Showing posts with label Kings Place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kings Place. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 July 2020

Appeal: Save Kings Place

You know things are bad when a major venue like Kings Place has to fight for survival. I like this place a lot (see notes on my Links page) and it would be a big loss to live music if it closed - a place worth saving, indeed. 

If you can, please donate at https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/

Tuesday, 24 April 2018

Nordic jazz on steroids - Eyolf Dale

Watching Norwegian pianist Eyolf Dale and his band take their places, it occurred to me that this was the second octet I'd seen on this very stage in recent months. I briefly wondered if we're witnessing a resurgence of popularity in the 'big small band' format. I hope so. 

I had a formative experience watching the fabulous David Murray octet of the late 1980s - I was very young, okay - at the (now defunct) Norwich Jazz Festival with my Uncle Alan. Ever since then, I've always liked the balance of space to improvise and compositional posibilities offered by that size of outfit.

So, another octet, another unusual configuration - this time piano, bass, drums, vibes, tenor sax/clarinet, trombone, trumpet/flugel horn and... violin (!) all of whom had apparently arrived only 40 minutes previously, thanks to a delayed flight from Oslo.

This gig was the UK launch of the band's latest album, Return to Mind. It's fair to say, I had a bit of a preconceived idea of what we were about to hear. I wasn't particularly familiar with Dale's work, and had deliberately avoided listening to either of his Edition releases as leader on Bandamp before the gig. The first couple of tunes, Midsomer Gardens and Soaring, proceeded much as I'd expected. This was unmistakably Nordic jazz - beautiful, tinged with melancholy, evocative of wide-open landscapes and starry skies, Adrian Loseth Waade's violin adding Nordic folky touches. 

Things took an unexpected turn when the band played The Mayor. Its quirky melody, tempo changes and manic energy interplay of vibes with horns put me in mind of Frank Zappa, which I certainly hadn't anticipated. Dale had told us that the tune is a reference to his father-in-law; the man must be quite some character.

From here on, the band really began to stretch out. There was some great interplay between all the band's musicians, justifying Dale's undoubtedly partisan introduction that they are the best musicians he knows. André Roligheten on tenor and clarinet, and Hayden Powell deserve special mention.  Norwegian-American Rob Waring, who has returned to his ancestral home, even helped with my ongoing therapy to overcome vibraphobia - is that a thing?

All in all, not the night I'd been expecting, but what a gig! For once, the words blown away express genuine loss for words.

Unfortunately, this seems to have been the only UK date in the tour, so you'll need to travel to catch the band any time soon. At the risk of rubbing salt in, here's that YouTube vid again:






Sunday, 18 March 2018

Quiet Thunder

Whoa, check this out:

The Wonder Trail album launch gig is 3 May at Kings Place

I'm probably going to have to completely mash-up my diary, and take endless grief from my partner, but I'm planning on getting there. 

It'll be worth it.

Friday, 16 March 2018

Return to Mind album launch

Eyolf Dale, Kings Place, 4 April.




According to his label, Edition Records

'the poetic and expressive... Norwegian pianist Eyolf Dale has confirmed his promise and reputation as a strong band leader, creative composer and an expressive soloist with a taste for melodies and interplay that summon powerful musical imaginations. With the launch of his new album Return to Mind, Eyolf has developed his elegant and warm sound into a divine and powerfully emotive sound... Eyolf Dale is vital rising star of the highly creative European Jazz scene.'



The usual label promo hyperbole notwithstanding (Edition Records do produce some consistently high-quality music) this should be a great gig. 

Tickets are still on sale.


And here's a youtube preview:






When The World Was One: Last Train Jazz Essentials #4

If you've got this far, you'll  probably  have worked out that I'm not much in favour of the obsessive labelling that many music...