Gypsies of Bohemia: Jim
Wallace (guitar), Matthew Whitaker (guitar & vocals), Frank Grime (double
bass) & Sam Draper (drums)
Shamans Jazz Quartet: Claire Kahn (tenor & soprano saxophones, violin,
vocals), Chris Bonno (electric bass), Amos Joseph (piano) & Fito Pierre (drums).
(Review by Russell/Photos courtesy of Mike Tilley).
Mitry Mory meets Madchester or
never the twain. The French contingent from the outskirts of Paris – the
Shamans – opened the show at a well attended Jazz Café. A community,
work-shopping band lead by electric bassist Chris Bonno, their set list
comprised French popular song (George Brassens, Charles Aznavour), a standard (Autumn Leaves) and a Latin reworking of Minor Swing.
Vocalist Claire Kahn shocked the
audience by singing in French. What is the world coming to?!!! School girl/boy
French didn’t help much, Kahn’s soprano sax required little in the way of
translation; committed, personal statements. The quartet’s sound driven by
Bonno, abetted by drummer Pierre’s energetic display, had the effect of
relegating pianist Joseph to that of little heard sideman.
The French theme continued with
the arrival of the Madchester boys. The Mancs do jazz their way – Django the
inspiration, the material whatever takes their fancy. A couple of Django’s
tunes paid homage to the man, otherwise this was alt jazz at its best. Alt
jazz? Alt country has reclaimed the music from the rednecks, so the Gypsies of
Bohemia have set about dispatching the Mouldy Old Fig to the academic margin,
deconstructing pop songs as they go. Charismatic front man Matthew Whitaker
(rhythm guitar, vocals & alt beard) sat alongside former Newcastle College
music student Jim Wallace (guitar) and as they looked up all they could see was
a sea of faces – all seats long since taken, pretty young things sat at their
feet, the ‘mad for it’ crowd standing ten deep, bouncing off the walls such was
the energy generated by the Bohemians.
The rhythm boys – Whitaker,
propulsive bassist Frank Grime and ex-Newcastle College student Sam Draper
(yes, another success story from the Geordie seat of learning) had it, them,
the whole shebang, in their collective back pocket. The eclectic set list –
Blondie, Radiohead,, Britney Spears’ Toxic
(not as we know it, this was something else, truly toxic!), Soft Cell – struck
an acoustic chord with the audience. The Smiths (for some soporific, the
Bohemians take on their fellow Mancs somewhat different!), the Prodigy and the
Outhere Brothers aren’t obvious jazz material. This gig subverted the obvious,
only those with a sense of humour bypass would have failed to get it. The
band’s principal soloist, Jim Wallace, studied with James Birkett, some ten
years on Dr Birkett would be mightily impressed with his ace student. Superb technique,
adapted to the group sound, Wallace is a most impressive player. As the Jazz
Café’s mosh pit gathering bounced off the walls the Bohemians enquired
triumphantly: Let me hear you say Way Oh! Boom Boom Boom.
Russell.
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