Joni Mitchell was my gateway into jazz. I was a big fan of all those west coast acts like The Eagles, CSNY, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt and of course, Joni Mitchell. She had suddenly made a sideways lurch into jazz and started making albums with Michael Brecker, Wayne Shorter, Charles Mingus and Pate Metheny. One of those albums was the live Shadows and Light which featured Metheny, Jaco Pastorius, Lyle Mays, Don Alias and Brecker. The album is great, as is the concert film and all (especially Jaco) were at the top of their game. From there I bought a couple of Metheny albums, one of which had a tune on it dedicated to Bill Evans. Who was this Evans guy? I bought an LP of his and liked it and then one by some bloke called Miles Davis which had Evans on it.
Once you start doing jazz
family trees from Kind Of Blue you
never end. Now I have more jazz albums than any sane man needs and a son called
Miles. If Joni had decided to do an album of oompah music I’d now have a son
called Kaiser Wilhelm the Second. Go figure!
The band tonight has been
assembled by guitarist Pete Oxley from jazzers and those who have worked in
orchestra pits in the West End. With only minor changes, ‘Hejira’ has been
touring this show for a few years now; Pete ‘plays’ Pat, Hattie is ‘Joni', and Dave
Jones is ‘Jaco’.
As the band come on I
wonder what that ringing is and it’s Pete Oxley’s bell bottoms. It’s been a
while since I saw loons like that. They open with Coyote and instantly Whitehead has Joni, near enough but not quite,
enough to have some of herself in there, most notably in the lower register.
She handles the dense, sinuous lyric line well and Oxley, as he will do often
tonight, threads a crystalline guitar solo in between the vocals and over the
insistent bass and congas. A slowed down Woodstock
allows Whitehead to show her timing. It’s a languorous reading that drags
the time and intimates that it is now over 50 years since that age of Aquarius.
Help
Me is
a morning song about love’s dangers with another of those extended vocal lines.
The sax sings along, harmonising with the vocals and I realise that I’d pay
good money to hear this woman sing the phone book. (Ask your dad). She’s that
good and it is her not Joni we are hearing.
The medley of Amelia/Pat’s Solo/Hejira is played as
it is on the Shadows album. The band
is stripped down, the rhythm section having left the stage. Amelia is
wistful, yearning, full of ‘Dreams and false alarms’ with Oxley’s delicate
guitar keening and weeping and a warm wash of bass clarinet adds colour. Pete/Pat’s Solo full of glistening
shards and runs is ‘after’ Pat but Oxley makes it his own before the others
rejoin for Hejira. The bass is
lovely, probing, warm and inviting, full of Pastorian pops, before the soprano
cuts through, floating in and growing into a sharp edged solo. The band run
through A Surging Ways, one of
Oxley’s compositions which opens with a dramatic, lyrical, Spanish tinged bass
solo. A swirling dance groove rises out of it before the drums explode and the
whole band drives it forward. It’s a street funk, with suggestions of the
Crusaders but sounds better than that implies.
Hattie tells us it’s
Joni’s birthday today (82), but, disappointingly, there’s no cake. Black Crow closes the show with a lovely
band sound driving it on. Weston leads with a soaring tenor solo, full of
energy and Oxley stitches together a series of repeated solo over bombs dropped
by the drummer; the three leads of sax, vocals and guitar are a tight,
multi-headed front line.
For the encores Hattie
sings one of her songs (she has an ongoing solo career) and then it’s A Case of You to end the evening. The
line ‘I could drink a case of you and still be on my feet’ shows the sadness,
and some frustration in the lyric; Oxley’s guitar is delicate and elegant;
Whitehead’s voice soars and falls, from ethereal to husky. It’s a subdued and
melancholy end to the performance but the audience is loud and appreciative,
nonetheless.
It’s been a nostalgic
evening for me, taking me a long way back, but lovely and the music positively
glowed at times.
Additional
Comments The original Shadows
And Light concert film is available on YouTube in whole and in parts.
It’s also worth
mentioning the product that Pete was selling on the evening as it was the first
time I’d encountered an LSL – Look, Scan, Listen. It’s a book containing song
lyrics, comments by band members and a QR code (I assume) that gives you access
to the music as a whole, or as individual pieces. This LSL is for the Hejira
band’s Live At The Cockpit album and
costs £10 more than the CD. It’s a new type of product that combines streaming
with a physical product to hold whilst listening. It could be the next big
thing or it could go the way of DAT. More about it on Pete Oxley's
website. Dave Sayer

1 comment :
Wow! Great review Dave. I checked out the link at the bottom of your review - the LSL product is currently out of stock, but one can sign up for email notification.
I would have loved to hear Hejira live and ironically they are playing Helmsley tonight - 3 days after we moved away from North Yorkshire.
Post a Comment