The Jerusalem Post

Free and easy

- • By BARRY DAVIS

INTERNATIO­NAL JAZZ FESTIVAL Saalfelden Saalfelden, Austria August 22-25

The Saalfelden Jazz Festival marked its 40th anniversar­y this year from August 22-25. The fourday event took place at its regular berth in the southwest Austrian town with a plethora of predominan­tly avant-garde, or free-leaning, endeavors at numerous indoor and outdoor venues. And if you’re going to put out some adventurou­s vibes why not do that in one of the most picturesqu­e settings imaginable, with towering mountain peaks, verdant stretches and teaming streams and rivers aplenty in the vicinity?

The main stage, naturally, hosted the most highly anticipate­d of the dozens of acts lined up by perennial artistic director Mario Steidl, starting with an intriguing pairing of envelope-pushing Austrian bassist Manu Mayr and compatriot bass clarinet player and sometime vocalist Susanna Gartmayer. It was a commendabl­e front-line opener, and the two musicians were clearly simpatico as they reeled off velvety shades and sumptuous textures with some quirky asides thrown in to keep the more broad-minded members of the jam-packed audience on board. The audience sat transfixed and applauded rapturousl­y as the long piece – a work of well-sculpted beauty – ended.

Tri-national fivesome Koma Saxo were next up and duly pumped out the calories as they waded into juddering grooves, with Swedish reedmen Otis Sandsjö and Jonas Kulhammar, and Finnish counterpar­t Mikko Innanen blowing up a storm, ably supported by Swedish bassist

and German drummer Christian Lillinger. The latter was particular­ly entertaini­ng, and kept us constantly guessing as to which way his percussive trail would next lead him.

When it comes to big guns in the freer roaming areas of the jazz domain, there are few more eminent than American saxman Ken Vandermark. His Noise of Our Time quartet was a consummate­ly charged and inventive affair, with US-based, Swissborn pianist Sylvie Courvoisie­r enhancing the band’s output with plenty of left-field keyboard and percussive work. Drummer Tom Rainey also put in a stellar performanc­e, adroitly delivering tender riffs between more energized offerings.

And if you’re looking for bracing soundscape­s, Vandermark’s your man and, as expected, he belted out some high-octane stuff. But there were some quieter moments too, albeit stacked with tension, notably in the aptly titled “The Space between The Teeth,” which married merry mayhem with silent slots and shuddering explosive vignettes.

Vandermark is a master of sound, rhythm and weight, with all the players contributi­ng

and supporting, and intermitte­ntly getting their chance to strut their stuff from the front. Passages of delicacy, and even silence, were occasional­ly, almost brutally interrupte­d by bursts of gloves-off mayhem. But the lyricism was always around to be called upon.

THERE WERE high expectatio­ns from Norwegian accordioni­st Frode Haltli’s gig and the leader and his tentet duly did the business. Deftly crafted lilting, surging and ebbing melodies, with more than a hint of Gaelic charm to them, were a joy to the ears and the heart, while trumpeter Hildegunn Øiseth provided some dimensiona­l breadth with soaring arpeggios.

New York resident, Canadian flutist-saxophonis­t Anna Webber was yet another Saalfelden performer who put in a well-orchestrat­ed shift, with her American sextet delivering strident, pulsating, thickly layered waves of sound in a well-weighted show.

The pick of the bunch, at the main stage, was the Tropic nonet show led by French guitarist Julien Desprez and American cornetist Rob Mazurek, with drummer Gerald Cleaver powering hard and unapologet­ically from behind. While many of the other bands in the festival lineup tended towards the carefully composed side of avant-garde jazz, Desprez and Mazurek let it all hang out, in buckets. Festival ticket buyers looking for a rip-roaring, bare-knuckled time would have found it here.

Meanwhile, the Orjazztra Vienna big band kept us right royally entertaine­d with what could be best described as blues-seasoned cacophony, with plenty of good humor sewed into the seams.

And there was plenty in the way of fun and games over at the smaller Nexus-Short Cuts hall, with Courvoisie­r, this time teaming up with enterprisi­ng Austrian trumpeter Lorenz Raab. They clearly had the chemistry as they dovetailed through fast runs and more delicate, gossamer, breathy passages with seemingly well-rehearsed panache. I was surprised to hear from Raab during a post-gig chat that it was their first-ever show together. There may very well be more to come from their duo sometime.

The same auditorium also hosted risk-taking Danish saxophonis­t Mette Rasmussen in a merry joust with Bhutanborn guitarist Tashi Dorji. The latter employed a broad range of technologi­cal texture manipulato­rs, while Rasmussen took us on a wild and wacky trip along her own creative pathway.

The most entertaini­ng of the lot – as expected – was the Botticelli Baby bunch from Germany. Led by effervesce­nt bassist-vocalist and showman extraordin­aire Marlon Bösherz, the band put in a typically high-energy shift that had many in the audience hoofin’ and jivin’.

Besides the setting, the great venues and the welloiled production, just seeing the hundreds turn out for a festival, which by and large steers a wide berth around mainstream jazz material, is a definite fillip for the soul.

 ?? (Barry Davis) ?? SYLVIE COURVOISER plays piano while Lorenz Raab accompanie­s on trumpet.
(Barry Davis) SYLVIE COURVOISER plays piano while Lorenz Raab accompanie­s on trumpet.

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