Band:  Various, Herbie Hancock, Richard Bona, Kurt Elling, Eric Harland and Bad Plus
Venue: various
Date:  May 28 – June 7th

Review by John McBeath

 

 

The most comprehensive Australian jazz festival opened last Thursday in Hamer Hall with two jazz piano greats: the Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea duo. It was a night of musical camaraderie in a spectacular collaboration to deliver a fairly populist style.

Hancock mostly lead with quick, precisely executed chromatic runs and Corea provided embellishments, parallel reflected inventions, and occasional percussive effects.

After three totally improvised pieces with both men sporadically utilizing synthesisers, they played standard pieces including a rhythmic version of Hancock’s Cantaloupe Island; Corea’s signature tune Spain; and a big finale version of Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez in which, comically, audience vocal participation was invited. A standing ovation was a foregone conclusion.

Friday night brought Richard Bona’s quintet with snap-smart arrangements in a nimble fusion of jazz, rock and humour. Bona sang his originals, playing a very agile, jazz-inflected, five-string electric bass. Most songs were in his native Cameroonian, in styles from Latin jazz to Afro-beat, backed by a powerhouse group of trumpet, guitar, keys, and drums. Soaring trumpet solos came from Tatum Greenblatt and skillfully quick guitar by Adam Stoler. Bona is a great musician and entertainer with a range of laugh-out-loud banter. Another standing ovation.

A regular visitor to Australia, US vocalist Kurt Elling has never performed here with such comprehensive backing as last Saturday. The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, sensitively conducted by Benjamin Northey, plus Elling’s quartet brought over sixty performers on stage. A symphony orchestra doesn’t always fit into jazz, but these arrangements were well suited to the material, opening with an unSinatra-like rendition of Come Fly With Me, including a standout piano solo from Mads Baerentzen.

Elling’s characteristics were all evident: his bending of melody and individual phrasing, his four octave range, and inspired scat. Melbourne vocalist Michele Nicole joined Elling for a Latin jazz duet in Portuguese. His most expressive song in the jazz sense was Nature Boy, featuring four choruses of mind-boggling scat as he effortlessly arced through octaves, scattering groups of eighth-note phrases. Standing ovation number three.

The Bad Plus is a US piano trio like no other: a post-bop group with attitude. They play their esoteric originals – one titled The Empire Strikes Backwards – with elan, great ability and self-deprecating humour. Pianist Ethan Iverson delivered intricate lines with stabs of atonality as David King worked his drumkit with manic energy, and bassist Reid Anderson provided grounding. Their many fans are too hip for a standing ovation.

SHARE
For just over 24 years I have been a freelance writer, publishing in that time a wide variety of genres: news items, live concert reviews, travel articles, features, personality profiles, and CD and book reviews. I have written for various in-flight magazines, The Adelaide Review, The Republican, The Bulletin, The Australian, The Advertiser, The Melbourne Herald Sun and several regional newspapers. In 1994 I won a national travel-writing prize sponsored by The Australian newspaper, which led to my writing regularly for that paper. Since 2003 I have been jazz critic for The Advertiser and The Australian newspapers, on average contributing weekly to each paper. In 2005 I won a national Jazz Writing Competition sponsored by the Wangaratta Jazz Festival.

LEAVE A REPLY