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Gerald Clayton-Elena Pinderhughes Duo at Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society
ByThis powerful connection between the music and the audience is a testament to the beauty of the music and the impact of this magnetic duo’s performance.
Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society
Live performance
Half Moon Bay
Sunday, April 28, 2024
It is always a rewarding experience to attend a show at Bach Dancing & Dynamite Society in Half Moon Bay near San Francisco, both for the music and the beachfront location. As usual, president and artistic director Barbara Riching was the hostess and emcee, and the show, featuring Gerald Clayton and Elena Pinderhughes, filled the 200-seat room with energy and passiona testament to their exemplary musicianship.
Dutch-born, Los Angeles-raised Gerald Clayton is a thoughtful and complete pianist and composer. His playing encapsulates the history of jazz piano from swing up to the avant-garde. I say this because he largely avoids dissonancea ubiquitous characteristic of free jazzexcept as an occasional exclamation point or a brief diversion from his flowing melodic ideas. His playing is spacious yet finely chiseled with a reflective but soothing quality that bears at least a hint of the great

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980
Elena Pinderhughes brings impressive versatility and range to this unusual duo. As a flutist and vocalist, she is a phenom, a former child prodigy who has grown into the towering young jazz woman she is. She effortlessly shines in various genresjazz to salsa, hip-hop to rhythm 'n blues. I wouldn't be surprised to find her equally at home playing classical music. I could see her killing it on Erik Satie's "Gymnopédie."
Her flute's tone is full and throaty, yet light, airy, and incredibly pure. Her presence and playing were captivating and rapturous. She often appeared to draw audience members into a light trance, although they regularly gave her a spirited ovation after each solo.
This powerful connection between the music and the audience is a testament to the beauty of the music and the impact of this magnetic duo's performance. Their presentation, too, was relaxed and classy: Clayton sported a blue Dutch Boy cap and comfortable beige sport jacket, while Pinderhughes tastefully attired herself in a one-piece burnt-orange suit with thin, striated, vertical black stripes. She wore hoop earrings that dangled astride a dense chignon atop her head. Together, they have an inviting, easy, and smooth stage presence.
On to the music. The set opened with Clayton breezing into a Bach fugue-like figure. After he settled into the groove, Pinderhughes entered, her serenely piercing flute playing in unison to pleasing effect.
The second tune,

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
Next came a lament: Clayton's "Birds Love," a piece about a nightingale pining away for his unrequited love. His "New York Frederick Douglas" composition, a furious political statement, à la

Paul Bley
piano1932 - 2016
The penultimate tune, "Ode to Booker" (trumpet great

Booker Little
trumpet1938 - 1961

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008
The fitting final tune was the jazz standard crowd pleaser "There is No Greater Love" by
Isham Jones
b.1894Tags
Live Review
Gerald Clayton
Roy Strassman
United States
California
san francisco
Bill Evans
Thelonious Monk
Paul Bley
Booker Little
Freddie Hubbard
Stymes
Elena Pinderhughes
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Gerald Clayton Concerts
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Bach Dancing & Dynamite SocietyHalf Moon Bay, CA
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Gerald Clayton Quintet
Samueli TheaterCosta Mesa, CA
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