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Celebrating and Reflecting Back on Guelph Jazz Festival @ 30

Courtesy Josef Woodard
Along with the FIMAV festival in Victoriaville, Quebec, Guelph has established its place firmly in the left of center- minded niche of the global jazz festival cosmos.
Guelph Otario, Canada
September 14-17, 2023
There are precious few jazz festivals in the Americas adhering to what could be called the Triple-A curatorial mandate: adventurous, avant-garde and art-centric. These special cases cling to a commercially fragile, demographically marginaland also culturally vitalrealm and mission.
Such conditions make milestone in a left-leaning festival's life especially notable, as was the case with the Guelph Jazz Festival in its 30th anniversary edition. Although Guelph's geo-cultural purview has been more Canadian-focused in recent years, compared to its formerly more international scope, the festivalattached to colloquium based at the University of Guelph's International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisationcontinues to follow a formidable, progressive course. Along with the FIMAV festival in Victoriaville, Quebec, Guelph has established its place firmly in the left-of-center-minded niche of the global jazz festival cosmos.
As it happens, this year's Guelph festival was also notable as the swan song for director
Scott Thomson
tromboneA roughly considered top five shows for this listener, out of the program total of 12 shows, includes the

Lina Allemano
trumpetRatchet Orchestra
bass, acousticKim Zombik
vocalsNicolas Caloia
bass
Francois Houle
clarinetCory Smythe
pianoA rare marquee artist from the US on this year's roster, Smythe has played with

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945
As intriguing as the recording may be, the "canned" listening experience pales badly by comparison with the performative brilliance of the live item. Smythe has choreographed an elaborate sonic and visual scheme involving sparebut sometimes ferociousplaying of the actual piano keys, inside-the-piano percussiveness and light prepared piano touches mixed with ever-so-subtle electronics and a digital keyboard which creates a quarter-tone piano effect when he plays the actual piano keys.
Color me bewitched, and wondering if this wasn't my personal festival epiphany concert, whatever Smythe's jazz credentials.
Reflections on and historical ripples from the festival's 30-year history was a running theme this year, including the panel discussion component at the University, gazing inward, tightly focused on the heritage and reality of the festival itself. (This journalist and veteran of a handful of past festival visits, was one of the speakers on the "Jazz Writers" panel, testing my verbal skills alongside veteran Canadian jazz writer and avant-champion Stuart Broomer. Writer and academic Sara Villa was missing-in-action, laid low by COVID.)
Another point of historic departure was a double-header paying homage to the late, great

Steve Lacy
saxophone, soprano1934 - 2004
_Francesca_Patella.jpg)
Jorrit Dijkstra
saxophone
Kayla Milmine
saxophone, soprano
Tania Gill
pianoSusanna Hood
variousThe official festival opener came in the form of the deceptively modest-scaled duo Silvervest, in fact, one of the more fascinating new projects on the Canadian jazz scene. Through a remarkable empathetic link and creative fluidity, the sensational singer-poet Zombik and nimble bassist Nicholas Caloia (nimble in terms of dexterity and ideas) have created a fascinating entity both respectful of jazz (e.g.

Abbey Lincoln
vocals1930 - 2010

Betty Carter
vocals1929 - 1998
Silvervest was one of many Canadian acts appearing at the 2022 edition of the major jazz expo jazzahead! in Bremen, Germany, the year that Canada was the country in focus. Another impressive artist in Bremen was Allemanowho, in fact, lives in both Toronto and Berlin. Her late-night set in Guelph's humble but hip upstairs venue artBar was one of the clear dazzlers of the festival, between the inventive, idiom-stretching structures of her compositionsslithering between jazz, free improv and classical/new music polarities---and the of rich and exploratory nature of her work as a trumpeter.
Allemano is a prolific music-maker and DIY champion, with her own label, Lumo Records, and various projects afoot, including the Lina Allemano Four (alto saxophonist

Brodie West
clarinet
Nick Fraser
drumsb.1976

Andrew Downing
bassIn that cavernous space, Zubot had also appeared the night before, as part of Montreal's grand and mischievous avant-big band organism, Ratchet Orchestra. The group, which last played the Guelph festival in 2010, and this long but wholly satisfying concert adventure featured a set of diverse compositions and free-play strategies laid out by bassist Caloia and deftly taking advantage of the presence of strings along with more typical jazz big band colors. Along with the expected raucous sturm und drang und swell of the band, there were moments of languid melancholy, with echoes of

Henry Threadgill
woodwindsb.1944
Off in its own hard-to-pigeonhole corner of the avant-jazz domain, the Thursday night spotlight went to the group known as {Ahmed}. Named in honor of legendary bassist

Ahmed Abdul-Malik
bass1927 - 1993

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Antonin Gerbal
drums
Pat Thomas
pianob.1960
Seymour Wright
saxophone, altoOne of the peripheral but critical components of the Guelph Jazz Festival, like many right-minded fests, is the inclusion of a free outdoor outpost for the community including those who wouldn't necessarily cotton to the challenging ticketed concertsto congregate and enjoy free music in the city's central Market Square. On Friday night, the fare was about acoustic acts in the African, brass band and samba variety, while Saturday afternoon-to-midnight programming was more on a diverse curatorial plan, culminating in the Toronto-based Polaris Prize winner Witch Prophet. Director Thomson took the stage at midnight after her dynamic set and commented that this was "the first jazz festival i have programmed to feature a mosh pit."
Many fest-goers had departed by Sunday, but they sadly missed a special performance by the impressive and impressionistic Halifax-ian New Hermitage in the intimate Guelph Youth Centre venue. The inspired blend and interactive ears of
Andrew MacKelvie
clarinet, bassIndia Gailey
celloEllen Gibling
harpRoss Burns
guitarTags
Festivals Talking
The Ratchet Orchestra
Josef Woodard
Scott Thomson
Ajay Heble
Michel Levasseur
New Hermitage
Ratchet Orchestra
Kim Zombik
Nicholas Caloia
Tyshawn Sorey
anthony braxton
Hilary Hahn
Steve Lacy
Jorrit Dijkstra
Irene Abei
Kayla Milmine
Tania Gill
Susanna Hood
Abbey Lincoln
Betty Carter
Brodie West
Nick Fraser
Andrew Downing
Josh Zubot Strings
Henry Threadgill
{ahmed
Ahmed Abdul-Malik
Antonin Gerbal
Pat Thomas
Seymour Wright
Julius Eastman
Witch Prophet
Andrew MacKelvie
India Gailey
Ellen Gibling
Ross Burns
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