Category Archives: GIGS

Images of and thoughts about jazz gigs at Melbourne venues

James Sherlock joins Sonya Veronica

Sonya Veronica

Sonya Veronica will perform at Dizzy's on Friday

COMING GIG: 9pm, Friday, July 8, Dizzy’s Jazz Club, 381 Burnley St, Richmond

Sonya Veronica vocals, James Sherlock guitar, Howard Cairns double bass and Gideon Marcus drums.

Sonya Veronica has requested that Ausjazz blog mention her performance on Friday night at Dizzy’s.

Ausjazz blog has yet to catch Sonya in performance, but the names Howard Cairns and James Sherlock are a great recommendation that this will be a gig worth attending.

Something We Know, which is a website everyone ought to know for all the jazz gigs around town, has this to say:

“Singing is Sonya Veronica’s first love and jazz is her second. With her distinct voice and passionate interpretation Sonya will be singing from well-known to obscure jazz standard to chanson française”.

Contact Dizzy’s Jazz Club (03) 9428 1233 or email dizzys@dizzys.com.au for bookings. Tickets: $20/16.

SHAMELESS PUBLICITY FOR COLLIDER

Collider @ La Mama Musica, 205 Faraday St, Carlton, Monday, June 20, at 7.30pm
Shared Obsessions

Kynan Robinson trombone, Adam Simmons tenor sax, Andrea Keeble violin, Jason Bunn viola, Ronny Ferella drums, Anita Hustas double bass

Collider

Collider

Ausjazz blog’s take on Collider: “This was really visceral music and its effect was felt physically. The combination of instruments provided a timbre-laden treat that would gladden the heart of a Tasmanian conservationist or an Orbost logger, or both.”

Collider’s take on Collider: “A truly eclectic Melbourne ensemble, part jazz group, part string ensemble and part wind band.  Collectively the members of Collider occupy almost all facets of the Melbourne music scene, from the MSO, to the Make It Up Club.”

This program will showcase new material composed by four Collider members — Ronny Ferella, Anita Hustas, Andrea Keeble and Jason Bunn. Five new works will be premiered in “Shared Obsessions”:

Valiant Obsession (Jason Bunn): Inspired by a track from the Punch Brothers,
where a seemingly random violin tone was woven into a crackin tune (“Me and
Us”, from “Antifogmatic”, 2010). Each instrument is given a short tone
row, first set over a John Adams-esque driving accompaniment, then expanded
to allow each player to explore the improvisational possibilities of their
tone row, both individually and in combination.

Peteliske  (Anita Hustas): (pronounced peh-teh-lish-keh) means butterfly in
the Lithuanian language. This piece is inspired by the ancient Lithuanian
song form ‘Sutartine’ which is a polyphonic mantra like vocal chant.

Cloud Shaped Thought (Anita Hustas): based on the poem Cloud Shaped Thought by Lidjia Simkute.

Both Peteliske and Cloud Shaped Thought are performed from graphic scores
created especially for Collider.

Shrouded History (Ronny Ferella): A three-part work inspired by the drumming and singing of the Santeria religion (a religion found in Cuba that combines West African religious traditions with Catholicism)

Fly (Andrea Keeble): Inspired by musician/composer John Zorn and explores
eastern European folk influences.

VOCALIST WITH A NEW YORK STATE OF MIND

Jennifer Szelag on piano and vocals, Uptown Jazz Cafe, Fitzroy on June 15, 2011

Jennifer Szelag

Debut album on the way: Jennifer Szelag performs with Franky Rousseau

The intimate venue and soft lighting at Uptown always suit a solo performance. Visiting Canadian vocalist Jennifer Szelag did not disappoint the audience, which was heavy with professional musicians as she opened the set with Dear Harvey, an original she wrote as a letter that was never sent.

Szelag is one of those artists who wears her heart on her sleeve. Her emotion flows with ease from her lyrics, delivered with affecting simplicity and accompanied only by the notes of the upright piano — a recent and welcome addition at Uptown.

At 26, Szelag is a seasoned performer who travelled with a children’s choir while growing up in Canada and providing backing vocals for Celine Dion. She has come a long way from those days of singing in French in church choirs, having completed seven years of music study including a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the New York School for Jazz and Contemporary Music. In recent years the vocalist, who cites Neil Young, Joni Mitchell and Icelandic music as strong influences, has concentrated on developing her songwriting skills and plans to launch her debut album in the new year at Joe’s Pub in downtown Manhattan.

