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Vilnius Mama Jazz Festival 2023

Courtesy Edvardas Bla?evi?
While booking acts which might please a wide range of music lovers, the Festival focused on prominent women in jazz for this year's event.
State Youth Theater
Vilnius, Lithuania
May 25-28, 2023
Introduction
Now the largest city in the Baltic States, the Lithuanian capital Vilnius once again hosted the Mama Jazz Festival for its 23rd edition. While booking acts which might please a wide range of music lovers, the Festival focused on prominent women in jazz for this year's event. Fitting, really, as the founder and driving force behind the whole extravaganza is a woman, Judita Barto?evièien?, Mama Jazz herself, who has nurtured the event from small beginnings to a high-profile happening in the heart of the capital. The State Youth Theater, in the center of the UNESCO-listed Old Town, presented eight acts over four evenings, as well as a further nine in the Showcase for Lithuanian Jazz spread across two afternoons.Tiger Trio
Given the theme, it was highly appropriate that one of the headline acts was the Tiger Trio, the triumvirate of French bassist
Joëlle Léandre
bassb.1951

Myra Melford
pianob.1957

Nicole Mitchell
fluteb.1967

Irene Schweizer
pianob.1941
Maggie Nicols
vocalsb.1948
Coming off the back of a European tour, it was no surprise that the tigresses leapt right in from the off, Mitchell's flute fluttering over Melford's spiky piano and Léandre's vivacious arco. Unlike most improvising co-operatives, they created a succession of short self-contained pieces, twelve in all including the encore, rather than the more usual set-long flow. It meant they were constantly exploring new terrain without the sometimes meandering segues which can afflict some improv. Spontaneous orchestration resulted in unaccompanied pieces for each woman, as well as duets between Mitchell and each of the other two. The entire performance was a perfect amalgam of virtuosity and musicality, with just a dash of humor as well.
Alone Léandre demonstrated her authoritative tone, incantatory phrasing and rich color palette as her hands gliding continuously up and down the fingerboard to bow a frayed drone. Through her facial expressions she lived every note, as she added melodic variations and ultimately her voice, soaring above the spiraling iterations. Mitchell also flexed her vocal cords, sometimes simultaneously with her flute, the consequent multiphonics blurring the distinction between larynx and instrument. At other times she wordlessly sang or spun out spoken word lines, riffing on "Mama Jazz" on one occasion, but always accentuating the human dimension.
While Melford restricted herself to the piano, the range of nuance and tension she drew from it was exemplary. She delved under the bonnet to accompany some of the more abstract exchanges, but offered muscular, angular figures which both buttressed and steered. Her solo was a tour de force, allying a stabbing left hand rumble with percussive embellishment from the right, culminating in vibrant glissandos and forearm clusters. In consort with her partners, she called on repeated motifs to create a mesmerizing, undulating carpet of sound which wholly captured the affection of the rapt audience.
Maria Faust Jazz Catastrophe
Copenhagen-based Estonian saxophonist
Maria Faust
saxophoneb.1979

Kresten Osgood
drumsThe three seamlessly moved between open interplay and Faust's attractive compositions, variously anthemic, rocky and hymn-like, erasing the boundaries between genres. The saxophonist's playing similarly transcended borders, as she kept her overblown squeals within carefully ordained limits, never veering into a total freak out. It seemed that she employed such unconventional sounds in a thoroughly personal way, always deploying them with purpose.
So a folky head might emerge from floating brew of bubbling saxophone, chiming guitar and sensitive drum commentary, or a raucous unison materialize from guitar/drum headbanging. On guitar and effects, Pilgaard filled out the sound, both trading in texturesa motorbike revving, a swooping synthand supplying a framework, whether of sunny gentle chording or moody spacious smoldering.
Osgood enjoyed himself garlanding the pulse with masterful extemporizations, and once mischievously prolonging a vamp to delay Faust's entry. They concluded their set in a fine manner with "Happy And Fast Feet," which built through slow, aching repetition to an impassioned climax, with Faust jumping up and down as she screamed in the falsetto register, before a sudden final decompression.
Vladimir Tarasov's Austrian Circle
As befits his status as one of the forefathers of Lithuanian jazz, veteran drummer
Vladimir Tarasov
drumsb.1947

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Bill Laswell
bassb.1955

Tomasz Stańko
trumpet1942 - 2018

Mark Dresser
bass, acousticb.1952

Larry Ochs
saxophoneb.1949
For this appearance he convened a group under the moniker Austrian Circle which united him with old friends Andreas Schreiber on violin,

