Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Ben Wendel Group At Bop Stop
Ben Wendel Group At Bop Stop

Courtesy John Chacona
Bop Stop
Cleveland, OH
March 22, 2023
For a long time, California has held a mythic place in the U.S. popular imagination as a fountainhead of new ideas in culture, technology, or in the case of the smartphone ("Designed by Apple in California") of both. So it makes a certain amount of sense that every musician in the

Ben Wendel
saxophone, tenor
Taylor Eigsti
piano
Nate Wood
drumsb.1979

Harish Raghavan
bassTenor saxophone, piano, bass and drums is, of course, a classic jazz combo formation, and with the exception of Wendel's pedalboard, the band used no electronics. But jazz was only one element in the mix.
Like the music of

Kneebody
band / ensemble / orchestraFrom praise music the quartet borrowed the device of the long, steady buildup of tension that releases into a quiet denouement that built to a second climax, usually over a vamp. This was the dramatic arc, established with "February" and "January"two songs from Wendel's "The Seasons" projectand liberally used later in the band's 70-minute set. Rock songs also do this, and along with the sound mix, which could be blunt and two-dimensional at times, created the effect of arena-rock scale adrenaline in a jazz room.
Eigsti's piano was relatively low in that mix. Is that why he frequently threw in impishly spare single-note lines? Maybe not. The band's spirits were high all evening long. Wendel, who often bounced on his feet and swayed to the insatiable beat, thanked the crowd for bringing "Saturday night energy to a Wednesday night."
That energy was undeniable, but it was just a reflection of the relentless churn onstage. With few exceptions, the material chugged along with a locomotive momentum, Raghavan and Wood pushing things forward. Wendel responded by firing off bursts of hyper-articulate lines with the velocity and accuracy of algorithmic stock-trading software, a

Johnny Griffin
saxophone, tenor1928 - 2008
Even on "Song Song," Wendel's hommage to

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023

Vernel Fournier
drums1928 - 2000
After returning to the stage, Wendel announced that the band would do something out of the ordinary. "We're going to play on 'Rhythm' changes. I think the tune might be 'Wee,' but Harish would know. He knows all the tunes."
It was indeed the

Denzil Best
drums1917 - 1965
As the band filed offstage, a concertgoer in his sixties said, "There wasn't a single point in that set where they swung," before hastily adding, "I know that wasn't the point, but . . ."
No, it wasn't the point, but Wendel and the band made a point, and they made it loud and clear.
Tags
Live Review
Ben Wendel
John Chacona
Lydia Liebman Promotions
United States
Ohio
Cleveland
Bop Stop
Taylor Eigsti
Nate Wood
Vancouver
Chicago
Harish Raghavan
Kneebody
Los Angeles
Johnny Griffin
Ahmad Jamal
Vernell Fournier
Denzil Best
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