Used to playing gigs with Canadian guitarist Franky Rousseau, who is from Montreal, Szelag seemed at home on piano and sang with passion and an obvious delight in the songs she delivered at Uptown, which included Marooned (about abandonment), a cover of Neil Young’s Helpless (which Szelag described as a tongue-in-cheek tilt at Canadian politics), Let Me Go and Q&A, which was written about a bike ride across Canada.

I am always up front about not being a big fan of singers, but Szelag’s vocal style — displaying a mix of pop, rock, folk and electronica — is easy to like and has a refreshingly honest feel.

Szelag told the audience that while in Melbourne she would be playing with with guitarist Tim Jago, drummer Ben Vanderwal and bassist Sam Anning, so keep your ear to the ground to catch this visiting Canadian before she makes it big in New York City.

ROGER MITCHELL

JACAM MANRICKS RETURNS WITH LINDA OH

Jacam Manricks

Jacam Manricks (Picture supplied)

Before you get your hopes up, saxophonist Jacam Manricks is returning from New York only during his tour, but he’s in Melbourne on Sunday night at Bennetts Lane.

The line-up is exciting, especially as bassist Linda Oh (who was born in Malaysia, studied in Perth and went to Manhattan School of Music in New York) will be visiting for the first time since her hit performances at Wangaratta Festival of Jazz in 2009.

Linda Oh at Wangaratta Festival of Jazz 2009

Linda Oh at Wangaratta Festival of Jazz 2009

Jacam Manricks Quartet’s Australia/New Zealand tour to promote the album Trigonometry will feature Linda Oh bass, Eric McPherson drums, Jackson Harrison piano and Jacam Manricks sax & compositions.

The Australian tour dates are as follows:

Fri-May 27: Brisbane-Valley Jazz Festival at the Judith Wright Center (420 Brunswick St Fortitude Valley) 7:30pm
Sat-May 28: Gold Coast-Arts Center (135 Bundall Road, Surfers Paradise) 7.30pm
Sun-May 29: Melbourne-Bennetts Lane Jazz Club (Bennetts Lane Melbourne) 8pm
Mon-May 30: Melbourne- Oakland Studios (Workshop) (14A Metropolitan Ave Nunawading) 6-8pm
Fri-June 3: Darwin-Darwin Entertainment Center, Studio Concert 8pm
Sat-June 4: Sydney-The Sound Lounge, Seymour Centre (Cleveland Street, Sydney) Concert 8pm
Sun-June 5: Canberra -University of Canberra Concert NATSEM building (University Drive South at UC) 6pm
Mon-June 6: Adelaide- The Wheatsheaf Hotel (39 George St, Thebarton Adelaide) 8pm
Wed-June 8: Hobart- Conservatorium Recital Hall, Tasmania University 5 Sandy Bay Rd Hobart 8pm

ROGER MITCHELL

Sonya Veronica @ Dizzy’s

Sonya Veronica

Poster for Sonya Veronica

COMING GIG: 8pm, Thursday, March 31, Dizzy’s Jazz Club, 381 Burnley St, Richmond

Sonya Veronica vocals, Mark Fitzgibbon piano, Howard Cairns double bass and Raj Jayaweera drums.

Sonya Veronica has requested that Ausjazz blog mention her debut performance at Dizzy’s, which she says will be “a combination of jazz standards and a few chanson Francaise, like Léo Ferré’s Avec Le Temps“.

ABC Jazz includes in her repertoire for the night Miles Davis’s Seven Steps to Heaven, Billy Strayhorn’s A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing and Piaf’s La Vie En Rose.

On the gig guide Something We Know listing, Veronica says, “We’ll be playing from bebop style Pennies From Heaven to Cole Porter’s You’ll Be So Nice To Come Home To and curve it to Piaf’s La Vie En Rose.

Contact Dizzy’s Jazz Club (03) 9428 1233 or email dizzys@dizzys.com.au for bookings. Tickets: $15/12.

GIGS NOT TO MISS 3 — TUESDAY

Tuesday, March 22 at 9pm, Bennetts Lane, Melbourne

CALLUM G’FROERER QUARTET

Callum G'Froerer

Callum G'Froerer at Wangaratta 2010 with Johannes Leubbers Dectet

Perth-based trumpet player Callum G’Froerer leads a new quartet featuring Brett Thompson (Perth) on guitar, Alex Boneham (Sydney) on bass and Hugh Harvey (Melbourne) on drums.

