Gig review/ Transcendence 2.0 - jazz, fusion
By NARENDRA KUSNUR
Concert:
Transcendence 2.0
Artistes:
Louiz Banks, Mysore Manjunath, Yogesh Samsi, Gino Banks, Gianluca Liberatore,
Bangalore Amrit
Genre: Jazz, Carnatic, fusion
Genre: Jazz, Carnatic, fusion
Details: St
Andrew’s Auditorium, Bandra, June 9
Rating: ****
It was a
unique event, held as a tribute to two icons – Canadian jazz pianist Oscar
Peterson and Carnatic violinist T. Chowdiah. On Saturday, June 9, the audience
at the St Andrew’s Auditorium, Bandra, witnessed three diverse forms of music
at the Transcendence 2.0 concert.
Renowned
pianist-keyboardist Louiz Banks and his group played acoustic jazz, after which
violinist Mysore Manjunath gave a Carnatic recital. Appropriately, the evening
ended with fusion.
Banks, known
to be a huge admirer of Peterson, was joined by his son Gino on drums and
Gianluca Liberatore on upright bass, an instrument not heard often in Mumbai’s
live circles these days. The trio set the tone with the George Gershwin classic
‘Summertime’, followed by another standard ‘Bye Bye Blackbird’, composed by Ray
Henderson.
The set also
included old beauties ‘When I Fall In Love’ and ‘The Way You Look Tonight’,
before concluding with a Banks original ‘New Blues’. It was a brilliant
performance, and though the sound jarred in the first few minutes, it settled
down eventually. Banks and Gino played with a natural flow, and it was a
pleasure to hear some of Liberatore’s double bass solos. However, one missed a
Peterson original composition in the set list.
The Carnatic
part, featuring violinist Manjunath, tabla maestro Yogesh Samsi and kanjira
exponent Bangalore Amrit, began with a rendition of raag Purvi Kalyan, followed
by a raagam tanam pallavi in Kaapi. A raagmala concluded the set, which was
adorned by an exquisite violin build-up, remarkable tone and percussion runs.
The finale
involved another Banks original ‘Reunion’, loosely based on raag Chandrakauns.
Like most fusion encounters, it had some excellent interplay between jazz and
Carnatic music. The climax was explosive. While Manjunath was outstanding in
the pure Carnatic renditions, there were two occasions he played out of
sequence in the fusion interaction. One huge gaffe was made by the compere, who
described Manjunath’s set as a ‘great blend of Hindustani music’. Where was the
homework?
This was the
second part of the annual Transcendence series, and one looks forward to more.
While Mumbai doesn’t have too many Carnatic events, one also doesn’t see much
of old-school jazz. This turned out to be a perfect platform for those looking
forward to rich music.
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