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UMBRIA JAZZ 2001 Special to JAM by W. Royal Stokes There are those who enjoy awarding first place to one or another of the overseas jazz festivals and this writer, having over the past two decades attended a number of them, is not immune to that temptation. While many such gatherings offer a variety of styles, from blues and gospel acts to traditional, Swing Era, bebop, and subsequent developments in jazz in attractive settings, my winner's five stars go to Italy's Umbria Jazz. Perugia, with a history and architecture dating from the Middle Ages and earlier, is a constant presence that instructs and inspires the visitor to this charming city. The three-decade-old festival provides, along with its indoor paid-entrance venues, several outdoor stages free to the public. That constitutes a gift to the community and to tourists that bespeaks the generous civic spirit of festival founder and producer Carlo Pagnotta and the local governing body. The acts on virtually all stages except the huge outdoor ticket-requiring Giardini del Frontone repeat daily throughout the ten days. One of several one-time indoor performances was "Dee Dee Bridgewater Sings Kurt Weil," the opening-night Gala in the opera house Teatro Morlacchi.
Three units that impressed me for their musicality, originality, creativity, and uninhibited swing had me returning for more -- or wanting to in the case of the first-named group, which performed only once. Marco Zurzolo & La Banda MVM, who departed the festival after their Saturday noon set in Teatro Morlacchi, were from Naples and for this reviewer this band holds second place, after Dee Dee, in the festival's program for all-round excellence. With the leader on alto saxophone, a trumpet and four-reed front line, bass, two trap drummers, percussionist, and accordion player, the MZ & LB MVM blended folk materials of their native city and Southern Italy, romantic Greek strains, strolling-musician effects, mainstream, bop, and outside blowing, and world-class solo action by all band members for a boiling two hours of untrammeled excitement. No doubt about it, La Banda MVM is a unique musical experience and provided for these ears some of the hottest sounds they have recently heard. The John Pizzarelli Trio, with the leader on guitar and vocals, pianist Ray Kennedy, and brother Martin Pizzarelli on bass, performed for a packed house in the tiny and charming Bottega del Vino nightly at midnight. A roller-coaster set opener, "Should I," was followed by a dreamy "When Lights Are Low." Kennedy tore up the keyboard on "A Shine on Your Shoes" and John's single-string picking of the melody on "These Foolish Things" thrilled. "Saving My Love For You" was a tour de force of scat, and on "Oscar Night," a Kennedy original, the composer, displaying sheer virtuosity, was all over the piano with "circular-breathing" attack. The final choruses of the number were a four-alarm fire. When one closed the eyes while checking out the Swedish Esbjörn Svensson Trio, with the leader at the piano, Dan Berglund, bass, and Magnus Öström, drums, one wondered, à la early Louis Armstrong contemporaries, what accessories or instrument alterations were conspiring for such unorthodox sounds. The only one this observer discerned was the reverb-creating pedal of the bassist, who elicited voice-like moans from his upright and on one locomotive-force selection brought down the house. Esbjörn employed rolling two-handed bass rumbles and dived into the piano for guitar-like pings, and drummer Öström combined rifle-shot rim shots on his snare with wild dances across his cymbals. Among the tunes the trio used for its stunning performance were Monk's "Little Rootie Tootie" and an appropriately titled original, "The Chapel," for the session took place in the historic Oratorio Santa Cecilia, a centuries-old worshiping space.
One-night-only acts at the 4400-seat outdoor Giardini del Fronte included the Brad Mehldau, Ahmad Jamal, and Keith Jarrett trios; the John Scofield, Gato Barbieri-Enrico Rava, and Courtney Pine bands; the Wayne Shorter Acoustic Quartet; the Diane Reeves Quintet; Marc Ribot & Los Cubanos Postizos; Michel Camilo & Tomatito; Gilberto Gil and Milton Nascimento; and Paolo Conte's "Razmataz." No doubt about it, for this long-time observer of the European scene, other jazz festivals there would be hard put to knock Umbria Jazz out of first place. © 2001 W. Royal Stokes W. Royal Stokes is a contributor to the annual Down Beat Critics Poll and author of The Jazz Scene: An Informal History from New Orleans to 1990 (Oxford University Press, 1991), Swing Era New York: The Jazz Photographs of Charles Peterson (Temple University Press, 1994), and Living the Jazz Life: Conversations with Forty Musicians about Their Careers in Jazz (Oxford University Press, 2000). RETURN TO OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2001 MAIN INDEX © Kansas City Jazz Ambassadors 1996-2001. All rights reserved. |
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