Dave Douglas (was Cheltenham Jazz Festival)
Richard Gardner wrote:
The real star performance came in the evening with Dave Douglas and the Freak In band. The line up was: Dave Douglas trumpet, Seamus Blake tenor saxophone, David Gilmore guitar, Jamie Saft wurlitzer, Ikue Mori electronic percussion, Brad Jones bass, Derrek Phillips drums.
The amplification of the drums was poor making them muddy which did not help understand what Ikue Mori was doing down in the mix. I was also not overly impressed by Seamus Blake who held his place but didn't blow me away. However, this is a band that is on fire. They are clearly still new to the material which, in places, is awkward to play. Blake, Saft, Gilmore and Jones were reading all the heads and there were signs of relief when particularly fiendish sections passed sounding fine. Dave Douglas has taken to prowling the stage cueing and urging on soloists not unlike another trumpeter a few years ago.
The result is that the Freak In material has moved away from the careful cut and paste of the studio and really stretches out fuelled by the enthusiasm of a band fresh to it. If they are coming to your area go and see them. Apparently the BBC recorded the Sunday night London gig and it is going out on Jazz on 3 (available as a webcast) in a couple of weeks time.
Final point, Mr Douglas told the audience it was a joy to play with such an amazing bunch of musicians. He was the fool. There was a pause and he said not as big a fool as our president. Another pause. Did you hear what happened to the Dixie Chicks? If that happens to me I will feel it is an honour.
I saw the London gig, at a half full Queen Elizabeth Hall. I'm pretty much in agreement with everything Richard says (including the muddy drum mix, regrettably) and suggest you all check out the webcast when it comes. I particularly liked the deconstruction of the classic jazz "everyone has a solo leading to a triumphant restatement of the theme" convention, in that Ikue Mori's laptop solos completely destroyed the ever-upwards momentum that Blake and Gilmore generated. The people sat behind me were having kittens, but then they were discussing their Dave Brubeck albums during the interval. Dave merely apologised for his President on Sunday night, to the predictable applause. I don't think the Dixie Chicks thing will ever happen to him as, despite being on RCA, he's not what you'd call a mainstream artist. I doubt Joe Public in Buttsville, Arizona will ever know or care who Douglas is. I also think (and here's where I duck for cover) that Jazz fans are far more likely to be left-leaning than Nashville-style Country fans, and therefore far less likely to burn his CDs just because he doesn't agree with the Anglo-American police action in Iraq. Alastair -- Personalised email by http://another.com
Alastair (et. al): If flag-waving Yanks eager for anti-U.S, CDs to burn can buy as many Dave Douglas CDs as they do of the Dixie Chicks this would be great for Douglas' sales. Heck if rednecks even bough one half the # of DD CDs as DC CDs, Douglas would be the best selling jazz artists since Louis Armstrong. Ken Waxman --- alastair@pretentious.co.uk wrote:
Dave merely apologised for his President on Sunday night, to the predictable applause. I don't think the Dixie Chicks thing will ever happen to him as, despite being on RCA, he's not what you'd call a mainstream artist. I doubt Joe Public in Buttsville, Arizona will ever know or care who Douglas is. I also think (and here's where I duck for cover) that Jazz fans are far more likely to be left-leaning than Nashville-style Country fans, and therefore far less likely to burn his CDs just because he doesn't agree with the Anglo-American police action in Iraq.
===== Ken Waxman mingusaum@yahoo.ca www.jazzword.com - Jazz/improv news, CD reviews and photos ______________________________________________________________________ Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca
participants (2)
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alastair@pretentious.co.uk -
Ken Waxman