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Flow Festival 2023

Courtesy Konstantin Kondrukhov
Suvilahti, Helsinki, Finland
August 11-13, 2023
The stark quantity and sheer quality of improvised and instrumental music on offer at Finland's Flow Festival only starts to make sense when you dig into its roots. Once loudly crowned by Vogue as "the Nordics countries' coolest festival"a fact the event's PR team are not in a hurry to let you forgetthe Helsinki hipster fest was, it turns out, originally founded 19 years ago as a jazz and soul happening. At the helm was and is a certain Tuomas Kallio, the forward-thinking producer behind The Five Corners Quintet, a sample-based fictional five-piece which eventually evolved into a real-life Finnish jazz supergroup. (At least two alumni were present and accounted for at this year's Flow.)
Now, "genre-bleed" festivals may be increasingly common; but the consistent commitment to wiggier sounds witnessed at Flowwhere daily attendance hits 30,000 and the bulk of the budget is spent tempting big-name pop and indie acts like Lorde and Blur to Finlandis the most welcome surprise. Hosted in the sprawl of an abandoned power station's grounds, of Flow's five "main" live music stages, two are dedicated almost exclusively to jazz, experimental music and global grooves (a further four spaces are devoted to DJs). Now, any multi-stage festival is a simultaneously exciting/frustrating whirlpool of chance discoveries, missed moments and audio adventures not taken, but at Flow it feels possible for different strands of music fan to realise their own reality in parallel bubblesindeed a hip-hop fan, house head, ageing rocker or, yes, jazzbo could live our their best three days without ever straying into an unfamiliar musical climate.
A 360° perspective
Look only to first-day highlight Nala Sinephro, whose thrilling, improvised ambient soundscaping provided a jolting, welcome antidote to the Britpop histrionics of Suede and the pounding Afrobeats of Wizkid on the mainstage. The Caribbean-Belgian harpist/keyboardist/producer made hypnotic waves with Space 1.8 (2021, Warp Records), a meandering, meditative set which received the ultimate indie honour of a Pitchfork end-of-year ranking. The LP was a beautiful, beguiling and introspective late-night affair that one might not imagine would translate so compellingly to a live environmentbut at Flow its expansive drones and secular spiritualism was summoned in 3D by a nuanced quintet, with two additional synth/electronic players (plus horn and drums) playing respectful rings round the leader .The venue for this nocturnal Friday set was the Balloon 360° stage, a self-contained sonic universe which, situated at the furthest end of the festival area, took on the vibe of an insiders' retreat. The circular arena was styled like a mini-Roman amphitheatre, with rows of stadium-style seating, plus ample space to rubberneck (or dance) closer to the action. It was the ideal venue to witness

DOMi + JD Beck
band / ensemble / orchestraHer band mate is just 20, and while much childish banter still remainsnearly every song is seemingly introduced as the set's "worst"it feels a notably slicker, more mature outing than the duo's appearance at Pori Jazz a year earlier. In the meantime, debut album Not Tight (2022, Blue Note) emerged to enthusiastic reviewssometimes tempered with a lingering sense that it failed to quite capture the controlled chaos of the pair's viral-famous improv freakouts. This, then, is the final post-modern twistthe LP's songs, bottled for consumption and then set free again. Instrumental workouts like "Whatup" and "Sniff" are thrilling pinch-me, hype-justifying musical workouts, while early single "Smile" and the restless tempo changes of "Duke" (a tribute both to

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Thundercat
bass, electricb.1984

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Weather Report
band / ensemble / orchestra
Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023
Helsinki Rocks
There was an intriguing intergenerational clash of homegrown artists on display at Flow 2023. Finnish keyboardist " data-original-title="" title="">Olli Ahvenlahti presented a somewhat premature 50th anniversary celebration of his celebrated '70s crossover hit The Poet (1976, Love Records) while simultaneously previewing a forthcoming sequel. Proudly touting the same Fender Rhodes from those halcyon dates, the 74-year-old led a quintet who all looked significantly younger than the instrument in question (I checked: standout soloistJukka Eskola
trumpetSkipping forward a few generations, the New York-based Kaisa's Machine is after more elusive, ephemeral sonic fruit. Leader/bassist

Kaisa Mäensivu
bass
Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Joe Peri
drumsSitting between these two generationally is percussionist/producer

Teppo Mäkynen
drums
Timo Lassy
saxophoneb.1974
Destination: Out!
M?kynen's show took place indoors at The Other Sound, an all-seated, pitch-black theatre programming avant-garde and experimental sounds (and a dash of dance!) which ranged from synapse-firing profundity to the infuriatingly middlingoften in the same set. Most thrillingly, Finland's own Meriheini Luoto brought a spine-tingling intensity to frantic, frazzled, looped violin concoctions. Elsewhere, Berlin-based composer Maya Shenfield conjured textured electronic sonic sculptures that emerged like glaciers from a calm blue ocean. Arushi Jain's electro-raga schtick droned intently and without compromise, somewhat undermined by a self-conscious sense of performance.Yet the most arrestingand importantimprovisation of the entire festival arguably happened on the mainstage, when

Linda Fredriksson
saxophoneGlobalised grooves
In truth, Flow feels most fulfilling when its icy instincts for all things cool meld with an overflowing compassion for groove, most evident in the list of heavyweight international names on display. Algote Oho and his Sounds of Joy delivered exactly what's advertised on the tin. Context, as ever, is everythingjust compare the Ghanaian gospel singer's early afternoon set to a rainy, empty field at Pori Jazz a year earlier to this year's 11pm Saturday night performance to a crazed amphitheatre at Flow. Touring O Yinne! (2023, Philophon) hard, the eight-piece band played with a sense of purpose and road-tested aplomb which testifies to their growing reputation in Europe. While the band appears to be moving ever-farther away from the traditional stylings of the leaders' Frafra gospel roots, the infectious joy (pun intended) of this party-starting outfit onstage is irrefutable.In a similar piece of canny programming, reggae icon Horace Andy was, of course, an ideal foil for a sundown Sunday slot, while Esa's Afro-Synth Band, led by South African producer Esa Williams, closed Friday night with a joyous hoe-down of vintage synth-heavy Afro-disco bangers. Similar synths and a shameless retro magpie approach drive hometown hero Arp Frique, whose four-piece Family reappropriates joyous Afro-funk for the teeming European masses. Indeed, omnivorous, post-genre groove magpies are the name of the dayand inevitably work wonders at any festival where the sun is shining. Neapolitan production duo (and former

Tony Allen
drums1938 - 2020
Go with the Flow?
Flow has done a fine job of reading the room while directing the conversationof sating a broader demographic without forgetting the inner muso. And as ticket prices continue to spiral for big-name tours, the event offers a timely reminder to its audience of the joys of discoverythe uncompromising programming of its multi-stage format offering ample opportunities for even the most jaded ears to be wowed. However, this was the final event to be staged in the open canvas of Helsinki's repurposed Suvilahti industrial area, Flow's home since 2007. Let's hope wherever it finds itself in 2024, it's able to keep up its current eclecticismbecause we will be back for more.Tags
Live Review
Rob Garratt
Finland
Nala Sinephro
DOMi & JD Beck
duke ellington
Thundercat
Herbie Hancock
Weather Report
Wayne Shorter
Olli Ahvenlahti
Jukka Eskola
Kaisa's Machine
Kaisa M?ensivu
Ron Carter
Joe Peri
Teppo M?kynen
Timo Lassy
Linda Fredriksson
Horace Andy
Tony Allen
We Jazz Records
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About DOMi + JD Beck
Instrument: Band / ensemble / orchestra
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