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Spoleto Festival USA 2023

Courtesy William Struhs
...with wave after wave of invention, Younger almost dared anyone to say she is anything less than the McCoy Tyner of the harp. Yet it would be silly to pretend that any pianist could play as softly as Brandee did on her outro.
Queen Street Playhouse, Sottile Theatre, TD Arena
Charleston, SC
May 26 to June 11, 2023
Respect for the elders in the jazz lineup of this year's Spoleto Festival USA jazz was gracefully counterbalanced by a hearty welcome to newer generations. It only felt fleetingly like the closing of the book on a previous era when South Africa's iconic pianist-composer

Abdullah Ibrahim
pianob.1934

Henry Threadgill
woodwindsb.1944

Brandee Younger
harpb.1983
Younger was announced as a substitution (for Courtney Bryan) just three weeks before Spoleto opened on May 26, adding to the luster of Blumenfeld's agilityas a producer and as an interviewer. Other young lions and lionesses in the lineup included Charleston native

Quentin E. Baxter
drums
Kris Davis
pianob.1980

Immanuel Wilkins
saxophone, altob.1997
Ibrahim, absent from the festival for some 25 years, may have carved the largest arc of departure and return in Spoleto history, but others in the lineup had links with past festivals. Baxter appeared with

Ranky Tanky
band / ensemble / orchestra
Julian Lage
guitar, electric
Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965

Ravi Coltrane
saxophone, tenorb.1965

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007

Rashaan Carter
bass, acousticIf you ever thought Alice couldn't truly belong in a

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020
Nor would it be correct to imply that Younger allowed the sublimity of Alice Coltrane to be forgotten for long. "Love & Struggle" had a mixture of sublime Coltrane with a few flecks of soaring

Carlos Santana
guitarb.1947

Dorothy Ashby
harp1932 - 1996
"Unrest," parts I and II, delivered without a pause, began with an extended meditative Younger solo before

Allan Mednard
drums"Turiya and Ramakrishna" and "Spirit U Will" continued on this lofty plane. "Turiya" was the more exciting of the two because it revivified Coltrane's piano version with virtuosic brio and was the one title on this setlist that Younger hasn't recorded. Taking us gracefully into a soft landing, Younger finished with two titles from Brand New Life (Impulse!, 2023)a beautiful "If It's Magic" solo that hushed the hall and a sweet trio version of "You're a Girl for One Man Only" at a loping mid-tempo.
After Younger played Spoleto's first jazz gig at the Queen Street, Threadgill turned a longtime theatre and dance venue, Sottile Theatre, back into a jazz hall for the first time since 2007, when

Dino Saluzzi
bandoneonb.1935

Anja Lechner
cello
Fred Hersch
pianob.1955

Kurt Elling
vocalsb.1967

Ralph Alessi
trumpetb.1963

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980
Acoustically, the idea worked well, as Threadgill and his oddly configured Zooid quintet played a set of six selections culled from releases stretching back to their This Brings Us To, Volume 1 (Pi Recordings, 2009), plus a newborn to end the program. The set included, but did not overstress, Threadgill's Pulitzer Prize winner, dipping more generously into his newer Poof (Pi Recordings, 2021) outing with the group.
No matter how far the group hearkened back, they still looked and sounded cutting-edge, Threadgill starting out on flute for the first two compositions, "To Undertake My Corners Open" and "Beneath the Bottom," before switching to his alto horn for "Chairmaster."

Jose Davila
tuba
Christopher Hoffman
cellob.1978

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964
Found more readily in a Google search than by scouring Threadgill's discography, "Not the White Flag" was a special live treat, begun by Davila on tuba before Threadgill, Hoffman, and guitarist

Liberty Ellman
guitarThe genial stridency of "Now and Then," very much in an

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
Threadgill's new composition, "Fluoroscope," was an apt closer for his Sottile set, not only affording ample space to showcase the members of the quintet but also bringing a rugged circularity to the concert. Zooid drummer

Starting off his five-show engagement at Queen Street, Wilkins plunged straight into a set of compositions he is readying for the studio, accessorized with some electronics that the altoist used sparingly and initially struggled with. Yet the minor difficulties never obscured the exquisite chemistry of this quartet, with

