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Jazz Juniors 2022

Courtesy Micha? ?epecki
Cricoteka
Kraków, Poland
September 28-October 1, 2022
Jazz Juniors is primarily a competition, but simultaneously exists as a regular festival. This latter aspect has enlarged during recent years, following the debut of its new artistic director

Adam Pieronczyk
saxophoneb.1970
Also, in previous years, this festival had been quite nomadic, testing out fresh venues with each edition. In 2022, Jazz Juniors actually returned to Cricoteka, following the success of this venue's 2021 hosting. A modern construction looms over low-level original buildings, creating a multi-floor arts centre, with stages down in its basement and a café up on the top floor, a veritable eyrie looking down on the excellent view of the Vistula River below. Cricoteka also has the slowest elevator known to mankind, but the journey up to the top is worth the wait. Unlike some of the previous competition venues, with their voluminous theatres, Cricoteka's space is intimate, ensuring a feeling of envelopment between performers and audience, as well as an accompanying sonic embrace. One missing element this year was the late night programme at the nearby Milestone Jazz Club, which is now seemingly dormant in the long term. In 2021, these sessions featured three Polish acts each night, beginning around 10pm and continuing well past the witching hour. Nevertheless, with six competition acts on the opening day, followed by three nights of double bills, there were still plenty of sets to catch in '22.
This year's jury members, aside from Pierończyk himself, were the veteran tabla maestro

Trilok Gurtu
tablasb.1951

Reinier Baas
guitarb.1985
Way back in 2018, there were a few entrants who inhabited the pop, rock and/or prog folk spheres, but since then, the competing bands have mostly operated within various jazz zones. This year's opening act were Tantfreaky, who didn't proffer much jazz, aside from featuring a prominent tenor saxophone presence (although doubling on bass guitar). They seemed to enjoy looking like Gong, with a disco-druid variation, but their songs were too pop-esque for your scribe's taste, particularly on the vocal front. All of the acts who followed were certifiably jazzy..!
The Brzeziński Quartet played second, their leader's alto saxophone flanked by piano, electric bass and drums. Formed only this year, they play mostly original compositions. The drums possess an enlarged presence, while the alto capers in pastoral fashion, piano delicately frilling the edges and the bass flooding with a chewy mallow fullness. The tunes might be prettified, but they work up a froth, growing a slight toughness. Krzysiek Brzeziński himself is consistently out front, his alto providing the most substantial element to the sound, until he sharply walks off, leaving the other three to submerge into a bass-led funk vamp. With such brief (20 min) sets in which to parade their wares, it's puzzling why so many bands in this competition tend to veer off into lengthy spotlight sections that gobble up valuable minutes. During their time, a band needs to feature tightly directed and highly compacted works. The Quartet adopted a dress-code of black polo necks.
The third set of the first half featured the duo of Anna Jopek (piano) and Jakub Klemensiewicz (soprano saxophone), inviting down the sound of northern Poland. Jopek appears to be the prime composer, her piece presented in two parts. Klemensiewicz opens with breath sounds, Jopek is delicate, and the two instruments envelop themselves in a narrative song form. This duo's so northern that they steep themselves in a wintry Scandinavian bleakness, wistful in nature. The piano makes stark statements, initially isolated, but then growing in strength, providing a darker base for the still flighty soprano.
The four-piece Ziemia opened up the second part of the evening. This band already entered the 2021 competition, but they returned, upping their level from a very good set to one of the finest performances of this '22 edition. The line-up featured trumpet, guitar, bass and drums, formed by axeman Oskar Tomala in 2019. Together with bassman Jakob Wosik, he penned a collection of touring material, just in time for the lockdowns. During that dark period they released the Catastropha album via Bandcamp. From a thoughtfully sparse start, Tomala introduced prickly guitar, as Wosik unveiled a slow bass line, growing into a languid groove. Alan Kapo?ka used mallets on his drumkit and Mateusz ?ydek dusted out a melodic spray. Ziemia sound collectively exploratory, resonant, with spaced-out chords from their leader, all getting punchier, even though the drums now had a deliberately dampened, woody sound. Tomala delivered a totally out-front solo, closing the set with an involved thematic interlocking.
The Filip ?ó?towski Quartet were the fifth combo of the night, led by their trumpeter, formed in Gdańsk, 2020. The roster is completed by alto saxophone, keyboards and drums, but with no bassist present. Wojtek Wojda's Moog takes over this role, when he's not concentrating on acoustic piano. The numbers are well-constructed, in a mainline jazz direction, the melodies bordering on the anthemic, but with romantic piano flourishes from Wojda. Their second piece had a more modern-sounding stutter, heading towards a serpentine development.
The final band were the other chief contenders for first prize, along with Ziemia. ?lú are a trio who specialise in Afro-Cuban jazz, lying closer towards the upper age limitations of the competition, in their early thirties. This is yet another new band, formed in 2021. Their line-up is Joaquín Sosa (reeds), Aniel Someillan (upright bass) and Bárbaro Crespo (congas), with the latter being the dominant musical presence. Their Caribbean roots are crucial to the group style, with Someillan doubling on drums, and Crespo singing powerful lead vocal-chants, in the orisha-worshipping style. His cohorts assist in the call-and-response routines. Crespo has three regular congas, plus a fourth, bigger and bassier model. All three players sport suits in varying shades of blue. ?lú create a kind of beatnik version of a hardcore Cuban ceremony, and definitely possessed the greatest degree of performing extroversion during the evening.
This year, your scribe was in accord with the jury (unlike previous years), as his favoured bands, ?lú and Ziemia, actually won a joint first prize.
The second day of Jazz Juniors began a format that featured two acts each evening, for the remaining three days of the festival. It was jury member night, beginning with guitarist Reinier Baas, who was joined by alto saxophonist

