Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Tommy Halferty, Cormac O'Brien, Greg Felton At Scott's Jazz Club
Tommy Halferty, Cormac O'Brien, Greg Felton At Scott's Jazz Club
ByScott's Jazz Club
Jazz In The Round
Belfast, N. Ireland
March 31, 2023
Sergei Rachmaninoff surely wouldn't have minded. As Chamber Choir Ireland was tackling the Russian composer's choral masterpiece All Night Vigil in a Belfast monastery, across town in Ballyhackamore another master was holding forth. Guitarist

Tommy Halferty
guitarLike

Louis Stewart
guitarb.1944

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Stephane Grappelli
violin1908 - 1997

George Mraz
bass1944 - 2021

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020

Martial Solal
piano1927 - 2024

Norma Winstone
vocalsb.1941
Bassist

Cormac O'Brien
bass, acoustic
Greg Felton
pianoHalferty's own "Fluide" lowered the flame seductively, the quasi-bossa nova tempo inviting beautifully measured solos from all, before collectively taking "I'll Remember April" by the scruff of the neck. Watching Halferty in full flow, exploring the dynamic range of his Gibson 355 with spidery runs of tremendous clarity and emotive heft, was an exhilarating experience.
While the format of head-solo-head was unwavering, the trio's adroit variation in tempo from one song to the next maintained the music's allure for the full two-hour duration. A racing version of

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
There was an unspoken subtext to this performance. If popular music of the first half of the twentieth century has provided most of the codified jazz standards, another hundred years of jazz may tell a different story. As jazz schools expand the pool of composers deemed worthy of study, and as more jazz musicians find common currency in the music of, say,

Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950
In Halferty, O'Brien and Felton's hands, heartfelt interpretations of tunes by modern trailblazers

Ralph Towner
guitarb.1940

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

John Abercrombie
guitar1944 - 2017
Abercrombie is another whom Halferty collaborated with. In recent years following Abercrombie's passing, Halferty has dedicated whole gigs to the American guitarist's music. This time, the Scott's Jazz Club audience had to settle for just two, but the second of those, the sunny "Jazz Folk" spoke volumes about Abercrombie's influence on Halferty, and the musical affinity they shared.

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023

Bob James
pianob.1939
Two highly contrasting tunes closed out the set; the outlier mystique of Ralph Towner's ambient adventure "Nightfall" cast a brooding spell, while Steve Winwood's anthem "Can't Find My Way Home" featured gently persuasive solos from all three musicians. The applause had barely died down when Halferty launched solo into a bebop burner, inviting a fast-walking bass line from O'Brien and some lively trading to end the evening, much as it had begun, on a high.
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