STANDARDS AND MORE WITH STRONG AND INVENTIVE MUSICIANS
Secunderabad Club 8th May 2017
Written for The Hyderabad Western Music Foundation www.hydmusic .com
And responsible for giving us such a good
time was the Adrian D’Souza Quartet comprising Adrian D’Souza on Drums, Karan Joseph on Keyboard and bass, Lydia Hendrikje
Hornung, Vocals, and Pawan Benjamin on Tenor saxophone.
But before these strong and inventive
musicians came on stage and put a brand new spin on some of the old Jazz
standards with mainstream jazz, Latin music and blues ballads, the evening
began with a performance of a few songs by a local eleven member vocal ensemble
the ‘Deccan Voices’.
The Deccan Voices began with a rendition of
an old Duke Ellington jazz standard ‘I’m Beginning to See the Light’. A pop
song by Toto, ‘Africa’. A hymn, ‘All Things bright and Beautiful’, and a choral
version of ‘Take 5’, the eleven singer choral ensemble ended with ‘Balleilaka’
a Tamil song by AR Rehman. The ‘Deccan Voices’ directed by Joe Koster on keyboards looked like they were enjoying themselves
and dealt with the rhythms and harmonies well. All-in-all a good performance!
Let’s get back to the main event, and the
music and the musicians of the Adrian D’Souza Quartet .
Though the leader of the band is usually the main protagonist, with Adrian D'Souza on
drums, it is an ensemble cast, with every musician playing their part. Yet Adrian does steer, guide and support by listening and responding. Adrian’s
lightly swinging drumming is spare and elegant, and sometimes quite
rambunctious as the tune needs, but his drumming is always in good taste,
with a refined emotional sensitivity to the feeling of the song.
Lydia Hendrikje Hornung, has a light, jazz
soaked, crystalline tone of voice that is sweet and flexible, textured and emotionally strong. Most of all she is so refreshingly easy to listen to. She
demonstrated super vocal control, elasticity and command in the vocal twists
and nuances when she improvised. Generally an insightful, able and classy
singer.
Karan Joseph on
the keyboard is the backbone of the quartet. Karan is a resourceful arranger, very
expressive keyboard player, sometimes a powerhouse who cuts loose, opening up free-flying improvisation, sometimes quiet and
sensitive, hunched in
concentration, sometimes head-back and smiling, neck stretching with bird-like
movements, always maintaining an inventive but steady bass with his left hand.
Pawan Benjamin, what can one say about this
tall, thin, long haired young Tenor Saxophone player, who plays such touching,
tender, and sometimes blistering and blazing solo’s; his saxophone sounding like a
thoughtful voice as though he was thinking through his solos, with every phrase
always connecting to the other and being completely meaningful.
The
audience saw the inner enjoyment that the musicians felt while the Quartet played, not the overt show of rock musicians,
but simple smiles of pleasure when the musicians heard one of them or the other playing a
passage that that they had just created, and which grew wings and soared away,
whether it was the singer singing an emotional passage or the keyboardist
playing a piquant passage, or the saxophone saying something so meaningful, or
the drummer playing an appropriate variation, they shared the pleasure of the musicians
bringing out the best in each other, and giving pleasure to the audience at the
same time.
Whether the
Adrian D’Souza Quartet played a beautifully put together slow blues, or a
Brazilian samba, or a ballad or a jazz standard like 'Tenderly', or ‘East of the
Sun’, or ‘Speak Low’, or the
beautifully rendered ‘Moonlight in Vermont’, or a Wayne Shorter classic, the music was about joy. It was not music played for musicians. It was music played for everyone to enjoy. It was music that was completely
accessible, completely understandable, completely empathetic. it was music that
left the audience feeling good and elated. This was without doubt, the best
Jazz show that the twin-cities have seen in the last two years.
And for this pleasure we must thank The
Secunderabad Club, Bharati Cement, The Hyderabad Western Music Foundation and
Goethe Zentrum.
All Photographs by multi-man Joe Koster
Sounds like a superb show! Wish I had been there to watch all this in action.
ReplyDeleteWonderfully written Pratap. I could hear the music through your writing.
ReplyDelete