Pianist McCoy Tyner |
Tyner’s set lived up
to its high billing. Before Tyner called up Glover, his trio had the crowd juiced and the stage hot as French fry grease. The trio and Glover clicked immediately. Tyner and Glover traded like tenor saxophonists in an
old-school cutting contest. In all the years I have covered the Detroit Jazz
Festival, I never witnessed the crowd go completely nuts midway through each number. Glover was tap dancing so fast I thought his tap-shoes
were going to catch fire.
I lost count of the
ovations Glover received. After the third number, the drummer, the
bassist and Glover left the stage. I figured to give his feet a must needed coffee
break. Tyner played solo, settling down the crowd with a ballad played lovingly like the ballads he performed on his album “Nights of Ballads and Blues”. The
performance was the most exciting performance I have experience at the Detroit Jazz Festival in years.
Vocalist Cecile McLorin Salvant set at the Amphitheater was also
highly anticipated. It followed
Tyner’s performance. In 2010, Salvant won the Thelonious
Monk International Vocalist Competition. Since the win, she has received a lot of good
press. “Woman Child,” her debut for Mack Avenue Records is glorious. It is the best
jazz album by a vocalist I have experienced so far this year. I’m a fan of
Salvant. It pains me to write her performance with the David Berger Jazz
Orchestra was stiff.
Berger is a seasoned arranger. He wrote the arrangements for the performance. It was Salvant’s first shot at an international jazz festival performing with an orchestra. Frankly, she seemed as if she could not get into the arrangements. I wondered if headlining an international jazz festival this early in her career was too much of an undertaking. At age 23, she has not accumulated a lot of frequent flier miles as a bandleader or as a headliner. And her inexperience showed.
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