rhythmaning: (Saxophone)
[personal profile] rhythmaning
Back in September, Branford Marsalis joined SNJO to play the music of Wayne Shorter. It was a fascinating gig - it made me listen to Shorter's music in a different way.

I have seen Shorter play many times, but I have been growing away from his music. The last time I saw him play with his quartet, maybe ten years ago, I left before the concert's end: the music seemed so abstract that it didn't say anything to me; it was as if it was always just about to get going, without actually making it. (I must say that I was in a very small minority: the rest of the audience clearly thought it was a superb gig, and it was very well reviewed.)

But I love the Shorter's earlier music - such as the classic Blue Note albums from the early 1960s; and I love Marsalis' playing too. And I was very curious to the how SNJO - or, more precisely, their arrangers - would approach tunes written for much smaller ensembles.

DSC_5626 DSC_5640 DSC_5682

Firstly, I was in luck: the bulk of the tunes which made up this concert stemmed from a short period in the early and mid-1960s - Shorter's Blue Note recordings plus his time with Miles Davis and Art Blakey.

Secondly, the arrangements were excellent. This wasn't a surprise - the SNJO commissions great musicians around the world to arrange for them, and they regularly use the same arrangers who know what works for the band.

DSC_5616 bw

But thirdly... My favourite tune from the evening was the only tune that fell outside the 1960s, Geoff Keezer's arrangement of "Virgo Rising". I thought this was really beautiful. It might be because my familiarity with the older material meant that I thought I knew how the tunes should sound, and hearing them played differently was disorienting.

DSC_5632 DSC_5681 bw

The band did their usual great job with complex arrangements, and Branford was superlative: his empathy with the music was evident. He and Tommy Smith did some sax-jousting.

There is a lot of pleasure in hearing a full-on jazz orchestra playing music one loves: and this was very pleasurable indeed.

(Here are the SNJO's programme notes.)

Wayne Shorter c1990
Wayne Shorter, London c 1988.
SNJO and Branford Marsalis Play Wayne Shorter. Edinburgh, September 2013.

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