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Jazz em Agosto 2025

Courtesy Petra Cvelbar
Gulbenkian Foundation
Lisbon, Portugal
August 1-10, 2025
Despite the "onda de calor" which hit it, Lisbon remains as peaceful as ever in its saturnine routineeven though invasive tourism in the Baixa neighborhood has already changed its appearance, and not for the better.
August, however, is also the jazz month in the Portuguese capitala time for exploratory, avant-garde sounds, leaning heavily toward electronics at the newly renovated Gulbenkian Foundationwith architecture by Kengo Kumawhich hosted the 41st edition of Jazz em Agosto under the artistic direction of Rui Neves.
The opening days were dedicated to the trio format, a classic configuration in improvised music. The trios, however, could not have been more differentstarting with the masters

William Parker
bassb.1952

Cooper-Moore
pianob.1946

Hamid Drake
drumsb.1955
Witnessing such endeavors, the same questions from years past inevitably arise: how far can the appropriation of remote musical legacies (African, Asian, Aboriginal) go when filtered through a Western lenseven a heterodox one like the African-American tradition? The debate remains open, but there is no question that the lingua franca of this trio is grounded in sincerity, in active inner reworking, and in an unquestionable class that looks unflinchingly toward the unfinished aesthetic legacy of

Don Cherry
trumpet1936 - 1995
Plenty of Don Cherry's imprint could also be heard in the Portuguese trio led by trumpeter

Luis Vicente
trumpet
Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Pedro Melo Alves
drumsb.1991

Gonçalo Almeida
bass, acousticb.1978
Black music and free-form singing were also the territory of alto saxophonist

Darius Jones
saxophone, alto
Chris Lightcap
bassb.1971

Gerald Cleaver
drumsb.1963

Julius Hemphill
saxophone, alto1938 - 1995

Arthur Blythe
saxophone, alto1940 - 2017
A similar interplay emerged in another triothis time with piano and rhythm sectionled by Canadian pianist

Kris Davis
pianob.1980

Robert Hurst
bass, acousticb.1964

Johnathan Blake
drumsThe group draws from multiple piano-trio jazz grammars without being dominated by any, imposing instead its own rhythmic perspective that distances it from the classical-modern model privileging melody. In this sense, Davis perhaps takes a step back as a pianist to foreground her arranger's philosophy, fully aware of having two instrumental giants beside her. Hurst and Blake are exceptional, the latter an indefatigable juggler of drums and cymbalsphysically still yet hyperkinetic at the kit, using two snare drums of different pitches. A concert of notable substance, though a touch distant emotions-wise.
It was a thoughtful choice for the festival to dedicate one evening to a young Portuguese ensemble. This year, that honor went to bassist Joao Prospero's quartet, which performed a cycle of themes inspired by the novels of Haruki Murakami. Beneath an appearance of tranquility, transparency and gentleness, there were moments of surprise and bite, courtesy of drummer
Gonçalo Ribeiro
drumsMiguel Meirinhos
pianoOn another front, many concerts focused on new electronics, sonic manipulation, and stylistic hybridization.
Rafael Toral
electronicsThe Anglo-Iranian " data-original-title="" title="">Mariam Rezaei was an impressive figure, commanding an immense sonic arsenal from two turntables and electronics, sculpted through a frenetic yet coherent montagefirst unaccompanied, then joined by guitarist

Julien Desprez
guitar
Lukas König
drumsb.1988
Desprez and Konig returned with vocalist
Audrey Chen
cello
Moor Mother
poet / spoken wordThe setcrafted from mysterious atmospheres and driven toward a paroxysmal climaxplayed on the dichotomy between Chen's abstract virtuosity and Moor Motherthe latter in dazzling formwith her dramatic delivery. Konig maintained a suffocating, rock-oriented groove that held together the Babel of languages, producing a patchwork of immense enjoyment, if somewhat overextended in duration.
The X-Rai Hex Tet project blended and intertwined very different atmospheres within a fascinating electroacoustic system. The scene was that of British experimentation, with

Pat Thomas
pianob.1960
Seymour Wright
saxophone, altoPaul Abbott
drumsDriven by fragmented pulses from the two drum kits, the music floated in a refined interplay that underscored George's historical narrativefocused on early 18th-century British colonization and its consequent slaverywith a sense of estrangement.
Within this horizontal music, between ascetic silences and pointillist flurries, Wright's parasitic saxophone sounds stood outunyielding, anti-narrative, yet razor-sharp.
On the opposite end stood " data-original-title="" title="">Ahleuchatistas, a trio whose math-rock vision has been obsessively built over many years on the repetition of guitar arpeggios and riffs (
Shane Parish
guitar
King Crimson
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1969

John Zorn
saxophone, altob.1953

Trevor Dunn
bassParish returned the next day for a solo acoustic guitar set at the Grande Auditorium, this time with a repertoire of standardspure delight.
In the same venue, the duo of

Elias Stemeseder
synthesizerb.1990

Christian Lillinger
drumsb.1984
Brooklyn's scene was represented by two of its brightest stars: the trio

Thumbscrew
band / ensemble / orchestra
Patricia Brennan
vibraphoneThumbscrew's rapport is now second nature. Though an egalitarian trio,

Michael Formanek
bass, acousticb.1958

Mary Halvorson
guitar
Tomas Fujiwara
drums
Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
Patricia Brennan is the composer of the moment in the avant-jazz scene, following the unanimous acclaim for Breaking Stretch (Pyroclastic Records, 2024), performed in full at the festival's closing concert. Brennan is a marvelous musicianan inventive vibraphonist but here above all a brilliant composer of intense, engaging music that should not be mistaken for a postmodern take on Afro-Latin tradition. It is essentially rhythmicindeed, polyrhythmicbut contains a wealth of subtexts that surface in every sequence, propelled by a dream ensemble, equally perfect in its "dancing" dimension and in the nuanced intimacy of vibrant chamber interplay. Every member deserves mention: Patricia Brennan,

Adam O’Farrill
trumpet
Jon Irabagon
saxophone, tenor
Mark Shim
saxophone, tenorb.1973

Kim Cass
bass, acoustic
Dan Weiss
drumsKeisel Jimenez
congasThus concluded Jazz em Agostowith yet another sold-out edition, impeccable organization, and artistic success that only grew as the days went by.
Tags
Live Review
Patricia Brennan
Ludovico Granvassu
Portugal
Lisbon
William Parker
Cooper-Moore
Hamid Drake
Don Cherry
Luis Vicente
Pedro Melo Alves
Gon?alo Almeida
Darius Jones
Chris Lightcap
Gerald Cleaver
Julius Hemphill
Arthur Blythe
Kris Davis
Robert Hurst
Johnathan Blake
Joao Prospero
Gon?alo Ribeiro
Miguel Meirinhos
Joaquim Festas
Rafael Toral
Mariam Rezaei
Julien Desprez
Lukas K?nig
Audrey Chen
MC Dalek
Moor Mother
Pat Thomas
Seymour Wright
Paul Abbott
Crystabel Riley
Billy Steiger
Edward George
Ahleuchatistas
Shane Parish
King Crimson
john zorn
Danny Piechocki
Trevor Dunn
Elias Stemeseder
Christian Lillinger
Thumbscrew
Michael Formanek
Mary Halvorson
Tomas Fujiwara
Adam O'Farrill
Jon Irabagon
Mark Shim
Kim Cass
Dan Weiss
Keisel Jimenez
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