Wake up with Jamie

Tomorrow is 2Day, as I am sure you are aware if you’ve gone anywhere near a BBC channel on TV or radio in the past few days.

It’s all a big switch-around to draw attention to all the good things on BBC Radio 2, and what that means for jazz fans is that singer, pianist and all round champion of jazz – he’s even a guest director of the Cheltenham Jazz Festival for heaven’s sake – is on air from 7am to 8am tomorrow, along with Simon Mayo (well, you can’t have everything) and we might just get to hear some jazz while we have that first cuppa, or head of for that shave, or shampoo, or whatever…

It all goes a bit pear-shaped after 8am – or not, depending on your taste. Find out the full programme for 2Day here.

Jamie Cullum’s 2010 top CDs – plus Christmas faves

The jazz singer and pianist has chosen his favourite jazz discs of the year on his Beeb Radio 2 blog. Lots of good stuff in it, and pleased to see Sufjan Stevens’ latest (which I haven’t had a chance to hear yet) in the non-jazz additions. Read all about them here.

Which reminds me, the Sufjan Stevens Christmas box set gets a lot of plays in front of  thejazzbreakfast open fire at this time of the year. Last Christmas I posted my festive top ten and it hasn’t really changed a year on, so here‘s a reminder.

Cheltenham – what will you be going to hear?

So, Cheltenham is upon us, and it’s time to plan what to do. In many ways this year’s Cheltenham Jazz Festival is going to be a very different experience.

Of course, jazz is always different, always new, with the musicians playing this music having a pathological fear of repeating themselves. So, even if bassist Dave Holland or guitarist John Scofield, or pianist and composer Carla Bley has played Cheltenham before, the performances this weekend will be fresh and original. And even if you’ve seen a band like Polar Bear or Trio VD fairly recently, the way in which every band ups its game for a festival means nothing can be predicted with certainty.

But this year Cheltenham will also feel different outside of the music. Regular festival-goers will be familiar with that well-trodden route between the major venues of the Town Hall and Everyman Theatre. But no more. The organisers have chosen to consolidate the festival around the Town Hall and the adjoining Imperial Gardens, erecting a large Jazz Arena marquee in addition to the usual outdoor stage. There will be food and jazz market stalls in the gardens as well, and they hope to create a really concentrated festival feel in this area. They are calling it Jazz On The Square. Another new venue is the nearby Playhouse Theatre.

Why no Everyman? Well, I guess it’s a matter of plain economics, a bullet we will all just have to bite stoically upon, while trying to ignore the memory that the Everyman was one of the finest places in the land in which to hear jazz music.

So, how is the weekend going to pan out? Well, the festival actually started last night with an intimate evening with musical star Elaine Paige at the Daffodil restaurant. And it continues this evening with more of Elaine, this time in the Town Hall, plus a Funk & Soul Night with DJ Craig Charles at the University of Gloucester’s Park Bar, and rockabilly singer Imelda May inaugurating the Jazz Arena programme.

Friday night is always Music Night, courtesy of one of the festival’s big supporters, BBC Radio 2, and this year Ol’ Blue Eyes is the man being celebrated. Elsewhere, there is some blues from Eric Bibb in the Jazz Arena and Trio VD doing their damnedest to shake up your late night at the Town Hall Pillar Room.

Meanwhile, over at The Playhouse Theatre, there is the first of three sessions dedicated to free improvisation called Stewart Lee’s Freehouse, hosted by comedian Stewart Lee. He will also be talking about his interest in avant garde jazz on Sunday.

Saturday and Sunday are the really jam-packed days with 14 or so events apiece.

There is a strong Norwegian theme running through these days – Norway being a hugely important and vibrant jazz centre in the 21st century. So, we have the Norwegian/UK duo Food, the attractive jazz-pop of Beady Belle, and the weirdly wonderful Bulgarian-tinged folk-jazz of Farmers Market. The students of Norway’s Trondheim Conservatory and Birmingham’s Conservatoire will come together in the Trondheim Jazz Project.

The big international names over the weekend include US band leader Carla Bley and her Lost Chords group which includes British saxophonist Andy Sheppard and Italian trumpeter Paolo Fresu; US guitarist John Scofield, who hasn’t played over here much in recent years but has always proved a favourite with rock as well as jazz fans; the much-admired reeds player John Surman; and the Wolverhampton boy made good, bassist Dave Holland, who has a really interesting jazz/world project with flamenco guitarist Pepe Habichuela.

