‘Heavy metal/Eurostern’ starts off with a ripping funk-rock escapade featuring Jenkins in classic percussion-guitar style. The tempo eases up a bit and we get treated to a full five-minute trumpet solo from Rainner Brennecke in a sort of mock later Miles Davis style, based almost entirely on extended notes in the instrument’s lower register. Piano twitters away underneath, guitar nods in with some free jazz snapping. Then the original tempo is taken up by the saxes, and the second half of the track spotlights the Fun Horns unaccompanied. They take the funk riff and turn it into a complex counterpoint, which builds in sophistication through an elegant chorale to incorporate textures more associated with a baroque brass ensemble. The texture changes again and the instrumentalists indulge in a sort of mock-Stockhausen routine, echoing the earlier trumpet solo. This gives way to an astounding trombone solo which I challenge any trombonist to listen to without reaching for the lip salve in pained admiration.
|
‘Cuttlefish’ and ‘Greenwich one way system’ are two Jenkins concert favourites here given a subtle reworking. The first follows an expansive piano solo with an extended mute trumpet chorus, all accompanied by staccato rhythm and guitar figures, with a coda showing off the horns’ splendiferous breath control. ‘Greenwich one way system’ alternates a mock-standard jazz chord sequence with thumping atonal block chords. Several choruses of roaring sax thunder into a drum break which exchanges accusing glances with some elegantly unsuitable piano.‘Bilbao (St Columbus Day)’ is a carnival riot which first broke out on Jenkins’ ‘Scratches of Spain’ album. The treatment here prominently features an accordion amid the brisk vivace. In ‘4. Saxophone Nr.3-The Mayfest Variations’ the Fun Horns take us through a lively tango routine complete with perfectly articulated sirens and a brief trip to Glenn Millerland. The album ends with a high explosive reprise of ‘Bilbao’ with Billy Jenkins leading the way. Billy’s association with the Fun Horns led to a second album, ‘East and West Now Wear the Same Vest’, as well as a tour sponsored by the Arts Council. The Horns also appeared on Jenkins’ 1996 album, ‘S.A.D.’. Between them, the breadth of musical reference coupled with sheer technical ability are amply demonstrated on ‘Mayfest ‘94’. As Jenkins says on the sleevenote, it’s a "close-mixed-voyeuristic-upside-down-inside-out-aural experience". He even includes a little map of the mix as it was on the stage, to heighten your sense of sonic geography. Like his work with British jazz musicians, ‘Mayfest ‘94’ stresses the music itself, as it finds expression with virtuoso instrumentalists; and it sounds like Glasgow brought the best out of them on the night.
|
|