Peter Herbert
bass, acousticIt was often Tarasov who steered from behind his extended drum kit, whether by initiating delicate timbral interchange by placing untethered cymbals on the head of his kettle drum, or by abandoning the explicit rhythm of a jazzy passage for more uncharted territory. Schreiber's response variously encompassed hazy melody, oblique formality and the sort of demented hoedown which recalled

Billy Bang
violin1947 - 2011
Euroradio Jazz Orchestra
The Euroradio Jazz Orchestra (EJO), conducted by young Lithuanian composer and trombonistJievaras Jasinskis
tromboneFull of criss-crossing lines and punchy orchestral timbres, separated by mercurial refrains and more impressionistic segments, the work allowed brief solos from the whole orchestra. Although such elevator pitch opportunities made it difficult to work up a head of steam, too many impressed to list. However even among these some were notable: a barnstorming tenor saxophone outing by the UK's

Emma Rawicz
saxophone
Karolis Šarkus
saxophone, altob.1998
Elsewhere on the Main Stage
Renowned American-born Danish percussionist
Marilyn Mazur
percussionb.1955

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947
Scottish drummer

Graham Costello
drums
Fergus McCreadie
pianob.1997
Harry Weir
saxophoneFrench trumpeter

Airelle Besson
trumpetBenjamin Moussay
pianoFabrice Moreau
drumsShowcase Stage
An enduring attraction of the Mama Jazz Festival is its promotion of Lithuanian musicians through a Showcase Stage held during the event proper. Nine groups took to the spotlight seeking to impress listeners who included promoters and journalists from around Europe as well as the general public. However one of the most appealing acts was actually Ukrainian, invited out of solidarity with their oppressed neighbor. Named after a traditional wooden storage and drinking vessel, Kinva put folk melodies at the heart of their music. Songs which have been repositories for centuries of human feelingspain, tragedy, love, hopeacted as the basis for richly voiced interpretations.Now residing in Warsaw, the threesome of pianist Anastasija Litvinyuk, drummer
Igor Hnydyn
drumsSimilarly based upon tradition, drummer

Arkady Gotesman
percussionb.1959
Simonas Kaupinis
tubaKazimieras Jušinskas
saxophoneAll of the bands boasted polished musicianship. The Danish/Lithuanian sextet Snus conflated improv, jazz, noise and rock in neat charts distinguished by unexpected switches. Guitarist Klaudia Indrinliūnait?'s scribbling fretboard heroics furnished the wild card here. Similarly accomplished, the Broken Glass Quartet was nowhere near as fragmented as the name might suggest, but combined unusual instrumentation, thoughtful intricate arrangements, syncopated heads and jazzy soloing, especially by leader and composer " data-original-title="" title="">Pranas Kentra on guitar. Weird Ugly Fish, the twosome comprising drummer Aiste Kalvelyt? and the electronics of Julius ?epuk?nas, provided a complete change of pace. Kalvelyt? responded to the glitchy circuitry and synth loops with heavy tribal beats, funk tattoos and asymmetric asides in a display of powerhouse drumming.
Vocalist Veronika Chichi led a quintet of some of Lithuania's most talented musicians including pianist Dmitiri Golanov and Gotesman once again. A charismatic and lively presence, Chichi put her strong voice to good use, even wailing through a megaphone to supplement her singing. There was some pleasing interplay among the band too, not least Golanov hammering a dampened note picking up the cadence of Chichi's scat reiterations. Another commanding and energetic singer Kotryna Juodzevi?iūt? fronted the KJ Collective, a slightly schizophrenic outfit which swerved between R&B and soul shouting and more jazz-aligned backing.
Outro
While the cast on the main stage largely amplified the Festival aim of celebrating Women In Jazz, the groups in the Showcase suggested that there is still a long way to go before there is parity between the genders, even in the younger echelons of Lithuanian jazz. But recognizing the issue is the first step in addressing it, and there were many hopeful signs as women stepped away from the conventional functions as vocalists.Every night in the acoustically superior State Youth Theater was virtually sold out, with the audiences enthusiastic not only for the more accessible fare, but also for the more challenging acts. Such patronage is likely to ensure many more installments of the Mama Jazz Festival to come, and also to make the occasion popular with artists from a wide range of backgrounds.
Each year the Festival schedules conference style panels. The discussion on what the war in Ukraine meant for jazz included some of the most poignant moments of the whole event when Serhii Hrabar, Director of Jazz Festival Unity in Kyiv, described how concerts were still proceeding amongst the madness in the Ukrainian capital when air raids permitted, proving jazz survives in even the most desperate situations.
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