Micah Thomas
pianob.1997

Rick Rosato
bass, acousticb.1988

Kweku Sumbry
drumsDetractors might have charged that the synthesized sounds interrupted the flow of music in "Apparition," bridging the gap between the leader's solo and the rhythm section's takeover, while defenders might claim they personified the title. Wilkins himself seemed a bit dissatisfied, calling out to the soundbooth, and the next two numbers were acoustically sourced, mics working well though Immanuel's monitor may have been a concern.
By shedding their electronic woes, Wilkins and the quartet reached higher altitudes with their music. Grooving into a mellow mid-tempo, "Dark Eyes Smile" was their most engaging piece so far, Wilkins introducing the line over Rosato's bass, then sharing solo honors with Thomas before returning for the out-chorus. The ascent continued to its zenith with "If That Blood Runs East," where piano and alto harmonized on the melody before Sumbry kicked up the tempo behind the kit. Thomas mostly asserted himself afterward via a hypnotic ostinato while Wilkins soloed, ceding the spotlight back to Sumbry before re-entering for a moody landing.
"Blues Blood," the closer, was no less exciting and even more varied, for Wilkins was emboldened to try out his electronics once more after he and Thomas had soloed. Before settling into a bluesy groove as Wilkins vamped, Thomas showed us he could swing as well, and as this winsome tune faded out, he sprinkled some gospel flavoring into his comping.
Wilkins' engagement at Queen Street was fortuitously timed, so that he and the quartet could take in the Threadgill concert on the evening before their four-day engagement began and comfortably peep in on Ibrahim and Ekaya midway through his sojourn after his second performance. Ironically, Ibrahim's timing turned out to be less fortunate. Bad weather prevented him from returning to Cistern Yard, one of the two festival sites where he played in 1998.
Instead, the concert was transplanted indoors to the TD Arena a couple of blocks away, where the sound is better than the lighting and the lawn seating can be faithfully replicated. Delayed by the rescheduling, Ibrahim's arrival in the College of Charleston basketball arena was more solemn and dramatic in the dimmer light. Aside from introducing the members of Ekaya, the Zulu word for homeland, we heard little from Ibrahim, but it's very likely that the Ekaya sextet heardand sawplenty of prompts from their leader.
The intricate tapestry woven by the ensemble included seven piano solos from Ibrahim, three trio performances, and six arrangements with the horns14 Ibrahim compositions doled out into seven music clustersbefore the group returned after a feint toward the exit and covered

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
After a trio entrance that was likely an abbreviated "Mindiff," a chameleonic staple in Ibrahim's discography that he has recorded in multiple forms, " data-original-title="" title="">Cleave Guyton Jr., jumped all over bassist

Noah Jackson
bass, acousticWill Terrill
drums
Michael Pallas
trombone
Lance Bryant
saxophone, tenorb.1961

Josh Lee
saxophone, altoAt age 88, Ibrahim still has impressive skills, a prodigious band, and enough venturesome spiritand trust in his musiciansto continue tinkering with his arrangements. "Skippy" as an encore was notably different from the studio track, with Guyton switching back to flute and Jackson back to bowed cello, the weaponry they had used at the start of the concert; and without a clarinet solo from Guyton, a highlight of Mukashi: Once Upon A Time) (Sunnyside, 2014), it was difficult to be sure where "Mississippi" occurred in the magnificent 80-minute concert.
So, let's prayerfully put it out there that four years is already too long since the most recent Ibrahim & Ekaya recording. Greedy though the request may be, we need to hear more.
Tags
Live Review
Immanuel Wilkins
Perry Tannenbaum
United States
South Carolina
Charleston
abdullah ibrahim
Henry Threadgill
Brandee Younger
Quentin Baxter
Kris Davis
Ranky Tanky
Diatom Ribbons
Julian Lage
Terri Lyne Carrington
Ravi Coltrane
Alice Coltrane
Rashaan Carter
John Coltrane
McCoy Tyner
Carlos Santana
Dorothy Ashby
Allan Mednard
Dino Saluzzi
Anja Lechner
Fred Hersch
Kurt Elling
Ralph Alessi
Tyshawn Sorey
Jose Davila
Christopher Hoffman
Eric Dolphy
Liberty Ellman
Ornette Coleman
Elliot Humberto Kavee
Micah Thomas
Rick Rosato
Kweku Sumbry
Thelonious Monk
Cleave E. Guyton, Jr.
Noah Jackson
Will Terrill
Michael Pallas
Lance Bryant
Joshua Lee
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