Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Adam Rogers' Dice Trio at Hong Kong Arts Center
Adam Rogers' Dice Trio at Hong Kong Arts Center

Shouson Theatre, Hong Kong Arts Center
Jazz World Live Series
Hong Kong SAR
May 28, 2018
As the scraggly haze of copiously denim-clad, baseball cap and ponytail-touting figures assembled onstage,

Adam Rogers
guitarb.1965

John Scofield
guitarb.1951

Michael Brecker
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2007

Chris Potter
saxophone, tenorb.1971
He came to Hong Kong on May 28 well prepared for the task, packing a classic sunburst Strat and misbehaving Marshall stackan iconic combo made famous by Rogers' first hero,

Jimi Hendrix
guitar, electric1942 - 1970
The mood was unapologetically established with the intense opener "Dice," a thick funk-rock sludge built around a series of asymmetrical riffs which doubles as the opener/title track/manifesto of last year's recorded debut, before the trio proceeded to indolently work their way through eight-tenths of the self-released LP in order: The lazy mid-tempo blues nod "Chronics" was followed by the frenetic in-the-pocket pulse of "Sea Minor" before the musicians even looked up to acknowledge their audience. By now, 30 minutes in, the languid sense of three guys jamming in a garage was setchunky, funky riffs picked up and passed around, rhythmically dense but harmonically tethered fare serving as an undemanding canvas for Rogers' searing, scintillating solos. Self-consciously dumbing down, the American guitarist flipped repeatedly between passages of familiar pentatonic rock and blues phrasing and moodier modal extractions; the sense is of an intellectually minded orator trying to connect with the everyman within.
One wondered at times if he missed having more meat to play withwhile it was liberating to hear a jazz guitarist free from the rigmarole of playing over the changes, at times it might have been more engaging for all had there been a few more changes to play over. Despite being billed as a trio, established bassist

Fima Ephron
bass, electric
Nate Smith
drumsb.1974
Diverse tributes were paid to three unlikely influences, with rapper Flavor Flav incongruously evoked in the staccato grunge-metal stomper "Flav," which followed the moody, finger-picked electro-folk dirge "The Mystic (For Fred McDowell)," while the stonking funk-rock strut of set closer "L the Bruce" served a sideways a nod to comedian Lenny Bruce.
More subdued texturesand, even, chord changescame in the later stages, with a sweetly slumbering, unironic cover of Willie Nelson ballad "Crazy," littered by atmospheric volume swells, astride an equally pastoral wander through "I Fall in Love Too Easily." But it was a second standard which gave the evening its steamiest statement: A genetic reconstruction of "Ba-Lue Bolivar Ba-Lues-Are,"

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
Rogers' performancehosted at Hong Kong Arts Center's Shouson Theatre by the year-round Jazz World Live Seriesserved to wrap a golden month for guitar geeks, with a steady stream of divergent six string virtuosi passing through the Asian powerhouse in recent weeks, each playing at different venues at the behest of opposingly passionate promoters:

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Mike Stern
guitarb.1953

Dave Weckl
drumsb.1960


Teriver Cheung
guitarb.1985

Melissa Aldana
saxophonePhotos credit: Andrew Chester Ong.
Tags
Live Reviews
Adam Rogers
Rob Garratt
Hong Kong
John Scofield
Michael Brecker
Chris Potter
Jimi Hendrix
Fima Ephron
Nate Smith
Thelonious Monk
Miles Davis
Mike Stern
Dave Weckl
Paco Pe?a
Michael Felberbaum
Teriver Cheung
Melissa Aldana
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
