Archive for the ‘Shanghai Jazz History’ Category

JZ Festival review: days 3 and 4

Sunday, October 7th, 2007

The JZ Festival came to a roaring close today, unfortunately with a much lower afternoon turnout due to the rain but once again a satisfying mix of music, fully dug by those of us who did attend. But I skip ahead–first back to details of yesterday’s festival.

Saturday

Saturday was a very successful day for the festival, drawing medium-sized crowds again in the afternoon and selling out completely the evening portion. The day started with E-Groove, a Shanghainese funk-fusion band who play a popular brand of original instrumental music a la ’80s Michael Brecker. These guys play a regular concert series at the Jin Mao concert hall, and can occasionally be seen featured at JZ Club. Following them was Islaja, a Finnish duo who used lots of loop-based soundscapes to support the female folk vocals. She played guitar, and there was a man who played bass, and he played lots more chordal stuff than traditional bass lines. It was a slightly psychedelic, soothing sort of Finnish folk.

After Islaja finished, things got crunchy when The Thing started playing. The Thing is a free-jazz trio with members from Norway and Sweden, consisting of drums, bass, and saxophone; and their music was raging and intense most of the time, not accessible to the average listener but I though they were quite interesting and creative. The saxophonist played baritone saxophone most of the time, except for when he busted out the slide saxophone. Though not very loud, the slide sax seemed perfect for this kind of music because it has such a unique sort of effect.

The final group yesterday afternoon was Mi Ni Ma, a trio of laptop-poking, dial-twisting electronica musicians. It was a fun set, sort of dub-influenced hip hop beats. I know there are lots of special descriptors for different types of electronic music, so I’m probably using the completely wrong words to describe this group’s music (and all the electronic music I’ve heard at this festival) but anyway they were great.

After the area was cleared and the hordes of teeny boppers came streaming in, the JZ All-star big band played their set to a completely packed house. It was an ingenious way to bring some jazz into the attention range of young locals who normally wouldn’t ever hear it, and in fact the group was very well received. Of course, the masses had arrived to hear Taiwanese pop artist Chen Qizhen sing and play her guitar. Unfortunately, I had to rush off to another gig myself so I wasn’t able to hear what her music was like. I’m sure it was great.

Sunday

The festival’s final day began with a rain shower, which is never a good way to start a festival day. Even though the rain abated by the time Frog’N'Stein started their 3pm set to open the afternoon’s shows, all the people who had intended to come to the festival looked out their windows at the cloudy skies and wet sidewalks and thought, “I have to work tomorrow”. So most of them didn’t show up, but the music refused to be quashed and continued through the afternoon and evening. The rain stayed away until about 7pm too, which meant that all those people could have come down and had a great time completely dry. Now they’ll have to wait till next year.

Frog’N'Stein is a French funk band, who got the party started as best they could with the limited partygoers. After their set we heard from Beijing’s electric jazz trio Dew, a tightly-coordinated unit headed by pianist Xia Jia. Then, Finnish DJ Vladislav Delay took over the smaller stage for a slightly shortened set of moody, dark electronic textures. Finishing up the afternoon was Yannick Rieu Trio, a Canadian group who we also heard at the Beijing jazz festival two weeks ago. Definitely one of the highlights of the festival, his group played a unique type of jazz replete with sensitivity and communication among the players. Although their instrumentation was the same as Saturday’s final afternoon trio (Sax, drums and bass) their musical style was totally different. It was very free, but not in the squawking, honking sense of the previous day’s trio. It was based in a harmonic framework as straight-ahead jazz is, but allowed to move in many different directions. They have played in Shanghai a few times before, so if you missed them this time keep an eye out for their next appearance in town, as they’re bound to come again.

And for a completely anti-climactic end to my story of the festival, I will admit that I don’t know what happened for the final evening’s performance. The rain started coming down as I left the venue to return a borrowed instrument, and that was right at the time when they would have started letting people into the venue to hear the final two acts–Shanghai Latin Project and Cui Jian. Were they rained out completely? Or did they persevere and rock through the rainstorm? The question remains for now. In any case, the JZ Festival went pretty darn well overall, and I’m proud of Ren and the crew who put it all together. It was better than last year’s in many ways, and hopefully next year it will be even better. The i-mart artists who sold their wares were a fantastic addition, and the location of the venue–while not a grassy park–offered a great selection of food options inside and outside the concerts. The New Factories is really shaping into a cool area, so hopefully this made a few more people aware of it. Overall, I call it a major success.

JZ Festival review: day 1

Friday, October 5th, 2007

The first day of the JZ Festival saw excellent weather, an interesting new venue for a music festival, and a wide range of music styles. It’s already made lots of improvements on last year’s festival at Fuxing park (except for the being held in a nice park with trees part) like slightly more food and drink selection and a great mass of artists selling cool stuff made themselves–like bags, jewelry, and kitschy animal-shaped gifts.  Also the weather being nice is already a massive improvement over last years threatening storm clouds.  Opening the festival at 3pm was Lawrence Ku’s septet, playing his own compositions and arrangements from the group’s recent release “Process”. The group has a well-developed modern jazz sound that unfortunately doesn’t get featured locally very often, even though all the players are locally based. After Lawrence’s band finished on the main stage, Susanna and her magic orchestra played on the second stage. She has a dreamy, floating sort of sound to her music, and her orchestra was a one-man synthesizer orchestra but quite effective all the same. She was the first group of three that were brought into the festival through NOTCH, the festival of Scandinavian music that has merged with the JZ festival this year. She and the group that followed her, Supersilent, both hail from Norway. Supersilent played on the main stage, and made a pretty amazing show that started out with industrial-sounding sample-based free improvisation. Then they moved into some dark realms of free experimental music that was like a continuous segue. Very creative and different from everything else at the festival. The fourth band, the Skull Defects, were also making some quite interesting music with some electronic sampling and improvisation. However, they were a bit more rock-based, using more continuous rhythmic elements and interesting instruments like a big plastic water jug with a mic stuffed in the hole to get a nice deep drum sound.

