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Holding Hands & Article XI At The Norfolk & Norwich Festival

Courtesy John Sharpe
The Garage
Norfolk & Norwich Festival
Norwich, UK
May 25, 2021
With the UK slowly reopening as the vaccination program diminishes the reach of Covid 19, live performance once more becomes a possibility. Major kudos to the Norfolk & Norwich Festival team for pressing ahead with live programming of not just this event but much of the rest of the two-week-long annual festivities, albeit with reduced, socially distanced audiences for indoor spaces. So it was that an eagerly awaited double header presenting some of the UK's most exciting improvisers touched down in the salubrious surroundings of The Garage in Norwich.
First on the bill was Holding Hands, an octet led jointly by trumpeter

Chris Dowding
trumpetAndrew Lisle
drums
Martin Pyne
vibraphoneb.1963

Ben Higham
tubaDee Byrne
saxophone, altoOne of the most striking passages came when Howe looped a disembodied voice, talking about the ice sheet falling into the ocean, which was mirrored syllable by syllable by first Clarkson's trombone, then others, while the vibes cut free in a welter of off-kilter chiming. Underpinned by a heartbeat throb, Howe switched to a different sample and the original effect was repeated, this time with the voice shadowed by Milne's bass clarinet.
The underlying subject matter was no coincidence. At the centerpiece of the set was "Critical Time," a work concerned with borders, landscapes and climate change, developed in conjunction with pupils from a school nearby Thetford (birthplace of Thomas Paine, one of the inspirations of the American Revolution and the author of the seminal Rights Of Man). Played against a backdrop of the children's artwork, the four-part work constituted another highlight, less tightly structured, allowing greater improvisational leeway, with uneasy accompaniment, well exploited by Byrne's twisting fractured alto, and later by Dowding's incisive pocket trumpet. In a favored gambit, an elegiac unison progressively absorbed the horns, which, when it stopped, left just a chill electronic wind whistling around the hall. A fitting end to music which provoked thought as much as pleasure.
After the interval it was the turn of Article XI, an eleven-piece (yep!) outfit, punningly named after the section of the European Convention of Human Rights which deals with the right to freedom of assembly, including forming and joining trade unions, under the direction of guitarist

Anton Hunter
guitar
Cath Roberts
saxophone, baritoneb.1983

Ken Vandermark
saxophoneb.1964
Alicia Gardener-Trejo
saxophone, baritoneSeth Bennett
bassMost of the numbers performed this evening came from the unit's two albums, its eponymous debut (Efpi Records, 2018) and Live In Newcastle (Discus, 2020). Hunter explained that he created the charts by asking the constituent musicians to record themselves improvising in response to the written material, and that he then assembled together the best bits. While his tongue was likely firmly in his cheek, it did help explain the satisfying way in which he meshed together some unfettered and spirited improv within the loose-limbed arrangements, which involved subsets of the group, cued ensemble interventions, layered textures and spiky beats.
Other high points included the initial fluttering swirly duet between Dee Byrne's alto (busy night for her) and " data-original-title="" title="">Simon Prince's kinetic flute on "Always A Fox," the subsequent threesome of the leader's sparse guitar,

Graham South
trumpet
Johnny Hunter
drums
Oliver Dover
saxophone, baritone
Richard Foote
tromboneTags
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