thu 25/04/2024

William Parker and Hamid Drake Trio, Baltic | reviews, news & interviews

William Parker and Hamid Drake Trio, Baltic

William Parker and Hamid Drake Trio, Baltic

American avant-garde bassist and drummer play London Jazz Festival

They began with a whimper, rather than a bang. Bronx bassist William Parker was still tuning up when Zhenya Strigalev, Russian by birth but a regular performer at this south London restaurant and vodka bar, summoned the first quiet squeak from his alto saxophone. Parker’s playing became gradually more deliberate, but it was hard to say exactly at what point the London Jazz Festival gig had officially begun until Parker’s co-leader, the Louisiana-via-Chicago drummer Hamid Drake, finally picked up his mallets.
For those who continue to insist that avant-garde artists from Cecil Taylor to Jackson Pollock are doing nothing beyond the reach of a five-year-old child, there’s probably a joke in there somewhere. Yet despite the impeccable experimental credentials of both Drake and Parker, who actually met playing with Teutonic terroriser Peter Brotzmann, one of the great strengths of their collaboration was its open-armed accessibility. In other contexts, Drake has proved himself an excellent reggae player, while Parker recently released an album of (admittedly significantly reworked) Curtis Mayfield covers. Though such influences were evident only subtly tonight, neither man was afraid of a groove – swing, Latin, whatever – if he happened across it.

To point out that Strigalev is not in the same league as those with whom he shares the stage is perhaps stating the obvious, although it did seem odd that he positioned himself so far out front of his companions, and looked around so rarely. Indeed, he hardly opened his eyes at all. Particularly at the start of the set he also played too much, in apparent disregard of the fact that he was – unusually for a saxophonist – the only member of the trio not to achieve headline billing. It may have been part of a jazz festival, but this really was a drum’n’bass show.
Clearly comfortable in each other's presence, the pair have not only backed numerous frontmen but also recorded duo albums including Piercing the Veil and Summer Snow. Drake, the dreadlocked yoga enthusiast who last weekend, at Finland’s Tampere festival, interrupted his own set to deliver a 15-minute-plus talk on spirituality, was the more obviously charismatic. (Mercifully, he goes nowhere near a microphone tonight.) Yet Parker, in his crumpled hat, had a strong appeal of his own, singing along, à la Keith Jarrett, and at the close of the set affectionately mimed Drake’s stickwork.
More importantly, of course, each man’s playing was first rate. Again, Drake’s was the more extrovert, but he's a sufficiently multifaceted player to have contributed deft, delicate cymbal patterns, as well as a monstrous solo that, in accordance with tradition, drew the biggest cheer of the night. Parker’s playing, as usual, took the double bass into an unusual and exciting role, concerned with texture and propulsion more than harmonic bedrock. If the gig at times smouldered where it could have combusted, it's not the rhythm section that should shoulder the responsibility.

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hmm. I actually thought Mr Strigalev held his own rather well. And if he wasn't looking at his bandmates (since when has that meant anything?), he was certainly listening to them. And though I was there (like most of the audience) for the rhythm section I did find myself occasionally bored by their tendency to stick to what felt like cod rock grooving. Possibly that was due to the noise levels in the venue (anything too subtle would have been lost ), but I'd have liked a bit more of a dynamic range...

I thought William Parker and Hamid Drake were both amazing (especially given the background noise). Zhenya Strigalev i thought held his own, as the previous comment says, and i put his tendency to close his eyes etc down as signs of nervousness (who could blame him?). I've mentioned the noise. It really was awful: one woman in particular never shut up and even though she was several feet away from me i could hear every word she said. This noisiness plus the poor acoustics made the subtleties of the music hard to hear (especially the double bass). It was even worse yesterday for the Stephan Kerecki gig: i walked out of that part way through because it was just ridiculous. I could barely hear the music at all.

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