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Amersfoort World Jazz Festival 2021

Courtesy Cees Wouda
Amersfoort, Netherlands
August 9-15, 2021
As with so many festivals during the last 18 months, the Amersfoort World Jazz Festival was forced to concentrate on local talent. Although steering away from big name international visitors, this summer edition offered a prime opportunity to familiarise our ears with key players on the Dutch scene. The Amersfoort festival is no particular champion of out-there jazz perimeter sounds, but they produce a calendar that's crammed with mainline jazz, whether swing, bebop, funk or fusion orientated. There were also a few acts that operated in freer, improvisational zones.
The head honcho of the festival is

Alexander Beets
saxophone
Stanley Turrentine
saxophone, tenor1934 - 2000

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990
At the Observant, gigs were staged in the back garden area, with the deeply concentrating Oak outfit opening on your scribe's first night at the festival. A line-up of trumpet, piano, bass and drums produced a relaxed chamber resonance, with an unavoidable ECM comparison prompted. They became more active quite quickly, with Koen Smits choosing flugelhorn to negotiate this classicist landscape, painterly and precise. Alessandro Fongaro's sparse bass plucks lent a percussive quality, coupled with interior piano work from Sjoerd Van Eijck, then the horn mouthpiece was removed, replaced by a bunched fist, through which vocalisations passed. A bow caressed the sighing strings. This was a delicate tiptoe-ing into the

Tord Gustavsen
pianob.1970
These Observant evenings were all double bills, so the Israeli guitarist

Eran Har Even
guitarb.1983

Sun Mi Hong
drums
Gilad Hekselman
guitarb.1983

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
The following evening's double-header presented Peax and Soujourner's Truth. The duo of saxophonist/keyboardist Ties Mellema and percussionist Barry Jurjus call themselves Peax, with both of them employing liberal amounts of electronic matter, headphones clamped on their heads. The chosen instruments at first were baritone saxophone and drums, the chosen jackets lavishly patterned, almost in the glam rock realm. Backing tracks of keyboards/sequencers/loops abounded, but there were also chances for duck growls or goose rattles to leap out of the pulsing minimalism. Sometimes the baritone sounded like an ewi (electronic wind instrument), which seemed to defeat its advantage. A reggae lope appeared for the second piece, which had Mellema sounding like

Colin Stetson
woodwinds
Moondog
composer / conductor1916 - 1999
Sojourner's Truth came next, tipping the hat to female activists, with compositions specially prepared by flautist

Mark Lotz
fluteb.1963
Another night at Observant. The " data-original-title="" title="">Dick de Graaf Quartet operated in the vintage post-bop mode, providing a welcome injection of mainline jazz. Tenor man De Graaf was joined by an expected crew of piano, bass and drums, spreading out into a finger-clickin' coast, which upped to a much greater pace-chase around 30 minutes in, featuring a storming (and inventive) drum solo. Not often considered as a jazz standard, "Eleanor Rigby" offered a platform for set-climaxing, becoming surprisingly freer and funkier.
One of the highest of festival highlights was
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Udo Pannekeet
bassb.1978
By this time your scribe had moved into Observant permanently. The

Ben van den Dungen
saxophoneThe Gidon Nunes Vaz Sextet appeared second at Observant, delivering their "Celebration Suite," marking the band's return to live performance after the lockdowns. There were honeyed alto saxophone solos, and a precisely measured and enunciated trombone spotlight, muted and throaty, heralding the leader's own flugelhorn statement.
On Friday, the shows on the Lieve Vrouwekerhof square began, drawing in a much larger audience. The Belgian pianist

Jef Neve
pianob.1977
Jasper Høiby
bassSteven Delannoye
saxophone, tenorb.1983

Tadd Dameron
piano1917 - 1965

Kenny Dorham
trumpet1924 - 1972
The Observant pulled your scribe back afterwards, for a set by Montis, Goudsmit and Directie, a spirited guitar-Hammond organ-drums trio in the classic formation, loaded with energy, push and extroversion. Each member wields an equal strength, making them a formidable jazz-soul-funk force, with guitarist

Anton Goudsmit
guitarCyril Directie
drums
Ray Charles
piano and vocals1930 - 2004
Saturday's Lieve Vrouwekerhof programme opened with the Jazz Orchestra Of The Concertgebouw, Polish saxophonist

Sylwester Ostrowski
saxophoneOne odd act out was Kuenta i Tambú, an Amsterdam outfit who are steeped in the music of the Caribbean island Cura?ao, teetering almost exactly halfway between fierce electronic bassbooms and acoustic percussion freak-outs. It's a successful blend, particularly when the sonic mix was balanced so that all elements were equally audible. They even opened with a goat-horn fanfare! Two percussionists worked beside a turntablist, with density on the decks, shaping a drum thunder that was closer to the Burundi sound than any island intricacy.
Heading back to Observant, another artist joined a growing cluster of remarkable discoveries for your scribe. The young Israeli reedsman Aviv Noam won the Dutch Jazz Prize in 2020, releasing his This Is In Everything We Do quartet debut album. Partnered by bass clarinet, upright bass and drums, Noam began on the alto saxophone, initially streaming with a serene, impressionistic flow, nestled reeds aligning.

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Jimmy Giuffre
clarinet1921 - 2008
The biggest name artists outside of the Netherlands were probably saxophonist

Candy Dulfer
saxophone, alto
Hans Dulfer
saxophone
Manu Dibango
saxophone1934 - 2020
The last day of this Amersfoort festival once more oscillated between the venues, with larger and smaller gigs. Artistic director Alexander Beets invited his guest Sylwester Ostrowski to play in a no-messin' old school sextet at Observant, a gig that was only arranged the day before. A tribute to

Hank Mobley
saxophone, tenor1930 - 1986
The trio of

John Engels
drumsb.1935

Joris Teepe
bass, acousticb.1962

Benjamin Herman
saxophone
Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020
The big show climax arrived with a Jazz At The Philharmonic concept presentation, Ostrowski showing up again, pushing to the edge with some immediately wild blowing, although still retaining his low tones. The full line-up had taken to the stage by the time "Fly Me To The Moon" launched, another guest in the form of guitarist Anton Goudsmit, wading through a chicken shack groove, alto and tenors fully firing.
Although nowhere near as 'international' as usual, the Amersfoort festival offered an excellent opportunity to take a crash course in the current Dutch scene, with multiple introductions being made to completely unfamiliar bands, many of whom were outstanding, very worthy of wider touring around Europe, or even much further beyond.
Tags
Live Review
Martin Longley
Netherlands
Amsterdam
Alexander Beets
Stanley Turrentine
Dexter Gordon
Tord Gustavsen
Eran Har Even
Sun-Mi Hong
Gilad Hekselman
Wayne Shorter
Colin Stetson
Moondog
Mark Alban Lotz
Dick de Graaf
Udo Pannekeet
Ben van den Dungen
Jef Neve
Jasper H?iby
Nicolas Kummert
Steven Delannoye
Tadd Dameron
Kenny Dorham
Anton Goudsmit
Cyril Directie
Ray Charles
Sylwester Ostrowski
Nina Simone
Aviv Noam
Ornette Coleman
Eric Dolphy
Charles Mingus
Jimmy Giuffre
Candy Dulfer
Hans Dulfer
Manu Dibango
Hank Mobley
John Engels
Joris Teepe
Benjamin Herman
Lee Konitz
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