Showing posts with label Nick Vayenas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Vayenas. Show all posts

Friday, 26 February 2016

Patrick Cornelius - 606 AA Milne

Patrick Cornelius
Nick Vayenas
Patrick Cornelius - saxophone
Nick Vayenas - trombone
Alex Garnett - sax/clarinet
Andre Canniere - trumpet
Phil Robson - guitar
Steve Hamilton - piano
Andrew Bain - drums
Michael Janisch - bass.

Andre Canniere
Date - 8th February 2016
Venue - 606 Club, London
Current Album - While We're Still Young




 
The UK CD launch of Patrick  Cornelius' "While We're Still Young," his suite for octet with songs inspired by the children's poetry of A.A. Milne, performed by a Anglo-American 8 piece band.

Cornelius' latest project is inspired by the book “When We Were Very Young” a collection of poetry written by AA Milne, the English author best known for the beloved children’s book “Winnie the Pooh”. The title of the project is “While We’re Still Young”, a title that, while similar, evokes a  bittersweet flavour.

Michael Janisch
Patrick Cornelius originally thought that he was going to be writing this suite for his children. He regularly read to his daughter Isabella from "When We Were Very Young". He assumed perhaps with unrealistic altruism that this project would be a musical homage that Isabella and her brother would someday listen to with wonder and appreciation, but as he got into the actual writing, he realized that the idea of creating this music for his kids was a vain fantasy.
 
Phil Robson

Cornelius said, "I wrote for my own childhood; remembering the wonder and spectacle of exploring our big, scary, beautiful world through new eyes. I also wrote for my music influences. For Ellington, Debussy, Evans, and Shorter, yes, but also for my peers; the wealth of talent that exists in the creative music world today, many of which I actually hired to record the music with me." Patrick Cornelius

Andrew Bain
He revels in the bittersweet step between innocence and wisdom. Despite having left the magic and fury of youth in his wake, both personally and musically, Patrick Cornelius finds himself as a parent discovering AA Milne's work again and igniting that spark of that wonder. The message of "While We're Still Young" is that we should all search for that flame of innocent joy in our own lives, remember that feeling of wonder, and try to nurture it as best we can, no matter what our age or life circumstance. 

Alex Garnett





"While We're Still Young" swells the belly in a very English affair, epitomised by 'The Invaders' which is as ripe and dripping as a Vale Of Evesham orchard. It is the rich stain of a summer pudding, the cheap white bread on the outside is slowly discoloured by the rising pink of burgeoning fruit. As the seeping fruit paints its shades of chapped hands to rope burns it finally rests on the lurid bleed of unforgettable sunsets. Don't forget the cream, the double cream, so pure and rich that it can only be balanced by the smarting twang of sour currants, reminding us of the mercurial English summer.

AL.

Steve Hamilton



 

Thursday, 24 October 2013

Patrick Cornelius - Infinite Whirlwind

Patrick Cornelius - Alto saxophone
Patrick Cornelius got the last day (12/10/2013) of the Whirlwind Festival underway for me at King's Place. Arriving in a state of disarray after being pressed into action for one of London's Big Draw events, his quintet had an immediate calming effect. In fact I felt at home, here was a concert revolving around Cornelius' second album, Infinite Blue, and taking its title from a crayon no less.

Jason Rebello - Piano
Patrick Cornelius has a disarmingly unassuming demeanour yet he must possess a cohesive personality that builds a group around himself rather than play the despot. Looking every inch an old fashioned bank manager, bespectacled and tidy he brought his fellow players together with performance and composition.

Jason Rebello challenges preconceptions too, I had been banned from looking at his publicity photos for years by my mother. With a wild intense stare that reached beyond poster and flyer, I would have nightmares that Rebello had the power of ESP and telekinesis.
Michael Janisch - bass
Upon reading in John Chilton's "who's who" that he had entered a Buddhist Temple to hone his intense meditation skills I feared he might explode my head from 50 paces if our eyes ever locked. Of course totally unfounded, he looked absolutely approachable and yes there was an intensity to his playing but a buoyancy too.

Nick Vayenas - Trombone
"The Incident" wound every one up, audience and musicians alike. The hatless Michael Janisch giving way to Whirlwind Festival favourite Nick Vayenas, playing as crisply as his starched white shirt. Andrew Bain's nostrils flared wider than an asthmatic maori as he got involved too. It was the next tune "My Green Tara" that brought the performance of the set, the aforementioned Rebello producing a breath-taking turn. Delicate and balanced it described a shifting light that alternated between the opaque and transparent. Between these two planes I was caught like a fly in amber.


Andrew Bain - drums
The stillness of "In the Quiet Moments" was timely before the final "Regents Street" but I was still trapped in the resinous aspic of Jason Rebello's performance and his stare as the band took a bow in response to the audience's applause. My head didn't explode of course, well not through any Jedi mind tricks anyway, just good old fashioned music.

AL.

Friday, 18 October 2013

Alex Garnett & Nick Vayenas - Whirlwind Festival


The two worlds of the Whirlwind record label collided last week (10/10/2013) with a terrific collaboration between
Alex Garnett - saxophone
the UK's very own Alex Garnett and the NYC invader Nick Vayenas. A night of contrasts with Garnett drawing from the well of his debut solo release 'Serpent', which is a Whirlwind 'oldie' and Vayenas launching his album 'Some other time' that is so new that the musical ink is still drying on the page.

Femi Temowo -guitar
After experiencing the previous two concerts of the festival where the nice lads of Partikel and Ollie Howell Quintet conversed in polite tones it was like getting one stuck on your jaw when Alex Garnett came to the stage. Here is a man with charisma of the saloon type. Dapper in attire with a handle of witty banter he reminds one of a handsome Peter Lorre or a chancer, straight from the set of the 1947 film 'Brighton Rock'. You couldn't help but warm to his 'del boy' charm but there was nothing Robin Reliant about his playing and the opener "Serpent" was suitably sleek. Hard blowing and aggressive in his pin striper the only thing I was disappointed in was that he didn't possess a hoard of watches when his jacket swung open.

Nick Vayenas - Trombone
Nick Vayenas smoothed the pace with the full and rich "City of Notions", switching from trombone to trumpet and later casting off all his accoutrements for the only vocals I experienced over the 3 days with a Bakeresque "Blame it on my youth". Unlike Chet, singing the tune with all your own teeth improves diction and sound but maybe doesn't add the backstory of the troubled early years. Although I'm sure Vayenas had time enough to misbehave at the after-show Whirlwind parties. I underestimated his throbbing vocals at the time but in retrospect they do have more than enough pathos to carry his sentiments.



Femi Temowo played second fiddle to the main duo but was radiant in his sheer exuberance and heart, making both his smile and talent sparkle on Garnett's "Three for a Moor". Due to the brief hour slots that each group was assigned I couldn't devote much time to Marc Ayza, just a quick sketch of his coquettish 'Barnet fair'.


Marc Ayza - drums
Let us not forget this was our first glimpse of Michael Janisch, throughout the Festival he stayed in the shadows, deep behind microphones and music stands. Janisch gave us plenty to mull over with bass in hand and was magnificent on the final tune, a latin firebrand called "The Pimp". He brought us three bass lines in one with total commitment to the cause and more than our money's worth.

Michael Janisch - bass
I met plenty of students in the audience who had taken up his generous offers to be there for a minimal outlay. Including young guitarist Giorgos Pafitis who I had drawn just a few weeks earlier with Melissa James. As we congregated in the foyer afterwards his beaming grin said it all.

AL.