The Scotsman

Hard hitting, no holds barred set of sounds

- JIM GILCHRIST

Vijay Iyer Sextet/ Zoe Rahman Trio

Assembly Hall, Edinburgh

“WE’LL play till they tell us to stop,” announced the New York pianist and band leader by way of introducin­g his muscular sextet’s Edinburgh Jazz Festival debut.

And didn’t they just, in a solid hour and half of pretty unremittin­g turbulence. They nailed their colours to the mast straight away, Iyer’s vivacious piano intro joined by staccato riffing as the triple horns of Mark Shim, Steve Lehman and Graham Haynes swung into action, Shim’s tenor sax blowing a rip-roaring break, followed by Haynes’s flugelhorn, initially muted then processed through laptop electronic­s to deliver long notes that whirred and twittered weirdly, sounding at times like a demented Moog.

Lehman’s alto sax contrasted waspishly with the mighty honking of Shim’s tenor instrument. There was the staccato signalling and ominous horns of the title track of the sextet’s widely acclaimed album, Far From Over, while elsewhere Iyer’s stealthy deliberati­ons on piano and chiming keyboard would build up a head of steam, to be joined by a rising chorus of brass then into the funky slam of Nope, or the scrambling horn brawl and mighty, polyrhythm­ic fusillade from drummer Jeremy Dutton in Down to the Wire.

It was powerful, hard-edged music, which perhaps could have done with a few spoken intros by way of heightened communicat­ion. Uncompromi­sing music, perhaps for these chaotic times: in closing, Iyer acknowledg­ed that we’d had a certain other US visitor over the previous few days, and assured us that, in such troubled times, he and his band were here to repre-

sent “truth and compassion and human rights”, which earned them an additional roar of applause.

Opening the evening was Zoe Rahman and her Trio, the Mobo-winning pianist, whose Anglo-bengali heritage (plus an Irish granny thrown into the mix), meant that their short but fluidly ranging set progressed from the introducto­ry rolling and churning of her own Red Squirrel to sets which morphed cheerfully from music by Rabindrana­th Tagore into a perky Celtic jig, her regular sidemen, bassist Alec Dankworth and drummer Gene Calderazzo in hot pursuit.

The limber boogieing of Zantastic suddenly veered into the stately, resounding chords of Epicentre, with its occasional, eastern-sounding twang of plucked piano wires, while the catchy and increasing­ly animated Conversati­on withnellie,withwarmba­ss work from Dankworth, closed a set which was begging for a gig of its own.

 ??  ?? Pianist and band leader Vijay Iyer led his sextet in a powerful, uncompromi­sing set
Pianist and band leader Vijay Iyer led his sextet in a powerful, uncompromi­sing set

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