2019 Highlight: Junius Paul, Ism, International Anthem

Because free-jazz in the late-1950s and early-1960s was so far ahead of its time its current incarnation that involves young players adopting the style and changing it to suit their own inclinations, is another point of departure and you get that …

Published: 22 Dec 2019. Updated: 4 years.

Because free-jazz in the late-1950s and early-1960s was so far ahead of its time its current incarnation that involves young players adopting the style and changing it to suit their own inclinations, is another point of departure and you get that here. In other words all these decades on music makers actually are beginning to make better sense of the new thing and not be either in awe of it or puzzled by it so much to do anything creative with it. What bassist Junius Paul is doing is something fresh and interesting, however there is a certain reverence at play throughout Ism.

Say your jazz starting point is Charlie Haden or Malachi Favors then you will be on your way to Paul. The audio sound is very un-high tech which again is refreshing again so it does not sound corporate. If you like your audio quality so clean you could eat your dinner of it with a spoon then this is not the record for you.

The historic Chicago free-scene is reliably churning out lots of inspiring jazz once again and this record zones in on its heritage as an inspiration. Hopefully we will be hearing a lot more of Junius Paul in 2020. However do not get too carried away. This is more a stimulating statement of intent than a masterwork. SG

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The Sarah Tandy trio at Servant Jazz Quarters; and the John O’Gallagher, Hans Koller, Percy Pursglove, Jeff Williams quartet, Vortex, London

From March 2016. There are so many fine jazz-friendly places in Dalston, a district that is a significant match to Soho in both quantity and quality. The latest that I discovered recently, on Blues Street, where else, near the well-stocked library, …

Published: 22 Dec 2019. Updated: 4 years.

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From March 2016. There are so many fine jazz-friendly places in Dalston, a district that is a significant match to Soho in both quantity and quality. The latest that I discovered recently, on Blues Street, where else, near the well-stocked library, is a brasserie that features jazz on Sundays. Servant Jazz Quarters, a few streets away from the Blues on Bradbury Street, close to Gillett Square, is more of an out-and-out bar and even if the ‘Jazz’ in the venue name doesn’t always accurately describe its musical policy there is quality jazz regularly enough to make it worth hitting the spot. Chief among the must-hear acts the proprietors put on regularly is pianist Sarah Tandy. Tandy has a natural affinity for straightahead jazz, her sound splashed by the modern jazz approach of Wynton Kelly and Bill Evans as well as the spirit and taste of early Herbie Hancock easily conveyed and discerned. Away from a trio setting she appears in Jazz Jamaica depping for Ben Burrell.

Down a steep staircase performing on the bar’s basement ‘stand’ on this latest occasion (her trio partners vary) she was appearing with drummer Sam Gardner and double bassist Alex Davis whose rich vibrations warmed the room. Tandy takes her shoes off to play and eased into the classics, the set unfolding with a nicely undemonstrative version of ‘All Blues’ from Kind of Blue providing a lingua franca for jazz fan and neutral bar-goer, dipping their toes in jazz for the first time perhaps, alike. ‘My Shining Hour,’ called by Tandy in E flat, was also one of the tunes in the first set as was Monk’s ‘Straight No Chaser’, each piece given time to marinate and when put to heat, simmer.

Later in the Culture House at the Vortex I picked up on where I had left off earlier in the week when I had been listening to pianist-composer Hans Koller’s Retrospection (new triple LP out next month on Stoney Lane) featuring Fish Factory and Hamburg NDR studio sessions recorded between June 2011 and 2014. Three players from these larger group ensembles were here with the Birmingham scene New Cool School catalyst. US alto player John O’Gallagher, now studying for a doctorate in the city, has a very clear vibrato-less style that is very appealing. As an academic he’s interested in tone rows and has written a book on the subject while as a player he makes organic connections in real-time via Bird and Lee Konitz-accented priorities in the character of his playing personality. A Bach-ian discipline meanwhile runs deep down in the Koller musical profile comping here by injecting a crisp chunkiness to the big vamps that the Lee Konitz drummer Jeff Williams knows how to unloosen and shake free.

Williams has a fine new quintet record out on Whirlwind called Outlier. In the notes he mentions his wife We Need To Talk About Kevin author novelist Lionel Shriver who came into the club later and talked a little afterwards to the musicians and a few jazz fans as conversation turned spontaneously somehow to jazz in fiction and a mention of Rafi Zabor’s The Bear Comes Home. At this Williams’ eyes lit up, the image of the Tin Palace where the saxophone-playing bear and hero of the novel goes to play a vision leaping into view. SG

Sam Gardner, top left-to-right, Alex Davis and Sarah Tandy at Servant Jazz Quarters. pic marlbank