Future Grooves (BMus Assessments) at Sage Gateshead – futures determined. Rewind a few years to
Blaydon Jazz Club: lecturer James Birkett arrives with a shy teenage guitar
player. During the interval they play a couple of tunes together as a guitar
duo. The rest, as they say, is history. Bradley Johnston went on to play many
gigs and record an album with mentor Dr Birkett, more than hold his own at high
calibre jam sessions and find the time to form his own quartet amidst his music
degree studies. Last night Johnston kept a most important appointment…
Future Grooves (2015’s degree course student
performances at Sage Gateshead) included several final year examinees. Bradley
Johnston was one of them. Sage Two, the intimate, multi-tiered cockpit-like
performance space, welcomed Johnston to the stage with a huge round of
applause. Solo, duo, trio, quartet and horn-augmented octet, BJ had clearly
been thinking about his set and how best to present it.
A solo piece to begin the set leading off with Alfie, Johnston in a multi-layered
spotlight, alone, the man and his acoustic guitar. BJ invited the engaging
Belinda Voshtina to sing a number with him. Switching from acoustic to lightly
amplified electric, Johnston recalled the great Joe Pass in his accompaniment
of Voshtina on Take Love Easy (a
magical never to be forgotten moment). Bassist Paul Grainger and drummer Tim
Johnston made it a trio on All the Things
You Are and pianist Peter Gilligan completed the quartet (seated at Sage
Two’s Steinway) on Michel Petrucciani’s Looking
Up (BJ in his element, ideas flowing). To conclude the examination the
Lickety Split horn section strolled onto stage – Messrs. Bellis, Eland, Gowland
and Marshall. Johnston thanked all of the musicians for giving of their
services and said he had to go out with a Pat Metheny number. The American
guitar hero has been a major influence and BJ tore it up on See the World. ‘See the World’? It’s as
sure as night follows day that Bradley Johnston and his guitar will see the
world many times over.
Bradley Johnston (guitar) with Peter Gilligan (piano),
Paul Grainger (double bass), Tim Johnston (drums), Belinda Voshtina (vocals)
& the Lickety Split Horns: Eddie Bellis (trombone), Kevin Eland (trumpet),
Paul Gowland (tenor saxophone) & Alan Marshall (alto saxophone)
Earlier, several other students gave of their best in
front of the assessors and a supportive audience. The performances were for the
most part non-jazz sets incorporating familiar rock and pop tunes. Phil Richardson sang and played no
fewer than three guitars with his band of student friends. Here Comes the Sun, Lovely
Day – hit tunes long before the young man was born! Jack Simpson and the Gastric Band presented a powerful set of
guitar and vocals, again focusing on well-known numbers from a previous era:
Fleetwood Mac, The Police, Cream. Simpson chose to play a solo acoustic guitar
and vocals piece written by Lindsay Buckingham and delivered a positive Message in a Bottle to the three
examiners. Cream’s White Room and Badge confirmed Simpson’s blues-rockin’
abilities. Was he aware of the legend that White
Room had been written late at night in the waiting room at Newcastle
Central Station as Eric, Jack and Ginger were booked onto a midnight train
heading south (possibly after a gig at the Club A-Gogo)? Simpson’s bass and
drums – Steven Hall and Michael Mather – gave sterling support.
Steph Old offered something different. A vocalist,
with Gary Spalding accompanying on guitar, later to be joined by a second voice
and a percussionist, Old opted for a more up to date programme. Unashamedly
‘pop’, Old’s voice (sore throat not withstanding), soulful, assured, breezed
through Boyzone to Jesse J. Student Johnny
Roxburgh acted as MC for the evening. An easy, saloon bar charm – Bobby
Darin meets Bobby Darin! – belied his age (twenteen) and the fact that later he
too was to give his finals’ performance! The t-shirted Roxborough took the
opportunity during an interval break to don a three piece – his band members
played the game, all suited for the occasion – and emerged as Johnny Roxburgh and the Pirates. Feelin’ Good (the Newley-Bricusse number
given the to-be-expected big band horn arrangement), Straighten Up and Fly Right, a finger snapping Moon Dance, a strong vocal treatment of Sophisticated Lady with the accompaniment of Phil Richardson (acoustic
guitar) Roxburgh produced a most entertaining performance. The man can sing! There
is more than one big band in the region which could do worse than snap up his
services. For the record: first year bassist Steven Hall worked in several of
the bands – one to watch. And two of the ‘pirates’ are well known on the jazz
scene – tenor man Johnny ‘Blue Hat’ Davis and ‘bone man David Gray.
Future Grooves continues Wednesday and Thursday at
Sage Gateshead. Admission free but ticketed, check the venue’s website: www.sagegateshead.com
Russell.
Russell.

2 comments :
Great review Russell. BJ set sounds as if it is an I was there moment
Thanks for your kind words Russell, it was our pleasure. See you soon!
Believe!
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