The Scotsman

It’s a jubilant jazz reunion

- JIM GILCHRIST

Scottish National Jazz Orchestra & Kurt Elling Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh

Promising to “reconnect us all through music”, this performanc­e proved indeed a jubilant reunion for the SNJO, not only with live audiences, but also with Grammy Award-winning jazz vocalist Kurt Elling.

Apparition Bridge featured new arrangemen­ts and added lyrics to compositio­ns by European jazz composers, continuing the philosophi­cal questing which Elling and SNJO director Tommy Smith have pursued in previous collaborat­ions. The American singer’s warm, octave-leaping baritone was omnipresen­t, but it was the imperious clarion of Smith’s tenor saxophone which opened proceeding­s, bringing in Elling’s

often impassione­d vocals in an anthem-like orchestrat­ion by Brian Byrne, based on words by James Joyce.

Joe Zawinul’s Midnight Mood, arranged by Christian Jacob, cruised in elegantly ballroom swing-time, with Elling scatting energetica­lly and trombonist Liam Shortall stepping up to the plate for a matchingly demonstrat­ive solo. A Helge Sund arrangemen­t morphed Jan Garbarek’s Molde Canticle into a tune by the late Esbjörn Svensson, the magisteria­l Garbarek theme given an oriental accent as Elling intoned visions of sand-bound ruins. And so it flowed, with vivid dynamism, driven by the sterling rhythm section of pianist Pete Johnstone, bassist Calum Gourlay and drummer Alyn Cosker. Sean Gibb’s trumpet break phased neatly into Smith’s soprano sax in the Wheelerwin­stone compositio­n Sea Lady, while Yvonne Robertson’s flute brought impression­ist brushstrok­es to Michel Legrand’s You Must Believe in Spring.

Elling’s incantatio­ns of Zen timelessne­ss and a hallucinat­ory encounter with the afterlife in Lars Jansson’s Appleton bookended a very physical tenor sax solo from Konrad Wiszniewsk­i – thoughts of the hereafter, couched in arresting music of the here and now.

 ?? ?? Tommy Smith
Tommy Smith

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