Los Angeles Times

Jazz fest rolls with punches

The Richard Sears Group, with ‘Tootie’ Heath on drums, sets the tempo at Sunday’s festival-like concert.

- By Chris Barton chris.barton@latimes.com

Cancellati­ons mar Angel City festivitie­s, but the show goes on with greats like “Tootie” Heath.

Six years in, it’s reasonable to expect some growing pains from the Angel City Jazz Festival.

Heading into its third and most convention­ally “festival-like” concert Sunday on its six-night schedule, which offered a slate of four acts under clear skies at the John Anson Ford Amphitheat­re, the festival still couldn’t escape the shadow of a run of bad luck with scheduling.

With the event’s most buzzed-about act — the Robert Glasper Experiment — canceling its show because of a scheduling conf lict, the festival rebounded fast by booking the Terence Blanchard Quintet in its place for Saturday. But just as the sun was setting, festival emcee LeRoy Downs announced that Blanchard had also canceled his appearance (a festival representa­tive later cited “circumstan­ces beyond our control,” and said all pre-sold tickets would be refunded).

As a result, instead of a show at Zipper Hall on Saturday, the festival will present a free screening of the next-generation jazz documentar­y “Icons Among Us” at the Little Tokyo club the Blue Whale. That will be followed by a previously booked night celebratin­g the birthday of the late Freddie Hubbard, which will feature Henry Franklin, John Beasley and trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire (the Blue Whale’s ticket charges still apply).

Still, despite the pangs of concern for a music festival — particular­ly one as ambitious as Angel City in a stilluncer­tain economic climate — the rest of its run has gone as planned, with Sunday’s event offering an expected blend of tradition and experiment­ation.

Although this year’s installmen­t may be missing the star wattage of previous bills, which have included Ravi Coltrane, Archie Shepp and Dave Douglas, its core message of the music’s ability to transcend stylistic and generation­al boundaries remained strong. That goal was heard clearly in an opening set with the Richard Sears Group, which featured 78-year-old drummer Albert “Tootie” Heath, who has played with a roster of jazz greats that includes John Coltrane, Dexter Gordon and Lester Young.

Heath has been one of the stories of the year with this summer’s beautiful, generation-spanning album “Tootie’s Tempo,” with bassist Ben Street and the Bad Plus’ Ethan Iverson on piano. Although booking that band would’ve been a coup, Sears’ group proved nimble foils for Heath’s playful mix of swing and funk-leaning locomotion on a suite commission­ed by the L.A. Jazz Society in Heath’s honor.

A bandleader in his own right, reedist Steve Lugerner delivered inspired and acrobatic runs on saxophone and bass clarinet, but the drummer in the bow tie remained the focal point. Frequently grinning ear to ear, Heath drove the group with a blend of power and mischief behind the off-balance piano of Sears, who worked to keep pace with Heath during a bright duet.

Returning for a second Angel City appearance, Kneebody delivered its signature tightly wound mix of jazz, bent indie rock and electronic­a. Although the group’s daring live shows can deliver some hair-raising feats of off-time pace and melody, this set primarily focused on Kneebody’s more at ease, melodic side as heard on the new album “The Line.” Built around an off-kilter groove from drummer Nate Wood, the herkyjerky “Nerd Mountain” was marked by a tightly wound interplay between saxophonis­t Ben Wendel and trumpeter Shane Endsley, who spiraled around Wood’s almost inhuman-sounding beat as it continued to hiccup, warp and reform again with a quicksilve­r pace.

Cuban saxophonis­t Yosvany Terry offered a welcome venture into postmodern Cuban jazz, mixing the occasional snippet of sals aready melody with rich postbop. Pianist Osmany Paredes offered a nimble counterwei­ght to the harmonies of Terry with trumpeter Michael Rodriguez on “Harlem Matinee,” and a later piece spiked by a growling Spanish vocal break from Terry and a rattling percussion turn on chekeré brief ly took the Ford down a darkened Cuban back street by way of midtown Manhattan.

In another reach across the generation gap, saxophonis­t Greg Osby offered swerving, serpentine leads that tested the mettle of his backing trio, composed of students at the Thelonious Monk Institute at UCLA. A fixture on Blue Note Records in the ’90s, Osby zigzagged through an array of crisp, off-balance melodies that were matched every step of the way by dreadlocke­d drummer Jonathan Pinson.

Eventually joined by clarinetis­t Anat Cohen, Osby’s band closed the night with a busy run through a few standards. Though it could be seen as a contrastin­g move for a forward-looking festival that in previous years has been spiked by ventures into scorched earth avant-garde with appearance­s by Nels Cline, Satoko Fujii and Vinnie Golia, it underscore­d the festival’s determined connection with history.

As Cohen pulled at the melody of a gently swung “Mack the Knife,” with Osby shadowing her every step, the song’s familiar shape was stretched somewhere new, marking a gentle echo of a festival that strives to follow the same path.

 ?? Photog raphs by Gina Ferazzi
Los Angeles Times ?? MEMBERS of the Richard Sears Group — JJ Kirkpatric­k on trumpet, left, Garrett Lang on bass and Steve Lugerner on woodwinds — perform during the Angel City Jazz Festival at the John Anson Ford Amphitheat­re.
Photog raphs by Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times MEMBERS of the Richard Sears Group — JJ Kirkpatric­k on trumpet, left, Garrett Lang on bass and Steve Lugerner on woodwinds — perform during the Angel City Jazz Festival at the John Anson Ford Amphitheat­re.
 ??  ?? CONCERTGOE­RS get close as the Richard Sears Group plays the Ford Amphitheat­re on Sunday.
CONCERTGOE­RS get close as the Richard Sears Group plays the Ford Amphitheat­re on Sunday.

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