Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Edgefest 2017: Give the Drummers Some, Part 1-2
Edgefest 2017: Give the Drummers Some, Part 1-2

Edgefest
Ann Arbor, MI
October 18-19, 2017
When mid-October rolls around, many fans of avant-garde jazz and creative music prepare to converge on Ann Arbor, Michigan for their annual pilgrimage to the Kerrytown Concert House, home of the Edgefest festival. Now in its twenty-first year, Edgefest has become one of the premier festivals in North America for those interested in the outer realms of jazz, and the adventurous music it offers always leaves audiences exhilarated. With a relatively small, 110-seat venue, the Kerrytown stage provides an intimate atmosphere that is perfect for an up-close encounter with some world-class musicians.
But what makes Edgefest truly exceptional is not just the superb music it provides over four days. Going further, the festival sponsors numerous workshops and clinics, often by partnering with the University of Michigan and its faculty and students, as well as with local high schools and even middle schools. Additionally, "Fringe" performances at other venues around town provide even more opportunities for audiences to experience the music. In short, Edgefest strives to cultivate a spirit of community, both within the ranks of the Edgefest faithful and with wider Ann Arbor, a commitment exemplified by the traditional Edgefest parade each Saturday afternoon, where locals can join in the fun as Ann Arbor's own version of a New Orleans "second line" marches its way through town.
The theme for this year's Edgefest, "Drums Along the Edge," which ran from October 18-21, allowed the festival to highlight the contributions made by drummers and percussionists across the wide swath of today's creative music scene. With long-established veterans like

Pheeroan AkLaff
drumsb.1955

Tom Rainey
drumsb.1957

William Hooker
drumsb.1946

Tomas Fujiwara
drums
Harris Eisenstadt
drums
Allison Miller
drumsWednesday evening began with one of the more unusual line-ups of the festival, as percussionist " data-original-title="" title="">Michael Gould teamed up with actor/director Malcolm Tulip for "Remember Me": an imaginative, wry, and sometimes profound re-thinking of "Dido's Lament" from Henry Purcell's opera Dido and Aeneas, using the poems of Ken Mikolowski as text. The duo were joined briefly at the outset by Edgefest director and mezzo soprano vocalist Deanna Relyea and cellist Katri Ervamaa, who delineated the classical foundation of the aria, before Tulip's expansive vocalizations and Gould's broad array of percussion techniques and computer-generated effects took the performance into the realm of the surreal. Although a meditation on finitude and death's inevitability might not at first seem to offer the most inspiring thematic material with which to launch a festival, Tulip and Gould brought a defiant creativity to their collage of vignettes, and Gould effectively demonstrated that this would indeed be a drummers' festival.
Gould's "Remember Me" was followed by a trombone trio featuring

Steve Swell
tromboneb.1954

Dick Griffin
tromboneb.1939

Joe McPhee
woodwindsb.1939
Finishing out the first night was the trio of drummer Pheeroan akLaff, bassist " data-original-title="" title="">Julian Thayer, and multi-instrumentalist extraordinaire

Scott Robinson
saxophone, tenorb.1959
Thursday night's programming represented the wide gamut of stylistic approaches for which Edgefest has become justly celebrated. Drummer
Jonathan Taylor
pianoMolly Jones
saxophone, sopranoMarcus Elliot
saxophone, tenor
Jaribu Shahid
bass, acousticb.1955
Michael Malis
pianoWith his forceful, percussive piano style, Malis put in quite a workout with Taylor's band, yet he apparently had plenty of energy left in reserve, as he shared the next set with the indomitable William Hooker for a jaw-dropping display of improvisational power. Hooker seemed to invite the audience into the performance by walking down the aisle and shaking hands with those he could reach while on his way to the stage, in a sign that something extraordinary was about to happen. Then, using a John Lomax field recording of an Alabama prison work song as a catalyst, he and Malis launched into a number of freewheeling improvisations that harnessed the emotional power of the recording while simultaneously redirecting it. Shouting "Let's Not Forget!" repeatedly at the outset, it was clear that Hooker had weighty matters on his mindand he played like it, with periodic outbursts and exclamations to spur Malis and himself to greater heights. With a fusillade of intensity, Hooker seemed at times to push his kit to the limits, with Malis matching his vigor with each strike of the toms. Malis has a strong classical sensibility behind much of his playing, but his more untethered statements revealed a barely-controlled fury; combined with Hooker's impassioned and relentless attacks, the result was one of the festival's most riveting and overpowering performances.
After Hooker and Malis came

Joe Daley
tuba
Warren Smith
drumsb.1934

Don Pullen
piano1941 - 1995
The night's closer was drummer Allison Miller's Boom Tic Boom ensemble, an exceptionally tight and infectious sextet. Playing material from its last two releases, 2016's widely-acclaimed Otis Was a Polar Bear and 2013's No Morphine No Lilies, the group navigated its way through Miller's lively tunes with ease, even though three of the players

Jeff Lederer
woodwinds
Carmen Staaf
pianob.1981

Tony Scherr
bass
Kirk Knuffke
trumpet
Jenny Scheinman
violinb.1979
Photo credit: Frank Rubolino
Tags
Live Reviews
Troy Dostert
United States
Pheeroan AkLaff
Tom Rainey
William Hooker
Tomas Fujiwara
Harris Eisenstadt
Allison Miller
Michael Gould
Malcolm Tulip
Deanna Relyea
Katri Ervamaa
Steve Swell
Dick Griffin
Joe McPhee
Julian Thayer
Scott Robinson
Jonathan Taylor
Molly Jones
Marcus Elliot
Jaribu SHAHID
Michael Malis
Joe Daley
Warren Smith
Don Pullen
Jeff Lederer
Carmen Staaf
Tony Scherr
Kirk Knuffke
Jenny Scheinman
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Matthew Alec with PARADISE: The Meat Loaf Tribute at...
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The Grant Green Tribute ft. Jerome Clark Band
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