We had two glimpses of Callum G’Froerer in 2010. In July he was with the Mace Francis Orchestra at Bennetts Lane, his solos featuring in There’s Nothing to Say, The Preacher is Broken and Pine Tree Blisters. Then, with the Johannes Luebbers Dectet, he played St Patrick’s Hall in the opening night of Wangaratta Jazz in October. The dectet’s performance was a highlight of the festival, and I noted at the time the “richly expressive trumpet” of G’Froerer and that his solo in Just Ripe was “capable of melting the hardest of hearts”.

For more details of G’Froerer’s musical journey so far, which has include time last year at Banff Centre Workshop for Jazz and Improvised Music, visit his website.

I’m looking forward to hearing this quartet from Perth, Melbourne and Sydney play compositions inspired by a trip to the US and Banff, as well as selections from G’Froerer and Brett Thompson’s collaborative work from 2009 based on the life of Robert Johnson.

As well as the performance on Tuesday, the quartet will play on March 24 at 8.30pm at Vibe On Smith St for a “Special Thursday” show. Entry: $10.

Callum G'Froerer

Callum G'Froerer (trumpet) in Mace Francis Orchestra

Something we just heard …

GIGS COMING UP

If you’ve been to that great source of live music Something We Know, you’ll know most of what’s happening about town in Melbourne. But in case you have not heard, Blip is in town and has a few gigs. Here’s the info:

blip

saturday, 19th march
jim denley – wind instruments
mike majkowski – double bass + objects
avant whatever presents: blip ‘calibrated’ official melbourne album launch gig.
(the night also features rod cooper solo, rosalind hall/alice hui-sheng chang & robbie avenaim solo)
@ art beat – 211a Victoria st North Melbourne 8pm.

blip + dale gorfinkel & joe talia
solo @ tape projects

sunday 20th march
1/81 bouverie st, melbourne.
7:30pm.

blip + robbie avenaim @ monkey

monday 21st march
181 st georges rd, north fitzroy.
7:30pm.

blip + cor fuhler (guitar) @ make it up club

tuesday 22nd march
(the night also features steve heather/david tolley/ren walters & james mclean/jon smeathers/sam zerna).
bar open – 317 brunswick st, fitzroy.
8:30pm

GIGS NOT TO MISS 2 — SUNDAY

Sunday, March 20 at 9pm, Bennetts Lane, Melbourne

Marinucci/Gould/Manins

Marinucci, Gould, Manins

Tony Gould, Imogen Manins and Gianni Marinucci at Stonnington Jazz,

Gianni Marinucci trumpet and flugelhorn, Tony Gould piano and Imogen Manins cello

Sundays used to be days of worship and reverence for many of us, and the chords and melodies of hymns are deeply embedded in our musical memory banks. Many of us have left that music behind in the process of shedding beliefs, but the beauty and mystery and — it often seemed — the rich exultation and sadness have left their mark, even if at times it shows mostly in an imperative to find alternatives that are challenging, dissonant or provocative.

Marinucci, Gould and Manins are not inviting us to worship, but they may well inspire us to reverence with the beauty of their playing and allow us to sink deeply into the luxurious timbres of their instruments.

I don’t know what this trio will be playing, but I don’t expect it to be at all jarring or hard to take. This Sunday could well be a time for quiet reverence. No drums, no bass; just the mingling voices of these three instruments (well, four if you count Gianni’s two horns).

GIGS NOT TO MISS 1 — TONIGHT

Saturday, March 19 at 9pm, Uptown Jazz Cafe, Brunswick St, Fitzroy

INSIDE OUT — CD launch

Paul Williamson

Paul Williamson at Uptown with Eugene Ball for Trumpet Armageddon

Paul Williamson trumpet, Marc Hannaford piano, Sam Zerna acoustic bass, and James McLean drums launch their new album on Jazzhead, In Cahoots.

I’m recycling some pics, so that’s why Eugene Ball sneaks into the frame. But he won’t be in cahoots with this lot when they perform at Uptown tonight.

Don’t be deterred by rumours that a certain airline may have given grief to Sam Zerna’s bass en route to that rival city to the north. There’s a lot you can do with duct tape!

This quartet was formed in 2009 on Williamson’s return to Melbourne after two years living in Dublin and playing in Ireland, Europe and the US. In Cahoots is his seventh CD release as a leader, after Non-Consensual Head Compression (2001, Newmarket), Talk It Up (2002, Newmarket), Mutations (2003, Newmarket), On the Surface, In the Core (2005, Newmarket), Far Away Here (2006, Jazzhead), and By a Thread (2009, Downstream).

