Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Tomasz Stanko Quintet at RNCM Theatre, Manchester
Tomasz Stanko Quintet at RNCM Theatre, Manchester
ByTomasz Stańko
trumpet1942 - 2018
Tonight, Manchester's RNCM is home to the trumpeter's far edgier incarnation: a consolidation of the Polish master's freer past and poetically composed present. The music summoned indoors perfectly mirrors the weather outside; dark in melodic color, wet in its fluidity with momentous flare ups of the elements, reflecting moments of brilliant neon light in the pools of the asphalt.
As is to be expected, Stanko was in magnificent form during the entire performance, cementing his position as one of European Jazz's most celebrated artists. His grainy tone was atmosphere swallowingdisplaying rough, lyrical caresses on "Dirge for Europe" and "So Nice"; abandoning form and melody while delivering smoldering sections of "Dark Eyes of Martha Hirsch" and "Last Song" in molten sheets of sound. But the Dark Eyes quintet is not just another vehicle for Stanko to show his mastery: the trumpeter gave ample room throughout the entire performance for his collaborators to show their own merit.
Bassist Anders Christensen's low-end murmurings took on a cavernous quality in this live setting in a role far meatier and more forceful than was his custom. Playing mostly rhythm, pianist Alexi Tuomarila anchored the sound with occasional flourishes of tasteful dexterity. With the end of the trumpeter's partnership with pianist

Marcin Wasilewski
pianob.1975

Jakob Bro
guitarb.1978

Jakob Bro, Anders Christensen
"The Dark Eyes of Marth Hirsch," the album's centre piece, acted as a platform for each of the musicians to declare their individuality in definitive form in the work's solo pockets, earning rapturous applause from the audience. Ending with a majestic and melancholy reading of Krzysztof Komeda
piano
1931 - 1969
Photo Credit Michael Chance
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