Baritone saxophonist Alex Harding |
The baritone saxophonist Alex Harding
has finally returned to his native Detroit after many years on the road working
with marquee jazz acts such as of Julius
Hemphill, the Mingus Big Band, and Roy Hargrove, and becoming a constant force
on New York’s jazz scene where his reputation as a top commodity was cemented
years ago. To celebrate Harding's homecoming,
an organization called Celebrate Detroit, run by jazz supporter Rev. Daniel Aldridge, threw a two-hour tribute for Harding
at the St. Matthew’s & St. Joseph’s Episcopal Church Sunday afternoon that
was fit for royalty. The tribute was hosted by the popular jazz radio
personality Maxine Michaels, and Harding performed with three of his groups, opening the program with a terrific duo
with drummer Leonard King, who played brilliantly on each number he soloed on.
Next Harding played with a quartet trombonist Vincent Chandler, bassist Rocco
Popielarski, and King again on drums. The quartet cooked on a mix of originals
and standards such as Thelonious Monk’s “Evidence” and Horace Silver’s
“Peace”. On those cuts, Harding’s and
Chandler’s virtuosity as soloists were on full display. Harding has a gorgeous tone on the baritone, and he has a
knack for making the horn sound, at any given moment, like a tenor sax. At key
moments of the concert, Harding appeared to have channeled the ghosts of
baritone sax Gods Pepper Adams and Harry Carney, clearly two of Harding’s chief
influences. Harding and Chandler on the frontline proved to be the perfect match.
Chandler is unquestionably among the top
tier trombonist in jazz, proving that when the zoom lens was put on him. In the second set, Harding performed with his
Organ Nation trio drummer Djallo Dakate and the always soulful organist Jim
Alfredson. Alfredson had his organ howling and the church walls sweating.
Harding closed the program by calling back on stage all the musicians, and letting
them run buck wild on the Meters’ classic “Cissy Strut”. The musicians showed out on that number. It was questionable if the musicians had forgotten
they were in a church. Harding ended with a touching original “Spirit Take My Hand” that he composed for his deceased
grandmother and father. The two-hour concert was flawless with each musician
playing as if it was their last performance on earth. It’s encouraging when an
organization such as Celebrate Detroit recognize accomplished Detroit jazz
musicians while they’re still alive and swinging.
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