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PORTLAND JAZZ FESTIVAL: Taking stock

by Tom D'Antoni on March 2, 2010

Read OMN’s daily coverage of the Festival.

Opinion

Yes, it was smaller by half, but so is the economy. That we had a Portland Jazz Festival at all is a good thing. That they sold out seven of the eight major events says a lot for Portland. The only one that didn’t sell out was Dave Douglas at the Crystal Ballroom on Sunday night, ending the Festival.

Someone wondered if they had flip-flopped Pharoah Sanders and Douglas, with Sanders at night and Douglas in the afternoon, they might have sold them all out. That’s interesting speculation, but the truth is that there weren’t that many seats left at the Crystal.

Is Jazz Dead? Or has it moved to a new address? — A bogus question

I understand why it was chosen as a topic of discussion for the lead Jazz Conversation and as a sub-theme for the Festival. The question causes Jazz fans to become indignant, to point fingers and grumble, “Of course, it isn’t dead. What a dumb question.”

It is a dumb question and was written to sell books for Stuart Nicholson, the author who posed it. It is a naked straw man, but marketing is marketing. A little controversy sells, bogus or not.

So the straw man turned out to be the burning man of the Festival, set ablaze by the music, local and national and international. But it was still a straw man. It was an exercise designed to have a happy ending. That it did is hard to complain about.

Those Norwegians

Frode Haltli PJF photo by Fran Kaufman

I must admit that I was one of the multitude who said, “Say what?” when they announced that three Norwegian bands were going to be in the Festival. Three? Really? Norwegians? Puzzled looks all over town.

On second thought, this guy Bill Royston has brought in some amazing talent, musicians like Cecil Taylor and Ornette Coleman, folks we never ever thought we’d get to see in Puddletown. He had the balls to feature ECM throughout an entire Festival! Maybe we should trust him on this? But three bands from Norway?

While they did not provide my top three moments at the Festival, I noted this, “For first-time listeners to In The Country, there may have come a time after a tune or two when it dawned on them, ‘This is what ECM sounds like.’ The landmark label is known for (the teeth-gritting title) “Chamber Jazz.” It has documented many bands like the Norwegians in the Festival this year.

“What’s happy about the sudden realization that you’re hearing ‘ECM’ is that there’s an accompanying thought, ‘I never get to hear this in Portland.’”

On Festival Friday, Tim DuRoche wrote a story on OMN, Norwegian Would: Why Globalism is Good for Jazz in which he said:

…if we limit Jazz’s definition to Crouch et al’s monoculture, conservative, blues-based, swinging model then we do a disservice to the future of the music, and we choke jazz in the same way that Bush/Rove suffocated democracy, one of our other great ‘gifts’ to the world.

About Seim and Haltli, I wrote, “The audience stayed absolutely silent for the next 25 or so minutes as the two were a living example of the old ECM slogan, “The most beautiful sound next to silence.”

Holding the Norwegian’s performances in Norse Hall was cute and quaint and totally appropriate.

Whether or not they took you to the same place you go when you hear Fables of Faubus, or My Favorite Things, or a seductive Brazilian Bossa Nova or the brilliance of Dave Douglas is not the point. They took you somewhere you might not have ever been, and I don’t mean Norway.

That’s what this Festival has always been about.

Images that won’t go away

Pharoah Sanders

Pharoah Sanders at the Newmark. PJF photo by Fran Kaufman

  • Dancing onstage, including that deep knee bend. We were all hoping he would make it to his feet. He did.
  • Faking us out with two melodic pieces at the beginning of his set. The guy next to me grumbled, “He didn’t sound like this in the sixties.” I replied, “Well, maybe he don’t feel that way anymore…anyway COLTRANE sounded like that!”
  • Hearing him playing out and knowing that he’s welcome to do any damned thing he likes.
  • Wishing there had been a more skillful interviewer at the Jazz Conversation.
  • Pharoah and Nancy King sitting together for the first time in fifty years over dinner at Typhoon.
  • Devin Phillips, after playing with his idol, telling me he was going to, “Go home and sit on the sofa and think about what I just did.”
  • The inevitable wonder if this might be the last time.

Mingus Big Band

Handy solos. PJF photo by Fran Kaufma

  • That they could be so passionate and play so hard after having spent so much time and energy trying to get out of New York in a blizzard and arriving too late for a sound check.
  • Sound person Shira Otchis of She Rock Sound who dialed them in on the fly.
  • Seeing drummer Justin Faulkner for the first time. Yes, he bangs too much, and lacks subtlety at age 18, but am I going to argue with Craig Handy, Sue Mingus, Branford Marsalis and Pharoah Sanders, all of whom have him in their bands? No, I’m not.

Portland Jazz Composer’s Orchestra

Andrew Oliver conducts

  • Dan Duval’s amazing composition, Jive Cactus, which followed no one’s rules.
  • Sam Howard’s titanic, Mingus-like Courage Like a Mountain, which I didn’t realize was Mingus-like until I heard him talk about Mingus at the Jazz Conversation. I’m not sure he realized it either.

Dave Holland

  • Walking the bass and conjuring the spirit of Leroy Vinnegar.

Foreground: Kikoski and Grant. L-R Nastos sax, Newton trumpet, Hunter trombone, Moore bass. PJF photo by Fran Kaufman

The Jams

  • Darrell Grant holding things together, playing beautifully and swinging madly.
  • The playing and singing of Amazing Grace for Dick Bogle, who passed away on the eve of the Festival.
  • Robert Moore singing the lyrics to Blue Monk.
  • Craig Handy bending over and reaching every soul with a lengthy alto solo.
  • The young woman from Amsterdam who tried to decorate my hat with a toothpick.
  • David Ornette Cherry dragging the room into singing Malinyea…and finally the room responding as it should.
  • The Norwegians trying to figure out Witchi-Tai-To.
  • Discovering players you’ve never seen anywhere else before, like saxophonist Julian Jacobs.

