Scholarship Trust, and a staggering £1,600 was raised! So many thanks to everyone for their generosity and to Ian, Will Bersey, Carol Hawkins and all the St Edmund’s team for making the concert such a success!

Three is the magic number: Big Bands 3!

Not one: not two: but three bands come together next week on Wednesday 28 March, as Big Bands 3 returns.

Kent's First Lady of Jazz: Ruby Mutlow

Following on from last year’s highly successful charity concert, the bands of St Edmund’s School and the University of Kent will be joining forces in support of the Jacob Barnes Scholarship Trust.

Jacob ‘Jake’ Barnes, who died aged 21 after a two-year fight against a virulent form of leukemia, was an exceptional talent. He was a scholar at St Edmund’s School, and pianist with the University of Kent Chamber Choir in 2007-08.  Following A-Levels, Jake won a place at the Royal Academy of Music. His name will be remembered by the Jacob Barnes Scholarship, which will be presented annually at the Royal Academy of Music to a young chamber ensemble.

Ian Swatman, conductor of the University Concert and Big Bands and also Head of Instrumental Studies at St Edmund’s School, will be at the helm, which will feature popular repertoire for Concert and Big Bands with guest soloists.

Tickets are priced at £5 and are available from the School box office on 01227 475600.

After the Concert and Big Band’s action-packed concert at the Gulbenkian Theatre last month, this promises to be an exciting event, in aid of a very worthy cause. Support it if you can.

Greeting the first day of spring with Jazz @ 5

Yesterday was apparently the first day of spring, and what better way to herald the change into the new season with the first Jazz @ 5 on the Gulbenkian Theatre’s foyer stage.

Andrew Kitchin

Featuring the robust pianistic skills of second-year Economic student, Niji Adeleye, and saxophonist with the Concert and Big Bands, Tim Pickering, both of whom were making their debut, and Jazz @ 5 stalwart Andrew Kitchin on guitar, the programme kicked off with a lively blues.

Steph Richardson, Niji Adeleye

Over the course of set the stage was graced with songstresses Steph Richardson (who, when not singing jazz or studying Drama, can also be found performing and conducting with the Chamber Choir), Ruby Mutlow (familiar as singer with the Big Band), and Jo Gray. A deft rendition of Too Darn Hot from Steph, a French version of I Go Sailing from Jo and a vibrant I Wish I Knew (How It Feels To Be Free) were just some of the standards in the programme, alongside some instrumental pieces showing Niji’s immense creativity, Andrew’s skilful solo-ing and some robust melodic improvisation from Tim.

Well received by an enthusiastic (and numerous) crowd, the event was a great success: well done to all the performers.

Jo Gray, Tim Pickering, Andrew Kitchin

All that Jazz: Jazz @ 5 this Wednesday

The ever-popular Jazz @ 5 series returns for a one-off special this Wednesday, on the Gulbenkian Theatre’s foyer stage. 

Jazz @ 5
Lickety-spit: Andrew Kitchin

University musicians will gather at 5pm to provide an informal gig, including jazz standards, showtunes and songs. Appearing at the gig will be Jazz @ 5 regulars Andrew Kitchin (guitar), Steph Richardson and Jo Gray (voice), along with this year’s Big Band singer, Ruby Mutlow.

Making their Jazz @ 5 debut will be saxophonist with the Concert and Big Bands, Tim Pickering, and pianist with the London Community Gospel Choir and second-year Economics student, Niji Adeleye.

The gig starts at 5pm, and admission is free: come and enjoy some laid-back mid-week jazz at the end of the day.

Big Band and Concert Band will take it Nice ‘n’ Easy next Friday

There’s now just one week to go until the annual roof-raiser at the Gulbenkian with the University Concert and Big Bands, on Friday 10 February.

Kent's First Lady of Jazz: Ruby Mutlow

Starring in the concert will be second-year Music Scholar and jazz singer Ruby Mutlow, who’ll be familiar to those of us who went to the concert this time last year, as well as to those who chilled out at various Jazz @ 5 sessions, and the Big Band Gala in the summer term. Possessing a characterful and wonderfully graceful voice, Ruby will be joining the Big Band for a selection of vocal pieces.

In the first half, amongst other pieces, the Concert Band will explore selections from Wicked,whilst music in the second half from the Big Band will include Duke Ellington.

Conductor Ian Swatman is his usual unflappable self so close to the gig, and he’s looking forward to his usual banter with the audience, perhaps the occasional reference to a certain Northern football club whose fortunes lie close to Ian’s heart, and maybe one or two surprises as well.

The concert starts at 7.30pm, and there’ll be live music in the Gulbenkian Foyer from 6pm with a selection of a cappella vocal groups and instrumental jazz.

Details online here: tickets are disappearing fast!

