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| Pianist Geri Allen |
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| Pianist Geri Allen |
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| Pianist Jason Moran |
Jason Moran and Jeff Mills
with special guest Jessica Care Moore (Friday Carhartt
Amphitheater Stage)
I believed wholeheartedly
this opening night performance was one of the more inventive in recent years
and set the tone for how special this year’s Detroit jazz fest was going to be.
Moran is a worldwind force in jazz, Mill is one of the founding fathers of
Techno music, and Moore is one of the best writers Detroit has ever produced.
Mixing their respective talents was pure delight. And Moore’s culturally and
politically conscious poems mixed beautifully with the improvisational magic
Moran and Mills created.
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Listening to Potter’s
Saturday afternoon set, I couldn’t help thinking about something that
saxophonist Sonny Rollins told me. That you must be an exceptional musician to
play in a band without a pianist. No one in their right mind would argue that
Potter, Brewer, and Scott aren’t world-class jazz musicians who could swing in
whatever musical situation they are in. A whole lot of swinging was exactly
what the Potter trio served up, moving proficiently from standards to original
material. Potter is a tenor saxophonist with a
substantial discography and mastery of his instrument. Solo after solo, Potter
gobbled up the music changes like Halloween candy.
| Pianist Kenny Barron |
Kenny Barron is one of the
best jazz pianists in the history of jazz, and he doesn’t need to bring any
extras during a performance because his playing is so soul-grabbing that any
extras are overkill. For his Detroit fest performance, Barron offered more than
himself this time around. He introduced to the jazz fest a magnificent young
vocalist named Tyreek McDole, who had the audience eating out of his hands a
short time after he began singing. Two of my jazz friends, Ronald Lockett and
Debbie Tent, implored me to catch this set, and I'm glad that I listened to
them. Barron, of course, was amazing, and McDole's mature and enticing voice
melted in the audience’s ears.
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| Pianist Hiromi |
Hiromi’s performance was a fitting follow-up to Jason Moran’s opening night set, although it wasn’t designed to be. Hiromi is an energetic pianist and a creative dynamo, rare these days in jazz circles. She raced up and down the piano like a madwoman, even at times banging the keys with her elbows. Her brand of swing may not appeal to the average jazz purist, but it would appeal to a listener searching for a pianist who is comfortable swinging outside the lines.
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| Vocalist Joan Belgrave |
This set was a beautifully
produced homage to four jazz vocalists who had a lasting impact on the music. And a
tribute of this magnitude could have only been pulled off by vocalists who also profoundly impacted the music: Joan Belgrave, Joan Crawford, Diane Mathis, and
Tonya Hood. The wonderful thing about this set was that neither of the
vocalists attempted to emulate the style of the vocalists they were honoring.
Belgrave, Crawford, Mathis, and Hood brought their own uniqueness to the songs
that Ella, Nancy, Dinah, and Etta immortalized. This set was unadulterated
vocal jazz at its absolute finest.
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| Saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin |
I had my fingers crossed
for years that the organizers of the Detroit jazz fest would book saxophonist
Lakecia Benjamin. I have experienced her twice before in Detroit. The last time
at a church. She couldn’t cut loose like she usually does. I felt the Detroit
jazz fest would be a good place for her to be herself, and her Sunday afternoon
set didn’t disappoint. She opened the set with an ode to John Coltrane, nearly
blowing the sun out of the sky. Then she moved to selections from her
Grammy-nominated albums. The best part of the set was her band stretching out
on “My Favorite Things” and the dynamic exchange between Benjamin and drummer
Terreon Gully, a newcomer to her band.
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| Pianist Jason Moran |
For the past few years,
pianist Jason Moran has been immersed in the music of Duke Ellington, and he
let the Detroit jazz festival audience in on the extent of his immersion with
Ellington's music by performing many of Ellington’s signature compositions with
the Detroit Jazz Festival Collegiate Jazz Orchestra. In the hands of Moran and the collegiate musicians, Ellington's music was
expertly performed, and it was good to hear the next generation swing their way
through the music. The highlight of the set was the orchestra burning through
Ellington’s “Bragging in Brass.” Jason was so taken with how the orchestra
handled that complicated piece, Moran surprised the orchestra and the audience
by having the orchestra perform it again.
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| Pianist Omar Saso |
Pianist Omar Sosa is the
reigning king of Afro-Cuban jazz, and he proved why that title is apropos. Sosa
had the piano sweating like a personal trainer. Sosa delivered an hour-plus of
feel-good swing.
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| The Branford Marsalis Quartet |
This was Marsalis' first
set at the Detroit jazz festival in 15 years. It was a set that I’ve seen
Marsalis deliver many times, and yet his band pianist, Joey Calderazzo, bassist
Eric Revis, and drummer Justin Faulkner never disappoint. The set opened with
“The Mighty Sword” followed.
by “There’s No Sweet Man
Worth the Salt of My Tears.” Here’s where you get to see the best pianist and
drummer duo in the business show their ass. Witnessing
the two music soulmates trading is always engaging. Marsalis surprised the
audience by inviting Lakecia Benjamin to join his band. I thought Benjamin
needed at least 24 hours to recover from her thunderous set.