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Bill Frisell in Bristol, Brussels, Orvieto…

At the end of Bill Frisell’s concert in Bristol last night, my son (who had bought the tickets as a belated birthday present) asked me which of all the times I’d seen him live was my favourite. That took some thinking, but eventually I told him that it was probably a solo concert at Cadogan Hall in London half a dozen years ago. Although perhaps not the most spectacular, it seemed to capture so much of the essence of an extraordinary musician.

But Frisell is one of those players who put his essence into every note, whatever the context and the demands it makes. At last night’s gig in the beautiful St George’s, a repurposed 200-year-old neoclassical church, he was joined by the bassist Thomas Morgan and the drummer Rudy Royston, long-time partners with whom he has a rapport that may be well grooved but never precludes the element of quiet surprise.

Their two unbroken 45-minute sets were intimate conversations that flowed from theme to theme with a beautiful sense of dovetailing, full of subtle allusions that looked both backwards and forwards, maintaining a gentle but persuasive continuity.

Some of the themes I recognised were Frisell favourites: a gorgeous “Lush Life” (including the prefatory verse); the loping “Lookout for Hope”, with its light reggae inflection; the staccato flourishes of Thelonious Monk’s “Evidence”; Bacharach and David’s “What the World Needs Now Is Love”, with a lovely moment in which Frisell simply stroked out the chords; and, as an encore and parting benediction, a quietly glowing “When You Wish Upon a Star”, written for the 1940 Disney film Pinocchio, a song that he once said “has been in my bloodstream for as long as I can remember.”

The trio is also present throughout his new album, Orchestras, which combines one disc recorded live at two halls in Belgium with the Brussels Philharmonic and another captured at a theatre in Orvieto with the Umbria Jazz Orchestra. Both ensembles are arranged by the great Michael Gibbs, now 86 years years old, who pours all his decades of knowledge and wisdom into providing inspiring settings for the guitarist.

If Nelson Riddle had been a jazz arranger on the level of a Gil Evans, he might have come up with the subtly shaded orchestrations Gibbs delivers for the full symphony outfit on his own “Nocturne Vulgaire” and “Sweet Rain”, Ron Carter’s “Doom” and several of the guitarist’s own compositions, including “Electricity”, “Throughout” and “Richter 858 No 7”, from his album of pieces inspired by the German artist. Strings, brass and woodwind are everywhere deployed with subtle grace.

On the second disc, Gibbs uses the 11-piece Umbria ensemble — six brass, four reeds and a lone cellist — to bring out the shades in Frisell’s music that evoke an America of bayous, of prairies, of woodsmoke rising from remote farmsteads. It’s much more of a jazz sound, like an expanded version of the three-horn sextet with which the guitarist made the gorgeous Blues Dream album — a particular favourite of mine — in 2001.

Thanks to Gibbs, everything on both discs has combines an almost weightless elegance with deep soulfulness, something the arranger absorbed from his reverence for Gil Evans. You can hear it perfectly on “Strange Meeting”, with echoes of Evans’s fondness for the Spanish tinge in its luscious sway and Moorish blues tonality, drawing the very best from Frisell, to whose vast discography this is a recommended addition.

* Bill Frisell’s Orchestras is out now on the Blue Note label, as two CDs or three LPs.

9 Comments Post a comment
  1. John Kieffer's avatar
    John Kieffer #

    I agree 100% about the 2018 Cadogan Hall solo concert. It was a special one. At one point it seemed he was playing McLaughlin’s Follow Your Heart and The Carter Family’s Wildwood Flower at the same time. A close second for me was the 2005 trio concert at the Barbican with Greg Leisz and Jenny Scheinman when a whole set consisting of John Lennon covers started to take shape out of a gauzy opening improvisation. A great musician.

    May 17, 2024
  2. Bren Pointer's avatar
    Bren Pointer #

    Thanks Richard for this wonderful piece. I saw Bill on Wednesday at the Islington Assembly Hall & it was remarkable on so many levels. I love his gentle nudging into unfamiliar soundscapes and his creative use of the variety of pedals in creating a unique conduit between tunes. The wonderful rapport & interplay with both Thomas, Rudy & Bill is evident in the spaces in between the music, what is said and unspoken, plus the way tension is built up & released in an understated way. The Inimitable tone of his guitar that covers the waterfront of so many styles yet is uniquely his own. A fabulous evening of astonishing music.

    May 18, 2024
  3. zenpublisher's avatar
    zenpublisher #

    Thanks for a great review! I too saw the Islington gig on Wednesday. What a great concert – paying hommage to so many other tunes and musicians, while still creating his own wonderful soundscapes with his trio partners. A few jolts of recognition, especially when he knocked out the John Surman riff from McLaughlin’s ‘Arjen’s Bag’ on Extrapolation. He is on record as saying how much he admired JM, especially early Shakti.

    May 18, 2024
    • westonjanem's avatar
      westonjanem #

      ‘Arjen’s Bag’ (aka ‘Follow Your Heart’ – see John Kieffer’s comment) has long been a Frisell live staple and he recorded it on ‘Ghost Town’ (2000). Some sources online claim that McLaughlin re-titled it for ‘My Goal is Beyond’ (1971) but in fact it was recorded (as ‘Follow Your Heart’) 12 months or so earlier as the opening track on Joe Farrell’s debut album for CTI (with Corea, Holland and DeJohnette and JM on two tracks). A very fine version it is too. Best T.

      May 20, 2024
  4. tonydudleyevans's avatar
    tonydudleyevans #

    Bill Frisell and Mike Gibbs led a wonderful two-way conversation in a ‘workshop’ at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire yesterday. This is discussed and photgraphed by John Watson on UK Jazz News: https://londonjazznews.com/2024/05/18/bill-frisell-trio-workshop-with-mike-gibbs-concert-in-birmingham/

    Bill and Mike shared many fascinating insights into the process of improvising and composition. Perhaps the most fascinating was Bill’s observation that sometimes when in a moment of creativity, if he starts to think about the creativity of that moment, the solo collapses.

    May 18, 2024
  5. micksteels's avatar
    micksteels #

    Saw Mike Gibbs band in 1978 marked down the guitar player in my notes as unknown….

    May 18, 2024
  6. jonturney's avatar

    Just missed being in your pic there – front row RH gallery 🙂

    A great night. I think Bill’s last visit to St George’s was on Mike Gibbs 70th birthday tour – our first visit to the venue and the day I decided Bristol would probably turn out to be an OK place…

    OTOH hand I recall the Barbican evening with Wheeler’s Angel Song quartet and Paul Motian trio and marvelling that Frisell could serve both halves of that double bill so well.

    May 22, 2024
  7. GRAHAM ROBERTS's avatar
    GRAHAM ROBERTS #

    Really sorry I missed Bill Frisell’s trio on this visit to the UK, but will take the opportunity of catching him when he returns in October for an appearance at Cadogan Hall with the wonderful group that played on the ‘Four’ album.

    May 24, 2024
  8. Frank Hudson's avatar

    I love Frisell, and I have been able to see him in several configurations. The time I saw him play with Royston was a special treat, for just as you describe him, Royston is a great ensemble player.

    May 27, 2024

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