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Joel Frahm Trio At Scott's Jazz Club

This is a very special place. The energy is amazing. As a working jazz musician, places like these are really diamonds.
Joel Frahm
Scott's Jazz Club
Belfast, N. Ireland
April 12, 2024
Another sold-out gig. It is not an uncommon occurrence at Scott's Jazz Club. Yet this was no ordinary occasion for Ballyhackamore's award-winning venue. For starters, the Joel Frahm Trio was in the house. Scott's Jazz Club has attracted plenty of outstanding musicians since opening its doors in 2021, but this felt like a cat-got-the-cream event.
And there was an extra frisson of excitement with the announcement that the gig was being recorded for a future BBC radio broadcast. An unexpected slice of theatricality, laced with comedy, ensued.
Once Frahm, bassist

Dan Loomis
bassb.1980

Ernesto Cervini
drumsb.1982
It was all good fun, but it did underline the often highly mediated nature of live jazz recordings. Think Ellington At Newport (Columbia, 1956), an iconic performance credited with reviving the fortunes of

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
Suspiciously enthusiastic crowd applause is nothing new, of course, with made-to-measure applause available commercially. You can fool some of the people some of the time... and in the music business that is all that matters.
To be fair to the Scott's Jazz Club audience, such shenanigans were unnecessary. For the duration of the Joel Frahm Trio's gig, it applauded when applause was due, cheered and whistled when the solos really hit the spot, and no less importantly, listened attentively throughout. It was no more or less than the music merited.
This trio evolved out of Cervini's Turboprop sextet, releasing its debut, The Bright Side (Anzic Records) in 2021. The guts of the set came from that album, though several new compositions proved that this trio is an ongoing concern. The opener, "Beeline" planted the trio firmly in the post-bop tradition, with fast-walking bass and insistent ride cymbal underpinning a burrowing solo from the leader.
Stylistically, Frahm follows in the footsteps of

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952

Michel Legrand
piano1932 - 2019

Herb Alpert
trumpetb.1935

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
On "Thinking of Benny" Frahm paid tribute to

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024
An infectious Afro-Cuban-flavored bass ostinato colored "The Road," Loomis' tribute to Venezuelan revolutionary Simón Bolívar, with Cervini using his hands in lieu of sticks. The spacious groove invited a slow, smoking solo from Frahm, though the applauseunpromptedcame in response to the bassist's lithe intervention. By contrast, Cervini's "The Heist" embraced knottier rhythmic terrain with its sly shifts in meter, though there was space aplenty for Frahm and Loomis to shine.
The lure of time-honored jazz standards proved too much, not just in Frahm's "Kern You Dig It," a handsome contrafact of Jerome Kern's "All The Things You Are," but on a ripping version of "I'm Old Fashioned"another Kern compositionin the second set. Despite the bop and blues lineage of the music denoting a bridge to the past, the healthy number of new compositions signaled an eye to the future. Three freshly minted numbers, the sensuous ballad "Moonface Lament," the exhilarating "Vesper Flights" and the bluesy swinger "Monkey Detectives"written on a train a week beforewere highlights.
The second set got off to the liveliest of starts with an incendiary Cervini-penned bop number. A fine solo of linear melodicism from Loomis contrasted with a bustling improvisation from the leader peppered with one well known motif after another fractious but thrilling, nevertheless.
Bass ostinato and brushes ushered in "The Bright Side," with Cervini's switch to sticks propelling the trio into a feisty exploration that resolved meditatively in

Jimi Hendrix
guitar, electric1942 - 1970
Nobody needed to ask the audience to whoop it up in response to the Joel Frahm Trio's excellent set; the prolonged cheers and applause at the end were heartfelt. Frahm, however, had more gas in the tank, and in a spontaneous gesture, offered up a quietly beguiling solo rendition of "My One and Only Love."
A little earlier Frahm had paid glowing tribute to Scott's Jazz Club. "This is a very special place. The energy is amazing. As a working jazz musician, places like these are really diamonds," he told the crowd. "They're very, very important for us and I think they are important culturally for the community. Please support this as much as you can because this is what life is all about." And that, much like the music, had the ring of truth. Applause, please.
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