| © Colin Muirhead |
My relationship with the Montreux Jazz Festival started back in 1995. At that time I was still getting in jazz, having started listening to it on the radio whilst working in the US in the early 1990s. After returning to the UK, I wanted to discover more about jazz and decided to kill two birds with one stone: by having a relaxing holiday overseas and attending a jazz festival at the same time. And where better to do so than in Montreux?
Truth be told, I knew little about the town before my first
holiday there. Having previously visited
the German-speaking part of Switzerland, I had an image of Alpine meadows, coolish
temperatures and coolish temperaments.
How wrong I was! I arrived in
Montreux on a blazing hot summer evening to discover an exhilarating atmosphere:
lots of people bustling around the various venues and bars along the lakeside
as the sun went down. Was this really
Switzerland? Well, yes it was. I soon surmised that this French-speaking
part of the country might have more in common with the South of France than with
the Bernese Oberland or cuckoo clocks.
That first evening was topped off by my first concert at the
jazz festival. I had heard of
Yellowjackets from my time in the US, but this was the first time I had seen
them live. I was totally blown away. Russ Ferrante, Bob Mintzer, Jimmy Haslip and
Will Kennedy drew me into their compelling and enticing world of contemporary
jazz, and I knew this was where I wanted to be.
After years of searching, I had found the music that I would grow to
love more and more.
| © Colin Muirhead |
| © Colin Muirhead |
In all, I visited the festival 13
times. My last visit, in 2012, was the
most memorable, principally for personal reasons that I outline in my book The
Montreux Years. But two
key events at the festival that year stick in my mind. Firstly, a great concert by my favourite
musician, Pat Metheny, together with his quartet of Chris Potter on sax, Ben
Williams on bass and Antonio Sánchez on drums.
Secondly, seeing Claude Nobs on stage introducing veteran pianist George
Gruntz. Nobody could have guessed this
at the time, but six months later Claude and George would die within a day of
each other.
From what I can gather, the
Montreux Jazz Festival is continuing to thrive and attract huge musical names,
even if the number of jazz artists taking part has fallen. However, the passing of Claude Nobs and many
of the musicians I saw at the festival made me think it was time to move on. Nevertheless, Montreux will always hold a
special place in my heart, and my book pays homage to the festival and my time
there.
I would like to send my very best
wishes to Knats for their gig on July 13.
And, to anyone who has not already done so, I do hope you’ll make it to the Montreux
Jazz Festival one of these years! Colin Muirhead
The
Montreux Years (ISBN: 9781790812028) is available in Kindle and
paperback formats from Amazon.
2 comments :
Thanks Colin for those memories of Montreux. Another BSH contributor (now retired) Ron Ainsborough sent reports from the 2013 Montreux festival - the year after your last visit. Here's the thing -.you were both at the Ticket Office gig on Tuesday afternoon. Were either of you aware of the Montreux connection you shared?
Thanks for this, Lance. No, I wasn't aware of the connection! I plan to be back at the Ticket Office in Whitley Bay next Tuesday - perhaps I can speak with Ron then or at another gig.
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