Mark Lockheart, Kings Place | reviews, news & interviews
Mark Lockheart, Kings Place
Mark Lockheart, Kings Place
The saxophonist's Ellington homage casts a warm glow over Hall Two
Suddenly, it's raining Duke Ellington homages. Stateside, there's Terri Lyne Carrington's Money Jungle: Provocative in Blue, a brilliant reimagining of Ellington's classic 1963 trio recording with Charles Mingus and Max Roach that recently hit the top spot on the JazzWeek radio chart.
Last night, a capacity Kings Place audience heard another outstanding contribution to this welcome wave of Ellingtonia: the London launch of saxophonist and composer Mark Lockheart's latest project, Ellington in Anticipation. An erstwhile member of the great Loose Tubes and a current mainstay of Mercury-nominated Polar Bear, Lockheart is one of the most consistently inventive musicians on the British jazz scene.
His treatment ranged from the reverential to the iconoclastic
A fan of Ellington's music since childhood – as a fresh faced 12-year-old he saw Duke's band play in Eastbourne – his treatment of some of the best loved themes in jazz ranged from the reverential to the iconoclastic. The familiar refrain of “It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)” was cast in a fetching new rhythmic and harmonic light, while “Satin Doll” morphed to such an extent that it became an entirely new piece, “Jungle Lady”.
In the magical transition from free time to pulse in “Come Sunday”, the textural doublings of “Creole Love Call” and the bringing together of the familiar with the freshly invented throughout, the subtleties of Lockheart's writing were everywhere in evidence. With its striking sonorities and rhythmic trickery, “Take The 'A' Train” perhaps came closest to an all-out Loose Tubes treatment. The chugging standstill at the end was a particularly Tubesesque detail.
From the rhythmic punch and pinpoint dynamic contrasts provided by fellow Polar Bear members Tom Herbert (bass) and Seb Rochford (drums), the delicate shadings of pianist Liam Noble, the countermelodic interest and powerful soloing of Finn Peters (alto sax, flute) and James Allsop (clarinets), plus the burnished legato and glacial harmonics of viola player Margrit Hasler, Lockheart's exceptional septet negotiated the intricacies of his arrangements with an almost nonchalant ease.
We were also treated to a number of arresting new Lockheart compositions from Ellington in Anticipation, of which “Uptown” possessed a jauntiness that bordered on effrontery. A feature for pianist Noble, “Beautiful Man” found the composer at his balladic best.
In the encore, “Indian Summer”, the luxuriant, carefully blended chords in saxes and flute cast a warm glow over the entire hall, even as the howling wind made its presence felt outside. Music-making of this calibre is rare indeed.
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Comments
Love of the Duke shone
Hi Andy, Yes, completely