Ben van Gelder
saxophone, altob.1988

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994
Next came a very rare chance to catch the Indian master percussionist Trilok Gurtu in a solo setting. He could easily encompass an hour's time, tipping over that point with a visible enthusiasm for playing. When we first entered the theatre, it looked like he was moving house, with a large jumble of gear set up on his podium: drumkit, tablas, cajon, and a table scattered with percussion tools, not least a large bucket of water. Gurtu savoured each moment as he spent time in different parts of his spread, homing in close to root out the intimate qualities of skin, metal and wood. His personal charisma helped immensely, branding a sense of refined meaning and sensitive ceremony on to the ritual proceedings. Gurtu was also miked up for vocal virtuosity, rattling out a stream of 'tabla talk.' Gurtu's bass thrum is tuned, giving him a melodic bedrock, magnified via the hall's powerfully excellent speaker stacks. He coaxed heavy motion from the tabla, making a swift swap from the regular drumkit. Tuned skins are at the core of most sounds that he makes, making solo performance a richer experience. At one point he almost entered the realms of Brazilian samba, using brushes. Gurtu says that he's playing pieces inspired by the elements, and he thinks that a mega-drumboom section might represent fire, although he points out that we're free to define the moods ourselves. There's a smudged line between the kit and the tabla, as if Gurtu considers his entire spread to be a single instrument. He warps the sound of water in his bucket, close-miked steel depth-charges, chanting, and finally, an encore sitting on his cajon, singing, with wrist-rattlers, emulating the Cuban style. Recently touring with

Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947
The third evening marked a return to young Polish talent, with a local Kraków duo of pianist Bartek Le?niak and drummer Artur Ma?ecki. Their set made a very gradual accumulation of dramatic energy, well-sculpted, with big bass drum booms, flashing cymbals and florid piano that was nevertheless not averse to some bangin,' emphatic conclusions. Ma?ecki cut to a very quiet snare-coaxing, bowing his cymbals faintly, as Le?niak leaned into the piano interior, to probe his bass strings with drumsticks. Meanwhile, Ma?ecki was using what looked like chopsticks, then switched to reed-clumps, once again growing and magnifying the palette towards an eventual thunder. The duo kept pushing up the volume, then receding, pulling back in the name of artistic variety.
The

Tim Berne
saxophone, altob.1954

Hank Roberts
cellob.1954

Joey Baron
drumsb.1955

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951
The final evening also opened with a Polish group, the Zió?ek Quartet, winners of Jazz Juniors in 2020. A line-up of trumpet, piano, bass and drums proffered a mainline post-

Tomasz Stańko
trumpet1942 - 2018
Jazz Juniors ended with another solo set, allowing the audience to ease down into an insular reverie.

Kit Downes
keyboardsb.1986

Skip James
guitar, acoustic1902 - 1969
Meanwhile, the mighty Trzech Kumpli local-ish brewery were on hand, as usual, to serve their adventurous beers, which this year included their reality-warping Tohunga New Zealand Triple IPA...
Tags
Live Review
Martin Longley
Poland
Krakow
Adam Pieronczyk
Trilok Gurtu
Reinier Baas
Ben van Gelder
Thelonious Monk
Antonio Carlos Jobim
Jan Garbarek
Tim Berne
Hank Roberts
Joey Baron
Bill Frisell
tomasz stanko
Kit Downes
Skip James
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