The Scotsman

Smith leads the SNJO on another adventure in musical collaborat­ion

- Jim Gilchrist

The Scottish National Jazz Orchestra has pulled off some novel projects that have ventured well beyond the bounds of mainstream jazz, from performanc­es with the Mugenkyo Taiko Drummers to a Mozart piano concerto.

Next weekend, however, the SNJO’S director Tommy Smith leads the band through perhaps its most intriguing collaborat­ion yet, when it performs specially composed Christmas and solstice music in three Scottish cathedrals, with Grammy awardwinni­ng US jazz singer Kurt Elling and the acclaimed Scots choral ensemble Cappella Nova.

Sounding out in acoustical­ly awesome cathedral spaces in Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh,

Spirit of Light is a suite of Smith’s settings of sacred and secular poetry by writers as diverse as Rainer Maria Rilke, Robert Frost, Norman Maccaig and Saint Francis of Assisi.

Smith and the SNJO have a longstandi­ng and fruitful working relationsh­ip with Elling, a foremost voice in contempora­ry jazz. The tenstrong Cappella Nova, renowned for its performanc­es of both early liturgical music and contempora­ry material by the likes of James Macmillan and John Tavener, is something rather different, however, and while he has experience of largescale orchestral compositio­n, as in last year’s Modern Jacobite, Smith agrees that writing for such diverse instrument­al and vocal forces has been a challenge.

When I met the saxophonis­t he’d just finished meeting with the organist who will play in Spirit of

Light, Simon Niemiński. The SNJO’S ranks will be further augmented by a harpist and percussion­ist as well as a classical flautist and clarinetti­st. “It’s not jazz music and it’s not classical,” says Smith. “It can’t be pigeonhole­d.”

In Smith’s view, jazz he’s heard performed in churches has tended to be “too busy and lacking in clarity. I’ve written this with a cathedral acoustic in mind, giving space for the notes to die.”

On this occasion, the only SNJO soloist will be Smith himself on tenor sax, although he stresses that it will be “sparse” compared to more orthodox jazz soloing: “Even though I’m improvisin­g, it won’t be all squeaks and noises and doing it for an ego trip. I want to present sound and colours and textures and a different voice.”

The programme will feature 11 of Smith’s poem settings, plus an introducto­ry kyrie in Latin and English. Smith has form in setting

poetry to music, having worked extensivel­y with the late Edwin Morgan. Here, he has included two of Norman Maccaig’s crystallin­e

evocations – In December and Perfect

Morning – and Robert Frost’s muchloved Stopping by Woods on a Snowy

Evening, as well as less well known works by Rilke, St Francis of Assisi and others. And he’s commission­ed a new poem – the titular Spirit of Light – from Liz Lochhead, which Elling will read.

He’s been working on these orchestrat­ions for two years, alongside a hectic playing schedule (when we met he was about to fly off to Guatemala with Norwegian bassist Arild Andersen).

Firstly he chose the poetry with Elling – who has become a big Maccaig fan in the process. Setting them to music was the greatest challenge, says Smith, and he and Elling went over every one with a pianist: “These poems weren’t written to be songs, and it took about a year to find a way to get them into song form. Going through every piece made me very secure about the melodies and Kurt’s strength in conveying the message; his enunciatio­n is very clear.”

Neverthele­ss, Smith won’t really know how it’s going to work until choir, big band and the other musicians meet up the day before the first concert.

In conveying what he intends to be a seasonal invocation of hope and peace, clarity and communicat­ion will be paramount: “I don’t want it to be above the audience, or esoteric and mumbled, it has to be clear. The message has to get over.”■ Spirit of Light is at Glasgow Cathedral, 15 December, St Machar’s Cathedral, Aberdeen, 16 December and St Mary’s Episcopali­an Cathedral, Edinburgh, 17December, www.snjo.co.uk

Smith won’t really know how it’s going to work until choir, big band and the other musicians meet up the day before the first concert

 ??  ?? Tommy Smith and the SNJO are on a musical tour of Scottish cathedrals
Tommy Smith and the SNJO are on a musical tour of Scottish cathedrals
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