ETC.

  • Hearing David Friesen’s Charles Mingus stories, including the one about the first time he met the man and Mingus kissed him on the cheek and told him how much he loved Friesen’s playing.
  • Wondering why there was no place for Gordon Lee, Thara Memory, Nancy King, Glen Moore, Scott Steed, Mel Brown, John Stowell, Dan Balmer, Renato Caranto, Phil Baker, Reggie Houston and many other Portland Jazz virtuosi at this year’s Festival.
  • Realizing what a hard-working bunch of folks there are who actually making the Festival function.
  • Just being in audiences who love the music and all of us feeling the inspiration at the same time.
  • Being just as thrilled by the OMN writers who covered the Festival as I was with the music. Jack Berry, Tim DuRoche, Don Campbell and Angela Allen gave us unprecedented, full daily coverage…previews, reviews, flavor and substance. I’m so proud. I’ve said this before, but quoting David Bromberg, “I always like to have a guitar player in my band who plays better than me.” I love my band.
  • And those are just a few of the images that stay with me. My fingers are done wore out.


10 Responses to “PORTLAND JAZZ FESTIVAL: Taking stock”

  1. Yeah, had the switched Dave and Pharoah, I may have (ill-advisedly) missed Pharoah. Dave was the main draw of the Fest for me, but the three shows I caught were utterly gorgeous. I’m glad Alaska/Horizon, US Bank, et cetera all stepped in and saved the fest.

    Great recap. Looking forward to next year. I may move up to Portland for the week. :)

    ~Dan

  2. [...] And if you missed it, check out my reviews for Dave Holland Quintet (2/27), Pharoah Sanders (2/28), and Dave Douglas & Brass Ecstasy (2/28).  It was a truly fantastic weekend.  Also check out Oregon Music News’ complete coverage… [...]

  3. jim olding jim olding says:

    decent wrap tom, but really, is that all you have to say about the dave holland quintet here? that concert left me so pleasantly unhinged that i’ve had 2 sleepless nights since then! the jams, both nights, are sure to become a part of local jazz lore for years to come! i also was impressed by the late-evening sets in the sometimes-acoustically-problematical Art Bar; namely the farnell newton/marcus reynolds group on fri. & quadrophonnes on sat.: both sterling & highly professional presentations! and a VERY honorable mention to clay giberson & john nastos for their well-polished improv chops (is that an oxymoron?) on display @ the riverplace; it chewed up some time getting down & back, but it was well worth every minute i spent there!

  4. tomd Tom D'Antoni says:

    Jim, dude, After writing around 10,000 words over a 7 day period. I was plumb wrote out.

  5. jim olding jim olding says:

    plenary indulgence granted tom! having indulged in all the festival proceedings much more than i did, you earned an “i feel your pain” from me! (sweet ‘tho, ain’t it?) we old farts need some kinda “jazz viagra” pill for these sort of events, one that would give us endless stamina, multiply-attentive ears, & the ability to be in 4 places at once; not to mention the time to reflect on it all & still be able to write a coherent sentence! i know i’m not the same guy who devoured the vancouver fest thru most of the ’90s, hitting 5 or 6 venues every day, often all 10 of those days, from noon ’til dawn; usually w/ a “crash” course @ the Bert Wilson Conservatory of Non-stop Jazz in olympia on the way home. ah, those were some days!!

  6. Salvey Salvey says:

    Remember now Tom, Jazz Viagra. Brilliant answer for the OMN Jazz Stud. Pat yourself on the back for your prolific, funny and insightful coverage this week.

  7. lexpdx lexpdx says:

    Hey, Tom: Great Coverage of an extremely worthwhile event. You did not mention the killer set by Eugene’s Joe Manis and his trio at Rontoms on Sunday night. Joe told me that this was his first show in Portland, although two of his bandmates live up here. Anyway, the trio (Joe on sax, Dave Captien on bass, Kevin Congleton on drums) just tore the place up. Kudos also to organizer, Ben Darwish, and Rontoms for hosting their First Ever jazz show! Look for Joe Manis playing again up here sometime. Any jazz bookers out there, take a listen to his recordings.

  8. Jack Berry Jack Berry says:

    You worked your ass off. Portland has never had this kind of jazz coverage. They better be a payback.

  9. Matt Miner Matt Miner says:

    tTom: True, There were not enough places for many local jazz heroes in the festival. But the really sad thing is that they’re not presented often enough year-round, so that the festival can stay focused on bringing us sounds we can’t otherwise hear without leaving town.

  10. Thanks Oregon Music News, particularly Tom D’Antoni, for hoofing it all over town and capturing the 2010 Portland Jazz Festival experience. I hope this year’s success (selling out seven of eight performances) demonstrates that there is an audience for jazz in Portland, particularly jazz that is reaching into the future and the past, and creating something wholly new.


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tomd Tom D'Antoni
http://www.oregonmusicnews.com

Tom is Editor-In-Chief of Oregon Music News. He has worked in network and local TV as a producer/reporter including Oregon Art Beat and Inside Edition. He has written for national magazines and many newspapers, most recently Huffington Post and The Oregonian. He has network and local radio experience and currently hosts a show every Wednesday from 2-6pm on KMHD .