 

H-Eddie excitement as bebop superstar comes to Canterbury

It’s not very often that a superstar of the international bebop world lands in Canterbury, but that’s what’s happening on Saturday 11 February, as Eddie Daniels plays with the David Rees-Williams Trio.

Reading Thomas Owens’ excellent Bebop: the music and its players, a survey of key figures in the bebop movement – Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie to name but two – recently, the writer makes the following observation:

In recordings such as To Bird with Love, [Daniels] combines an astonishing technical command of the instrument, a beautiful, warm tone quality over the entire range of the instrument, a great sense of swing, and a rich melodic imagination. He has proven repeatedly and conclusively that bebop can fit the clarinet; the only barrier to a flood of bebop clarinetists appearing may be the challenge of meeting Daniels’s awesome standards.

Daniels has been called a ‘thoroughly well-bred demon’ by none other than Leonard Bernstein; with an equal foothold in the world of jazz and classical music (Wynton Marsalis, anyone ?), Daniels has been a colossus since his early days with the Thad Jones band back in the 60’s. There’s a profile of Daniels over on that great jazz blog, LondonJazz.

Bebop remains, for me at least, one of the critical artistic movements of the twentieth century; witnessing the development of an harmonically more adventurous, and rhythmically more exploratory style, it  represented a move away from more traditional big band swing to a tighter, more focused style emphasising a richer inventiveness. Greater technical prowess was required to execute improvisation at break-neck speed: the almost instantaneous translation from harmonic and melodic thought to the physical execution of its ideas, at such speed, leading to some of the greatest recorded solos ever made. There was no room for error: a sure-footed way of working with a linear logic through the harmonic changes required a firm grasp of the underlying chords and their extensions, to allow ideas to unfold with such rapidity and yet stilll retain a melodic integrity. In the white heat of spontaneous creativity at a live gig, you had to know exactly what you were doing.

Tickets and details about the event on the Gulbenkian Theatre’s website here: one not to be missed.

And here’s a foretaste of Daniel’s terrific dexterity allied with a dazzling gift for melodic improvisation, on scintillating form in After You’ve Gone. Thomas Owens may have a point…

Worried about the future of British jazz ? Then listen to this…

Anyone who might be apprehensive at the future of jazz in Britain need only listen to last night’s broadcast of the ‘BBC Presents’ stage at this year’s Cheltenham Jazz Festival on Radio 3 to be reassured that the future looks bright.

The show presents two hours of live sets from earlier this year, and features the emerging talents Trish Clowes, Rachel Musson’s Skein, Saltwater Samurai, and Edinburgh-based The Discordian Trio.

Music ranges from the dextrous sax-playing of Trish Clowes, with her wonderfully agile group (including a cellist) – special mention to drummer James Maddren for his vibrant yet subtle drumming – to the deft, bright-sounding improvisations of Rachel Musson, the elctro-dance-infused Saltwater Samurai from South London, and the free-ranging explorations of The Discordian Trio.

The programme also includes interviews with some of the young players of today, who may well be the stars of tomorrow, if the quality of their music-making is anything to go by. Trish Clowes talks in particular about the benefits of studying at the Royal Academy, including working with luminary of the British saxophone world, Iain Ballamy, and about the challenge of being a working jazz artist. All the groups demonstrate an assurety and confidence in their playing that bodes well.

Check them out on iPlayer, and see photos from the event on the Jazz on 3 Flickr site here: the future of British jazz, in the hands of these young musicians, is very bright indeed.

All that jazz…

Congratulations to all the performers who brought the term’s jazz-making to a fine conclusion this evening, in the last of the current season of Jazz @ 5 gigs. A packed audience in the Gulbenkian Foyer gave an enthusiastic and supportive reception to all the players, and were clearly enjoying themselves at the end of the day.

An adventurous programme saw a mixture of groove-based tunes mixed with straight-ahead swing and some folk-inflected music: Grover Washington Jnr’s funky Mr Magic and EST’s Good Morning, Suzie Soho sat next to Hallelujah, I Love Him So and The Best Is Yet To Come, whilst Bad Moon Rising and songs by Fairground Attraction added a folky element to the evening.

Some fine performing from Alanya Holder, Steph Richardson and Jo Gray at the microphone, whilst newcomer Marina Ivanova made her Jazz @ 5 debut with great assurety, accompanied by guitarist Martin Lestra.

The regular quintet, led by Dan Harding on piano, saw Will Rathbone (sax), Andrew Kitchin (guitar) and Sophie Meikle changing with Melissa Hicks on bass, backed up by Matt Bardrick on drums. Andrew borrowed a new gadget for the occasion, an effects box, which added new elements to his improvised solos.

Well done to all: a fine way to bring the term’s jazz to a conclusion. Hopefully, there’ll be some more next term: watch this space…