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Makaya McCraven At Barbican Centre

Courtesy Lloyd Winters
Most, perhaps all, audience members would have been expecting a faithful recreation of the album. But McCraven extended the palette. The sound was oftentimes volcanic, a ramped-up, colour-saturated IMAX epic. The LCO strings never missed a beat. And the beats were complex.
Barbican Centre, Main Hall
In These Times
London
November 11, 2023
Jazz, said Whitney Balliett in 1958, is the sound of surprise. The New Yorker critic, who passed in 2007 but remains one of jazz literature's most felicitous writers, was describing jazz in a broad generic sense. Yet the aphorism applies equally well to the London concert premiere of

Makaya McCraven
drumsb.1983
Recorded over seven years, as funds permitted, and with more post-production interventions than

Teo Macero
producer1925 - 2008

Oded Tzur
saxophone, tenorMost, perhaps all, Barbican audience members would likely have been expecting a faithful recreation of the album. But McCraven extended the sonic palette. The performance was oftentimes volcanic, a ramped-up, colour-saturated IMAX epic which several times reached a level of intensity which is heard on the album only on the concluding section of one track, "This Place That Place," midway through the disc. The album's flute and harp had gone and its string quartet was replaced by the London Contemporary Orchestra's eighteen-piece (count 'em) string ensemble. The core banda quintet completed by vibraphonist

Joel Ross
vibraphone
Matt Gold
guitar
Junius Paul
bass, electric
Marquis Hill
trumpetb.1987

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Buddy Rich
drums1917 - 1987
To make time for extended solos and beefed-up string arrangements, only seven of the recorded suite's eleven parts were performed, and their running order was radically different from that on the album. First up, for instance, was track eight, "Seventh String," while track one, "In These Times," became the closer; on the album, "In These Times" is a warm-up track, but at the Barbican it built to an eruptive and cathartic conclusion. Robert Ames' conduction of the LCO was unfailingly on song and the players themselves never missed a beat.
And the beats were complex...
Given the direction of much of McCraven's recent work, not least regarding the last words of

Gil Scott-Heron
vocals1949 - 2011

Dave Brubeck
piano1920 - 2012

Bob Dylan
guitar and vocalsb.1941
Unlike the esteemed Brubeck's work, however, a political dimension runs through all McCraven's output, even if it is an attitude more often felt by the listener than a message made explicit by McCraven himself. At International Anthem, with whom he began recording in 2015 and who describe him as "the pillar of our label family," he is part of a milieu which has included

Irreversible Entanglements
band / ensemble / orchestrab.2015

Jaimie Branch
trumpet1983 - 2022
(McCraven's interview can be found here.)
Set List
Seventh String; Dream Another; The Knew Untitled; The Calling; Lullaby; This Place That Place; In These Times.Personnel
Makaya McCraven: drums, percussion; Marquis Hill: trumpet, percussion; Matt Gold: guitar, percussion; Joel Ross: vibraphone, percussion; Junius Paul: bass guitar, percussion; London Contemporary Orchestra conducted by Robert Ames.Tags
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