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Citadelic 2021

Courtesy Bjorn Comhaire
Citadelpark
Gent, Belgium
August 16-18, 2021
Your scribe took a three-day slice out of the six-day Citadelic festival, which had returned to its accustomed Citadelpark following a switch of location in 2020. He arrived for the second half of this 14th edition, catching three or four acts each day. Admission was free, as usual, pulling a healthy gathering, at least within the esoteric realms of free jazz and abstract improvisation. Light rain marred some sets, and the weather conditions were chillier than usual, unluckily. Nevertheless, positive vibrations pervaded, via the music and the general public enthusiasm.
The baritone saxophonist and bass clarinetist Hanne De Backer has become a notable presence on the Belgian improvising scene, here partnered in a quartet with the Austrian pianist

Elias Stemeseder
synthesizerb.1990
Rorschach is another quartet, but of an older vintage, including pianist

Eric Thielemans
drumsThe

Devin Gray
drumsb.1983
Bram De Looze
pianoThe next day's lunchtime set featured one of Belgium's already greatest fast-rising bands, meaning Dishwasher. Already caught at the Gent Jazz festival the month before, this trio adopt rock, dub and electronic moves, whilst still retaining an improvisatory jazz core. In fact, even though their pieces sound premeditated, Dishwasher's dial is permanently switched to the freedom setting, even if this means instant composition rather than unpredictable abstraction. It's just that they're committed to immersive basslines and repetitive beats, although their frontman's saxophone is the chief jazz style-provider. Werend Van Den Bossche's horn is frequently coated in electronic surface-alterers, as are the instruments of his co-latherers Louis Van Den Houvel (bass) and Arno Grootaers (drums). There are hints of

Jon Hassell
trumpetb.1937

Percy Jones
bass
Bill Laswell
bassb.1955
The evening part of the programme eased in gently via Belgian-Dutch trombone togetherness with

Nabou Claerhout
tromboneA quintet of unfamiliar Liège players followed, Bloom performing compositions by their guitarist Quentin Stokart, who's lately living in Brussels. They celebrated the release of their latest album on El Negocito, the innovative record label run by Citadelic's guiding figure Rogé Verstraete. Stokart's guitar frequently broke out around the organised structures of the other four players, as if the composer was deliberately setting out to subvert his own work, giving himself the freedom to disrupt. His sharp, metallic otherness careened across the anthemic intricacy with an individualist breakdown, followed by a wiry alto saxophone solo from Clement Dechambre, gutting with fire-tendrils.
The climactic combo was a trio with " data-original-title="" title="">Tuur Florizoone (accordion), Marine Horbaczewski (cello) and
Michel Massot
tromboneThe lunchtime set on the festival's final day brought together the veteran Gent bluesman Roland Van Campenhout and his regular cohort Steven De Bruyn (harmonicas/electronics), along with drummer and vocalist Karen Willems, who arrived with more of an alternative rock sensibility. Roland opened by flicking on his psychedelic sitar switch, squinting through an Indian classical haze, De Bruyn using his harp like a gulping-drone didgeridoo. Roland sent out a fuzz-horizon from his small electric axe, with Willems singing along in a clipped, punksome fashion. Then she used a megaphone to create a 1920s vocal effect. Roland moaned with his slide runs, painting a

Ry Cooder
guitarb.1947
The concluding evening run began with the reeds/accordion/bass trio of Kreis, amassing drone textures during their first pair of pieces, relishing a minimalist atmosphere. The third number highlighted a skating bass-bowing action from Kobe Boon, with a patiently plodding bass clarinet part, courtesy of Benjamin Hermans. The composer and accordionist Stan Maris is the son of trumpeter

Bart Maris
trumpetb.1965
A new performance concept made its debut with Black Sea Songs, a trio and a repertoire, combining the voice, strings and reeds of Sanem Kalfa, George Dumitriu and

Joachim Badenhorst
clarinetb.1981
Citadelic concluded with Tito's Binoculars, another unfamiliar combo, in a freshly-concocted improvisatory meeting, although the chief herder is saxophonist Viktor Perdieus, seen in action with the mighty Don Kapot. His cohorts were guitarist Fredrik Leroux (another Belgian) and a matching pair of Norwegians, Henrik N?rsteb? (trombone) and Eyvind Skarb? (drums). Noise is almighty, but there was also time for smooth tenor, small skin scuttles and some lightly rasping 'bone, signalling something aligned with jazz, though often appearing as an extreme ghost of a tune. There were insectoid flutters, soft breath sounds and light-tread drum-padding. The Binoculars operated on extreme parameters between loudness and softness, attuned in all quarters.
Even though the festival highlights had arrived during the preceding two days, or earlier on this closing day, its standards remained very high throughout, transcending the sometimes adverse weather conditions, and upholding the celebratory free music vibrations, magnetising quite a substantial audience considering the obstacles of these besmirched times.
Tags
Live Review
Martin Longley
Belgium
Ghent
Hanne De Backer
Elias Stemeseder
Erik Vermeulen
Eric Thielemans
Devin Gray
Chris Pitsiokos
Bram De Looze
Jon Hassell
Percy Jones
Bill Laswell
Jah Wobble
Nabou Claerhout
Michel Massot
Ry Cooder
Bart Maris
Joachim Badenhorst
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