Look out, too, for the Kit Downes Trio, for trumpeter Cuong Vu, and for Empirical.

On the relatively quieter Bank Holiday Monday, the festival’s accent is on the family with the always-packed Breakfast Show in the Town Hall, fun events on the Square, and a big Town Hall finale featuring retro soul singer Paloma Faith with the Guy Barker Orchestra. Paloma will be singing some Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald numbers as well as her own songs.

There is grown-up jazz on Monday, too, with Polar Bear as well as pianist Liam Noble and singer Christine Tobin interpreting Carole King’s Tapestry album in a jazz manner. There’s also a strong Birmingham showing on Monday with Sid Peacock taking his big band into The Playhouse Theatre, and the Lluis Mather Quartet – winners of the Dave Holland Prize for best band to come out of the current Birmingham Conservatoire jazz course – in the Town Hall Pillar Room.

Of course, the festival will extend into the rest of Cheltenham with a very healthy Fringe programme which has been going from the start of the week.

And, finally, let’s not forget guest director Jamie Cullum, who has helped programme the festival this year and gets to strut his stuff in the Cheltenham Town Hall on Sunday evening. Jamie’s picks of the festival include Beady Belle and a London-based biggish band called Fringe Magnetic.

You can find out all you need to know to plan your own festival at cheltenhamfestivals.com/jazz and the box office is on 0844 576 7979

Concert review: New York Voices & BBC Big Band

Town Hall, Birmingham UK
18-12-09

Now, I am aware that for a lot of British people, Christmas music is either that horrendous stuff they pump out in discount shops from, it seems like, late October (puerile pop stuff whether from Slade or John Lennon, though no longer, thanks to his fall from grace, Gary Glitter, and my, how grateful we all are for that), or that angel-voiced stuff from Kings College, etc.

But I lean towards the late 1950s and more specifically New York for my favourite Yuletide soundtrack, so the close-harmony jazz foursome New York Voices are right up my street.

Before they appeared the anti-freeze was applied with some spirited big band material from a jolly Jiggs Whigham (all he was missing was a Santa suit) and the band, with announcer Clare Teal doing her usual headgirl thing with the audience. Has she ever played old age homes, I wonder? The mask of bonhomie she slaps on seems to have the patronising lippy already applied. Mind you, I can probably summon up a smidgen of sympathy for her – a half-filled hall of mostly senior citizen Brummies  takes an age to thaw – especially on a perishing night like this one.

She described what New York Voices do as a “lost art” – at least I think that was what she said – and there do seem to be worryingly few people doing this inspiring and invigorating thing which requires each singer to be strong and individual yet capable of combining in perfect harmony and with a readily identifiable group sound.

They opened with a Paquito d’Rivera tune called Snow Samba, before whipping through No Moon At All, Sing! Sing! Sing!, Love You Madly, Stevie Wonder’s Don’t You Worry ‘Bout A Thing and a vocal reworking of Benny Goodman’s Don’t Be That Way, many of them from their most recent CD, A Day Like This.

The audience were a little more receptive after an interval drink and a cracking tenor solo from Paul Booth on God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen. The couple in front of me left three songs into the NYV’s second set – maybe they can’t cope with jazz harmonies and New York showbiz sass applied to Oh Little Town of Bethlehem and O Come All Ye Faithful, or maybe they had a baby-sitter wanting to get off to a Christmas club night?

So they missed a fab a cappella version of Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, as well as cool, crunchy harmonies and strong solo spots during The Christmas Song, Christmas Time Is Here and Let It Snow. There was also a haunting Hanukkah song called S’vivon.

Kim Nazarian, Lauren Kinhan, Darmon Meader and Peter Eldridge may be practitioners of a threatened art, but if young and more street-savvy groups like Naturally 7, and gospel groups like Take 6 (and our own Black Voices) can rekindle an interest in close harmony singing and jazzy harmonies then New York Voices might be more generally acclaimed as the classic and classy act they most certainly are.
This concert will be broadcast as A Swinging Christmas on BBC Radio 2 at 11pm on Wednesday 23 December.