Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Theo Saunders Sextet: San Diego, CA, July 5, 2011
Theo Saunders Sextet: San Diego, CA, July 5, 2011

Theo Saunders
piano
Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Jimmy Garrison
bass, acoustic1934 - 1976

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942

Sonny Greenwich
guitarb.1936

Sonny Fortune
saxophone, alto1939 - 2018

Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Ray Mantilla
percussion1934 - 2020
The sextet Saunders brought to the Saville Theatre was wisely assembled with a view toward balance.

Jeff Littleton
bass
Chuck Manning
saxophone, tenorb.1958
Musa has recently scored a gig with Cuban expatriate trumpeter

Arturo Sandoval
trumpetb.1949

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942
The band led off with Saunders' unique arrangement of country music legend Merle Travis' "16 Tons." It was Tennessee Ernie Ford meets

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975
After dispensing with the sumptuously voiced melody, Musa attacked the changes with a barely contained energy. His ideas came out with such bold alacrity, it was like they were chasing each other out of his alto saxophone. Manning followed with the opposite idea: ever patient, his calm, centered tone belied the increasingly coiled, scalar repetitions that built toward a quiet climax.
Saunders' solo began with incremental melodic gestures that grew in length while being supported by perfectly placed chordal accents. He built tension with right-hand trilling that eventually erupted into two-handed block chords that brought the spirit of

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Cole Porter
composer / conductor1891 - 1964
Other highlights included the lush ballad "Queen Of Tangents" Saunders dedicated to his wife, who was in attendance. A title like that might have sparked some marital discord, but the tune was so lovingly performed that another outcome was far more likely. Manning's honey-toned tenor hush rolled over Littleton's huge whole notes, which sang out in a rich baritone. The other horns drew long drawn pitches that wrapped around the melody and Saunders' perfectly placed chords.
"Free South Africa" utilized the three horns in a joyously voiced harmony, then somewhere in the middle, the band slipped into a rock-solid mambo type groove that reminded the listener that Saunders has got tons of Latin music experience under his fingertips.
The

Les Brown
composer / conductor1912 - 2001

Roswell Rudd
trombone1935 - 2017

Frank Rosolino
trombone1926 - 1978
It all came to an end with a 21st Century take on the Dixieland aestheticall three horns soloing at once over the martial, snare drum second-line grooving of Austin on the pianist's nod to post-Katrina New Orleans, "When The Saints Go Out."
90 minutes of scorching post-Trane expressionism, definitively performed by a perfectly balanced ensembleextremely satisfying.
Photo Credit:
Vince Outlaw
Tags
Theo Saunders
Live Reviews
Robert Bush
United States
Pharoah Sanders
Jimmy Garrison
Jack DeJohnette
Sonny Greenwich
Sonny Fortune
charles lloyd
Freddie Hubbard
Ray Mantilla
Jeff Littleton
Chuck Manning
arturo sandoval
Tony Williams
Oliver Nelson
McCoy Tyner
Cole Porter
Les Brown
Roswell Rudd
Frank Rosolino
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