After these four bands finished the afternoon set, the venue was cleared for the evening sets which included Coco and his Possicobilities band, and Chinese pop-rock singer Lao Lang. Coco wowed the audience with his lilting vocals and creative arrangements as always, and Lao Lang got the numbers into the venue through his big name. He sounded good, but just like any other Chinese pop singer to me. I have heard that the next two evening sets have sold really well, I think they must be more well-known Chinese pop headliners. The jury is still out about how many people will show up for day 2, which competes with the Yue festival at Zhongshan park. We’ll see how it goes…hold your breath for tomorrow’s update…

The Blues Room now open on Tongren lu

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

Spearheaded by drummer Al Gordon, this new club is the latest addition to the Shanghai live jazz and blues scene.  It’s a funky little club, literally one room, but it’s a great space and the band is solid.  As the name implies, the place is not trying to be another jazz venue; rather they are concentrating on blues, funk, and soul music–and are starting and ending much later than most other venues.  Most nights the club will have live music starting around 11pm, with sets running through till 4am.  Al has joining him on guitar Eddie Goltz, who also is a great singer, and Peter Phillips from New York on the keyboards.  They are encouraging musicians to join them for jam sessions, which is why they intentionally start the gig so late.

The place is serving down-home Southern style soul food, from chitlins to collard greens.  They also have a pretty full selection of bottled and draft beers, and of course a full standard bar.  Come down and check it out, by the time I write this the new sign should be up outside.  It’s located in the same building as the City Diner, on the ground floor (where Eat Drink Man Woman, the Taiwanese restaurant was).  That’s just on the corner of Tongren lu and Nanjing lu.

First JazzArt concert a massive success

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

The Boys on stageThe JazzArt concert series got off to a fantastic start with a packed house enjoying two sets of Lawrence Ku’s original music on this past Sunday. His group of seven musicians featured the cream of the crop on the Shanghai jazz scene, nearly all of whom are also faculty at the JZ school – including EJ Parker, Alec Haavik, Andy Hunter, Chris Trzcinski, me, Lawrence himself, as well as the amazing Beijing-based pianist XiaJia. The concert was held at the TwoCities art gallery on Moganshan lu, and was a perfect room for the band to play in. It’s just the right size for that kind of ensemble, because we didn’t have to use microphones at all. In fact the only amplification used was for the bass and guitar, and it was minimal.

The gallery had a gorgeous ceramics exhibition happening at the time, so during the break, before and after the concert, everyone had a chance to enjoy some cool modern art that fit the cool modern music closely. Unfortunately there was one guy who thought the patterned square tiles exhibited against white sand on the floor were floor tiles. Please folks, at the next concert do your best to refrain from stepping on the art.

The audience was super as well, the packed-full room engrossed in Lawrence’s extended compositions for two entire sets with minimal noise or conversation. It was an exquisite feeling actually, something that I have not enjoyed as a musician for a long time; it certainly inspired all the musicians to play even more superbly than usual.

The group has a rare month this May, because normally it doesn’t get to perform more than once every couple months (if that). This month however, the group has at least 4 shows. We played at the Shanghai jazz fest, this concert, then the group’s CD release concert/party at JZ on Thursday the 24th, and the Beijing jazz festival a couple days later. If you miss all these chances to hear the group, at least you will be able to buy the CD, entitled “Process,” at JZ Club (or directly from Lawrence) after the 24th.

Many of us at JZ School helped make the concert a success, but none more so than Marketing Manager Cathy Wang, who organized the concept and has worked for weeks to line up sponsors, venues, and publicity for the 6-month series. Sponsors for the event (and for the continuing series) include Torres Wine, who brought some delectable South American wines for the listeners to enjoy this time; AEE shoes, who are the gold sponsor for the entire series- which means they are covering much of the cost of paying the musicians; and That’s Shanghai magazine, the exclusive media sponsor who has generously given the school a full page ad in this month’s magazine, and others who I can’t remember just now.

The next concert in the series will feature the Steve Sweeting trio, which is him on piano, Scott Dodd on bass, and Ronnie Williams on drums. Every concert is held on the afternoon of the second Sunday of each month, so the next one will be on June 10 at 3pm. Almost every concert is held at a different art gallery, so the next one will be at number D, a gallery next to Suzhou creek. The exception is another concert at TwoCities — because they were the original gallery to feature jazz (the TwoCities in tune concert series) and also just because it’s a great room for jazz. They have a piano, and quite a nice one at that, so it makes the space even more attractive from a musical standpoint. So we hope to see you at some or all of the upcoming shows!

Photo credit Cecile Renault Copyright 2007