David 'Showtime' Gray (trombone, vocals, ocarina); Adam Sams (guitar, vocals, bass clarinet); Alan Law (keys); Paul Grainger (bass); Michael Mather (drums)
As the name implies, the David Gray Flextet are indeed very flexible in both numbers and material. Tonight they numbered five and the material was as varied as the leader's wardrobe.
'Showtime' was at his most effervescent blowing a trombone fuelled by an array of effects pedals, singing, dancing, shaking and scraping things and getting some cool sounds out of an ocarina. He's a sort of jazzy Michael Jackson.
This was definitely a game of two halves. The opening set included For the Elders; Silver Orcas; You Got a Friend in me (DG vocal); Cat Bells (bass clarinet solo); Some Time Ago (vocal) and It's Possible.
It was enjoyable without causing the earth to move. Plus it was starting to take shape as a one man show which is all well and good but I felt his four fellow travellers deserved a little more exposure. Alan Law, as he always does when given the chance, excelled as did Sams. Grainger performed his pivotal role to perfection with Mather chomping at the bit. His day would come.
The second set moved up a gear. The leader changed his velvet collared jacket for a snazzy shirt of the type seen on the beach in Honolulu and blasted off with The Girl Who Fell From the Sky. For Yusef Lateef's Nubian Lady he played ocarina and I have never heard any better jazz than this played on an ocarina. A vocal on Senor Blues was followed by (I think) On a Route (Roll?). This latter number saw some serious guitar shredding from Sams. The temperature on stage was rising with At War With Myself as Sams and the ever-smiling Mather went at it hammer and tongs or rather sticks and plecs.
Finally, at least for me, J.J. Johnson's Cyclops raised the roof. This was the jazz equivalent of Bazball. Lance
PS: When the next jazz poll comes around in the Miscellaneous Instrument category how about David Gray (ocarina)?
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