Lars Danielsson Group: Liberetto III, Wigmore Hall, EFG London Jazz Festival

One of the world’s great jazz bassists, the Swede Lars Danielsson, whose compositional as well as tonal and melodic gifts as an improviser make him stand out head and shoulders above many of his peers as a leader, was here with the successor in his …

Published: 20 Nov 2019. Updated: 2 years.

One of the world’s great jazz bassists, the Swede Lars Danielsson, whose compositional as well as tonal and melodic gifts as an improviser make him stand out head and shoulders above many of his peers as a leader, was here with the successor in his group to the ''jazz superstar'' Tigran: French pianist Grégory Privat; the stalwart e.s.t drummer Danielsson’s fellow Swede Magnus Öström; and long-time band guitarist Londoner John Parricelli.

Theirs is a romantic sound that straddles the lilting Nordic landscapes of Danielsson’s imagination and a hybrid Mediterranean sound coloured by Parricelli whose subtle washes of electronics coated his pristine sound in considerable warmth and aided the wah-wah swagger he conjured in the second set.

Danielsson’s beautiful solo late on in the concert on Joni Mitchell’s ‘Both Sides Now’ was the standout moment and deservedly received sustained applause from the packed audience in this famous hall perfect for chamber music that includes this kind of largely quietly delivered and often highly cerebral jazz.

Privat was impressive in the group interplay, less so when he broke out to solo: a routine that often ended up in the same tremolo-loving tightly defined thrashing around space.

Öström was an active scamperingly alert presence using brushes to speed and scurry, sweep up and fill, but the bass ruled and within his expansive realm Danielsson’s affinity with the baroque came into its own decisively on, as he noted, the unusual 4/4-arranged ‘Passacaglia’.

Less successful were the more pastoral travelogue-type passages. However, the material overall drawn from a substantial body of work has a great deal of quality and depth to it and the quartet conveyed its prevailingly mournful sense in a meaningful way that emphasised an essential introspective desire and tendency towards a pronounced bittersweet balladry.

Tags:

Blue Note Special: It Must Schwing, the Jazz Animals, Cadogan Hall, EFG London Jazz Festival

Quite a curate's egg, in other words only good in parts although an evening not without its surprises and charm, this Siggi Loch curated tribute to Blue Note records began with the rare sighting of the yellow shoe wearing boogie-woogie genius of the …

Published: 19 Nov 2019. Updated: 2 months.

Next post

Quite a curate's egg, in other words only good in parts although an evening not without its surprises and charm, this Siggi Loch curated tribute to Blue Note records began with the rare sighting of the yellow shoe wearing boogie-woogie genius of the keys Axel Zwingenberger. The audience, myself included, were tickled no end by his frequently recurring sideways-to-the-auditorium grin every now and then. The pianist gave a little chat about the, at this distance cognitive dissonance-inducing, boogie-woogie origins of Blue Note, now a quaint side note of a double take. Zwingenberger impressed most on his spontaneous improvisation in style of his own invention and it was an endearingly eccentric nod-and-a-wink way to open, he followed by duetting with the Jazz Animals' leader saxophonist Émile Parisien on Blue Note's first hit 'Summertime' and we soon got a better idea about how the Hall's acoustics were in another kind of blue note, more a muted one, not doing anyone any favours because everything seemed so underamplified and lacking impact.

Yaron Herman on piano took over and was a slightly subdued presence throughout and suffered most although bassist Joe Martin fared even worse acoustics-wise throughout. Trumpeter Theo Croker however was a hyperactive and entertaining presence and beamed out bright and brassily, his white hat and skinny jeans look completed by his shades finishing off the hipster quality, a contrast to the very soberly suited nonagenarian sax legend Benny Golson who completely stole the show when he came on late in the first half to play his composition the feelgood 'Along Came Betty' and later best of all the moving 'I Remember Clifford' and the crowd pleasing 'Blues March' in the second half. He and half the band started saluting one another which was fun and Croker even started taking photographs of Golson to complete the relaxed on-stage mood.

Trombonist Glenn Ferris was excellent early on in the ensemble horn part for 'Blue Train' and soloed most significantly later on 'Blues March'. He was cool enough to even stoop to tie his own shoelaces while lolling at the back of the stage on a break. But he vied with Croker who played a blinder throughout, pure toned and agile on 'A Night in Tunisia' and astutely in keeping with Golson's vision when the master joined.

Gerald Cleaver on drums only came into his own latterly in the second half (there were hardly any drum solos) and his role was not the scintillating factor it often is when he is found in an avant garde setting. I thought that the band were quite stiff early on and only warmed up properly in the second half. Perhaps it was the formality of the venue at play.

The surprise of the night was the talk given at the beginning of the second half by Kenneth Woolf, a nephew of Blue Note co-founder photographer Francis Woolf. Quite the amiable caricature of an English gent like something out of a PG Wodehouse novel and didn't he ramble? But his contribution provided a trip down memory lane, what the evening was at heart all about. SG