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Telakka Jazz 2025: Finland’s Second City Gets Spiritual

Courtesy Gina Southgate
Describing this music would be like trying to catch bullets in your teeth, and spit them out onto a plate
Ravintola Telakka
Tampere, Finland
January 3-4, 2025
"Tampere is the heart of the Finnish jazz scene," a Helsinki record shop clerk proudly told me, when I announced I was heading north for the former, smaller city's Telakka Jazz fest. "In that case, Helsinki is the head," another hip capital dweller would retort, when I repeated this claim a day later.
You would be forgiven for expecting a healthy rivalry to exist between Finland's two most populous cities (sorry Espoo), but separated by barely 100 miles (180km), there is too much musical interminglingand probably not enough of a national sceneto hold grudges for long. This was wildly evident at Telakka Jazz, described as a "nice little festival by local jazz forces" by another industry type I quizzed, before braving the snow.
It takes a certain sense of security to program a two-day jazz festival at which you headline, twice, but this was the case with drummer/promoter

Janne Tuomi
drumsb.1973
With nothing resembling a blues, ballad, or standard in sight, Telakka Jazz welcomed six free, experimental and/or spiritual-leaning groups to the invitingly artsy stage found inside a red-brick former dock building. In egalitarian Nordic style, all sets were one houralthough day-two closers Tahmela Six did sneak a cheeky encore. Named for the woodland suburb where they recorded their debut album Mountin a single day, barely a year earlierthe sextet wove a deep, soulful spell, the set opening with a thrilling 33-minute improvised suite weaving through elements of the album's title track. With an open-hearted spiritual aesthetic, filtered through a rustic, folkish sensibility, this was music of space and shape, of winding improvisations in collision and cohort.
Bassist

Eero Tikkanen
bass
A day earlier, Tuomi again took the spotlight for the premiere of Hatka, a brazen, new free-improv trio alongside feted British saxophone maverick (and

Derek Bailey
guitar1932 - 2005

Peter Brötzmann
woodwinds1941 - 2023

Alan Wilkinson
b.1954
Darin Gray
bass, acousticBoth nights opened with a new, unrecorded and bold experimental act. Billed as K??ri?inen-Hyv?rinen, the duo of guitarists Jukka K??ri?inen and

Lauri Hyvärinen
guitar, electricb.1986
Better known as leader of prog-ish outfit Utopianisti, multi-instrumentalist Markus Pajakkala presented a new (and apparently largely off-the-cuff), tech-heavy solo set, with varying results. There were two main configurations: in the first, Pajakkala triggered droning synth chords with his feet while performing searching reed solos, haphazardly palming some wind chimes for added ethereality; the second saw him looping live drums, keys, horns, and occasional misjudged vocalslayered rhythmic refrains, rubbing against each other to abstraction, playing over himself rather than against or alongside others. At times it was engaging, others middlingwatching the confused conjurer wander the stage, shuffling post-it notes of scribbled patches and presets, it appeared the artist had been imprisoned, rather than set free, by his own tech wizardry. After he closed by dancing off the stage in an animal mask, a friend told me the music made her see things. What things? "My own funeral."
By contrast, the easiest thing on the ear all weekend was the Antila-Sauros Wonderful Quartet, another new, undocumented outfit who performed a warm, swinging set of modal jazz that was skillfully executed but lent closest to expectations. The co-leaderskeys and vibraphonist Mikko Antila and multi-reeds player

Adele Sauros
saxophoneIn the same middle slot a night earlier came established collective Oiro Pena, led by drummer/composer Antti Vauhkonen, whose meandering expositions took on the disparate flavours of its apparently rotating cast of members. Again heavily indebted to the spiritual jazz of the '70s, there was an inclusive sense of swing in the bottom end, a feel of funk in the raindrops of Fender Rhodes, and a free-jazz abandon in the soaring sax and violin solos. Most beyond-the-norm were the three-part vocal refrains, delivered by two female voices and the leader himself: "Give me the strength to understand / Give me the strength to love," ran the rousing closer, in Finnish. A fittingly fair-weather finale, and a classic case of the whole outweighing its constituent elements.
There was however a seventh performer in the room. The British visual artist Gina Southgate set up a make-shift easel for the latter two performances on both nights of the festival, knocking out a steady stream of canvases on the spot (viewable in the gallery above). It was a thrill to watch her work, to witness sound and motion be transformed into a static visualisation in real time, a memory both clearer and more hazy than this review can ever hope to be.
Tags
Live Review
Adele Sauros
Rob Garratt
Finland
Tampere
Janne Tuomi
Eero Tikkanen
Eero Savela
Black Motor
Hot Heroes
Sami Sippola
Otto Eskelinen
Topias Tihe?salo
Alan Wilkinson
Darin Gray
Jukka K??ri?inen
Lauri Hyv?rinen
Utopianisti
Markus Pajakkala
Mikko Antila
Oiro Pena
Antti Vauhkonen
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