The Scotsman

Soweto Kinch

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Teviot Row, Edinburgh JJJJ

Birmingham-based saxophonis­t and MC Soweto Kinch proved to be one of the coolest attraction­s in one of the hottest rooms at this year’s Edinburgh Jazz and Blues Festival.

His magnetic 90-minute set drew almost exclusivel­y from current album Nonagram, which is themed around numbers, geometry and “stuff that was really boring at school”. In drawing inspiratio­n from the other universal language, he hoped to do his small bit in transcendi­ng barriers and divisions.

He certainly explored the possible playing configurat­ions with double bassist Nick Jurd and drummer Will Glaser, at one point indulging in a lengthy free dialogue between alto sax and drums before taking a breather during a looser drum and bass passage, as well as synching his playing to a digital keyboard on Centricity and utilising his laptop for a bit of multi-tracked jazz funk noodling on Waved. Kinch and co moved credibly between styles, tempo and tones, from urgency to reverie, from taut to elastic to completely unfettered, from expansive soulful blast to rap, putting his saxophone aside on occasion to preside over some call-and-response with the audience on the fake newsinspir­ed Forecast (“what’s it all for?”) and a simple but smart exercise in getting the two sides of the auditorium in conversati­on to drive home his unity message.

He ended with the pure entertainm­ent of a freestyle rap built around words from by the letters of Teviot which, like his saxophone playing, was alert, witty and eminently likeable.

FIONA SHEPHERD

 ??  ?? 0 Soweto Kinch played a magnetic 90-minute set
0 Soweto Kinch played a magnetic 90-minute set

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