Since his return from Dublin, the trumpet player has performed with Charlie Haden, John Abercrombie, and the Australian Art Orchestra at the Melbourne International Jazz Festival, Stonnington Jazz with Inside Out and the Wangaratta Jazz festival with By a Thread.

He lectures at Monash University and at Victorian College of the Arts (Melbourne University).

Inside Out is on tour:

March 20 The Ellington Jazz Club 6.30pm (Perth)
www.ellingtonjazz.com.au/

March 31 The Jazz Club – Jazzworx 7.30pm (Brisbane)
www.jazz.qld.edu.au/jazz-club

April 7 Bennetts Lane Jazz Club (Melbourne) 9pm
www.bennettslane.com

April 8 Wollongong Conservatorium of Music 7pm
http://wollongongjazz.com/

April 11 Venue 505 8.30pm (Sydney)
http://venue505.com/

April 14 Bennett’s Lane Jazz Club (Melbourne) 9pm
www.bennettslane.com

April 21 Bennett’s Lane Jazz Club (Melbourne) 9pm
www.bennettslane.com

April 29 UTAS 7pm (Hobart)
UTAS Hobart CBD Campuses, Conservatorium of Music
http://fcms.its.utas.edu.au/arts/music/

COLLIDER

GIG: Bennetts Lane, Sunday, February 27, 2011

Adam Simmons tenor saxophone, Kynan Robinson trombone, Ronny Ferella drums, Anita Hustas bass, Jason Bunn viola, Andrea Keeble violin

Jason Bunn on viola

Jason Bunn on viola

This was an unusual line-up, but not a surprise given the involvement of Simmons, Robinson and Ferella, who are always imaginative. It was formed in 2006 for a visit by San Francisco saxophonist and composer Phillip Greenlief, but he could not make it and neither did the charts for his suite, which was to draw on material from Ornette Coleman. So Simmons hurriedly put together a suite — untitled, but Adam suggests something like The Language in Beauty — inspired by Coleman, Greenlief and in part by the “what am I gonna do” panic that arose from wanting the gig to go ahead. Simmons asked Robinson to join and the band was born.

Kynan Robinson points the 'bone

Kynan Robinson points the 'bone

Collider has played infrequently since, at Melbourne Jazz Fringe Festival and the Melbourne Women’s International Jazz Festival. Most compositions are by Simmons and Robinson.

Jason Bunn on viola

Jason Bunn on viola

The evening opened with a Simmons piece entitled Words from Clouds, followed by three Robinson compositions — A Night on a Rollercoaster Turns a Woman’s Hair White, Midori and Malt as Water — followed by the Keeble and Hustas composition New Black SuiteNew Black 1 & 2 and Homeland.

The second set at Bennetts included three pieces from the Language of Beauty suite — Raskolnikov’s Folly, What Were the Names of the Karamazov Brothers?, and  All You Needand then Simmons’s Seven.

The pen I use to record track names and random responses to the music ran out early, so I hope the above is reasonably accurate. It certainly wasn’t accurate when this was first posted, but after multiple revisions and much help from Adam Simmons I’m hoping it is almost correct.

Andrea Keeble on violin

Andrea Keeble on violin

This was a most enjoyable and fascinating performance, but I feel as though words are a poor substitute for being there.

Collider at work

Collider at work

Collider works. It is unusual to have a violin and viola mixing it with more traditional instruments of improvised music, but the compositions and the musicians gave the whole performance an inspired coherence.

Ronny Ferella at the drum kit

Ronny Ferella at the drum kit

There were some absolutely entrancing standout solos — Robinson digging deep into the gravel and realising mid-solo he was breaking Ferella’s earlier appeal for quieter playing, Ronny Ferella taking the space to take us on a sublime journey of intricacy and introspection, Anita Hustas opening the final piece of the night with great presence, and Simmons on fire in slow-burn fashion that etched tenor notes into the dark room.

The viola gives voice

The viola gives voice

Jason Bunn on viola and Andrea Keeble violin were responsive, excited and exciting, ever adept as they set up and ran with rapid escapades that were often answered by the horns.

This was really visceral music and its effect was felt physically. The combination of instruments provided a timbre-laden treat that would gladden the heart of a Tasmanian conservationist or an Orbost logger, or both.

Anita Hustas

Anita Hustas on bass

I loved the contributions of each instrument, though Hustas seemed to be a little lost at times from where I was sitting. I loved the percussive interludes and the way Ferella intervened with such sensitivity and minimalism. And I loved the drawn-out string notes as the sombre final piece, Seven, came to a close.

Now that Collider has made such an impact, let’s hope the band gets out more.

Collider

Collider