John Fordham 

Soweto Kinch – review

It was smart programming at the eXplorations festival, offering audiences alternative ways into jazz each night, led by Jay Phelps, Soweto Kinch and Alex Wilson, writes John Fordham
  
  


Three different notions of jazz – cool, song-rooted swing; hip-hop and rap-fuelled street sounds; a lyrical remix with contemporary-classical and world music – made up the three-night eXplorations festival at Kings Place. Trumpeter Jay Phelps steered the first, Birmingham saxist and rapper Soweto Kinch the second and the world-jazz pianist Alex Wilson the third, but all guested on each other's shows. It was smart programming, offering audiences alternative ways into jazz each night.

Soweto Kinch's gig was a scalding display of post-Coleman alto-sax improvising, a virtuosic and intelligent exposition of political rap, and a visually riveting event into the bargain. Accompanied only by his keyboard-mimicking laptop, bassist Karl Rasheed-Abel and drummer Graham Godfrey for much of the gig, Kinch instantly revealed the barking emphasis and melodic resourcefulness that has made him a world-league saxophonist. Phelps joined for some pieces, the group then becoming an unruly, imploring brass/reeds mix reminiscent of the gospel-like free jazz of the late Ayler brothers. Kinch turned an orthodox ballad into a venomous wordplay on bank names in The Love of Money, and the set wound up on an exuberant Latin-tinged tune with the arrival of Wilson on piano.

The second half was the real tour de force, however, unveiling Kinch's work in progress – The Trials of Mike Smith, a contemporary take on The Seven Deadly Sins. A stinging sax line over a choppy, free-funk pulse, a rhythmically treacherous ballad and the deliciously dolorous sax/trumpet theme of Vacuum preceded a long sequence featuring the remarkable dancer Tyrone Isaac-Stuart. A bewildered and then angry rap on materialism ("When will I get mine?"), a breathtaking blur of dance movement in response to Kinch's doubling of the rap tempo and a freestyle passage with audience participation wound up the bold reinvention of music, drama and dance for which Kinch is rightly becoming famous.

 

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