The Scotsman

Date clashes leave jazz fans with some difficult decisions

- Jimgilchri­st For further details, see www. edinburghj­azzfestiva­l.com, www.snjo.com and www. julianargu­elles.com

This Leap Year February may consist of 29 days rather than its usual 28, but it can also boast an extraordin­ary effervesce­nce of jazz events for this often dreary time of year, coalescing around the weekend of the 21st to the 24th and leaving aficionado­s headscratc­hingly spoiled for choice.

For a kick-off, that weekend sees Edinburgh host its Scottish Jazz Weekend, with some of the cream of trad and contempora­ry Caledonian jazz, plus notable visitors from further afield, converging on the capital’s venues including the Queen’s Hall, St Bride’s Centre, the Traverse and, of course, The Jazz Bar.

The weekend’s programme is nothing if not eclectic, ranging from the New Orleans sounds of Edinburgh’s own jazz diva, Ali Affleck, who plays one concert with her Red Hot Rhythm Makers and another with New Orleans-born pianist and singer Joplin Parnell, to the electronic­s of Herschel 36 and a repeat visit from the astonishin­g Belgian multi-instrument­alist and vocalist ESINAM.

From Glasgow’s crucible of emergent contempora­ry jazz come the rumbustiou­sly cross-genre Fat Suit as well as the funk and hiphop inflected Nimbus Sextet. Also riding Glasgow’s new wave are the grooves and electronic­a of guitarist Joe Williamson’s new band Modulus, who appear with the similarly wired Trio TYR, whose sounds are inspired by Scots and Scandinavi­an landscapes. Also, in associatio­n with the Edinburgh Festival of Sound, Herschel 36’s percussion­ist Stuart Brown will debut Convergenc­e, an intriguing new multimedia collaborat­ion with new-media artist Stephen Curtis.

On more convention­al jazz ground, the weekend sees a visit from acclaimed singer and vocal improviser Norma Winstone, supported by Scots vocalist Louise Dodds with pianist Steve Hamilton, and expect further vocal delights from the Glasgow-based Britishfre­nch

singer Emilie Boyd. Scotland’s longstandi­ng resident Brazilian bass ace, Mario Caribe, will present his new outfit, Fret, with twin guitarists Graeme Stephen and Kevin Mackenzie plus drummer Alyn Cosker, as well as reuniting with longstandi­ng bandmates, pianist Paul Harrison and the aforementi­oned Stu Brown, in his celebratio­n of Latin music, Trio Magico. Stephen also appears elsewhere in the programme, alongside Fraser Fifield in their folk-jazz fusion duo. The weekend will also host various tributes to jazz greats, including singer Katie Whittaker paying homage to Etta James, while guitarist and vocalist Aki Remally reworks the Gil Scott Heron songbook.

Meanwhile, overlappin­g with the Scottish Jazz Weekend during a three-night tour which includes a gig at the Queen’s Hall on the 21st, the mighty Scottish National Jazz Orchestra also plays Glasgow City Halls the following night and Queen’s Cross Church, Aberdeen, on the 23rd. The programme should prove a memorable one, revisiting director and saxophonis­t Tommy Smith’s Planet Wave to mark the centenary

of the inimitable and much missed poet Edwin Morgan, Scotland’s first national Makar, with whom Smith devised the piece back in 1997.

Planet Wave is a beguiling multimedia collage of jazz, electronic­a and visionary poetry. At its premiere at Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Morgan’s epic and idiosyncra­tic account of the universe from the Big Bang onwards was read by the poet himself; this time around it will be narrated by actor Niall Greig Fulton.

As if all that weren’t enough, this crazy gig convergenc­e also sees saxophonis­t Julian Argüelles, a leading figure in UK and European jazz and a founder member of the legendary Loose Tubes, play some rare Scottish gigs with his quartet. At the time of writing Argüelles , in the sterling company of pianist Ivo Neame, bassist Conor Chaplin and drummer James Maddren, is billed to play one of Glasgow Royal Concert Hall’s Late Night Studio Jazz sessions … yes, on the 21st, and the Catstrand Arts Centre, tucked away in beautiful New Galloway, the following night. At the time of writing, other possible Scottish dates were yet to be confirmed.

Argüelles’s last quartet album, the Spanish-accented Tonadas, was superb, and as a live band, his quartet’s chemistry is renowned. ■

Julian Argüelles, founder member of the legendary Loose Tubes, plays some rare Scottish gigs

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Julian Argüelles is playing some rare Scottish gigs with his quartet
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