Trading Places at the Suoni: Vancouver-Lisbon-Montreal (Encounters of the Free Kind)

0

By Paul Serralheiro

Cross-pollination in the arts is always a good thing. An example of this is when musicians from different geographical locations get together to share their experiences in a concert setting. This is especially exciting in improvised music, because you never know what might happen. Such was the case on two different nights at the Suoni per il popolo festival last week.

June 12 featured a Lisbon-Montreal encounter at the Casa del popolo, which was the first part of an evening devoted to daring improvisational music (the second part featured Norwegian bassist Ingebrigt Haker-Falten’s Texas band The Young Mothers in a high-energy electric set, although the match up with the opener was a little odd). Heard three days later was the second installment of Trading Places, a collaboration between Montreal and Vancouver improvisers (which was followed by a solo set by drummer Will Guthrie). First instituted in 2016, this initiative allows two musicians from the Canadian West Coast to spend time in Montreal and play with locals during the festival’s run, including an informal workshop setting. In return two Montreal musicians travel West later in the year to engage in similar activities.

The June 12 Lisbon-Montreal encounter for its part was a concise set clocking in around the 45 minute mark. It paired the musical and life partners Karoline Leblanc on piano and drummer-percussionist Paulo J. Ferreira Lopes, with two of the latter’s Portuguese compatriots violist Ernesto Rodrigues, and guitarist Luis Lopes (no relation). As a unit, this quartet engaged in inspired and unscripted free-form improvisation.

The pianist’s flow of cascading chords and melodies was the thread that seemed to tie the music together, as Ferreira Lopes’ percussive washes seemed to ride in tandem with her energetic ideas. Guitarist Lopes, for his part, coaxed intriguing sounds and noises from his instrument, at times fingering the strings high up the neck, near the pickups, to get unusual harmonics and plucking effects, or scrapping a violin bow or a tin can across the strings. Violist Rodrigues wisely sawed away at his instrument, spinning a series of searing lines in this collective sketch that was at times jaw-dropping, the musicians feeding off each other in a sustained flow of inspiration.

Down the street at La Vitrola, Vancouverites Ron Samworth on guitar and drummer Mili Hong shared the stage on June 15 with four of our own: trumpeter Simon Millerd, vocalist Ayelet Rose Gottlieb, flutist Cleo Palacio-Quintin and guitarist Bernard Falaise.

The music of this sextet was surprisingly subdued and gentle, all the more so because Samworth and Falaise are very capable of shredding loud and mean guitar lines. The approach was compositional overall, as all players developed some finely textured music throughout an uninterrupted set. Vocalist Gottlieb for one soared over the rhythmic and harmonic textures with a nuanced voice emitting a wide range of sounds ranging from gentle cooing to impassioned groans. Trumpet and flute interacted in fascinating ways and Hong’s drumming was subtle and moving. While the distinct personalities of all involved were clear throughout the set, no one player dominated the proceedings, and the piece unfolded coherently as a collective composition.

From both of the collaborations there are two lessons to be gleaned, one of these being the universality of the language of music, the other (and even more important one), the open-ended possibilities of free improvisation and how new and strikingly beautiful things can emerge when sensitive and skilled musical talents are offered opportunities like these to work together.

Share:

About Author

* Marc Chénard est rédacteur responsable de la section jazz du magazine depuis 2000. Il est journaliste de carrière spécialisé en jazz et en musiques improvisées depuis 35 ans. Ses écrits ont été publiés en anglais, français et allemand dans sept différents pays. *Marc Chénard has been the jazz editor of this publication since year 2000. He is a dedicated writer in the fields of jazz and improvised music for about 35 years. His writings have appeared in English, French and German in seven different countries.

Leave A Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.