Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Trilok Gurtu And Tigran Hamasyan - Review

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Trilok Gurtu And Tigran Hamasyan - Review

    TRILOK GURTU AND TIGRAN HAMASYAN - REVIEW

    Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
    John Lewis

    guardian.co.uk
    Monday 26 September 2011 17.45 BST

    It's not often Trilok Gurtu finds himself upstaged. For more than
    three decades, the Mumbai-born percussionist has been one of the
    most charismatic figures in jazz, always surrounded by a kit that
    looks like the contents of Aladdin's cave. If drum solos are often
    an excuse for the audience to visit the bar, with Gurtu they are
    the centrepiece to the show - a sonic voyage using tablas, gongs,
    box drums, rattles, cowbells, shells and even a bucket of water. But
    tonight, from the moment he was joined on stage by the 24-year-old
    Armenian pianist Tigran Hamasyan, eyes were fixed elsewhere.

    Dressed in black and looking like a young Bob Dylan, Tigran placed his
    stool away from the piano and bent double while playing, his forehead
    almost touching the keys. He mumbled into a microphone while soloing;
    occasionally beat-boxing over the funkier tracks, sometimes singing
    wordless, hymn-like compositions.

    This performance - featuring two short solo performances and a lengthy
    duet - served as Hamasyan's London debut and showcased A Fable, his
    first album on the Verve label. However, where that LP comprises quiet,
    Satie-esque miniatures, here Gurtu pushed Tigran into wilder territory.

    His piano style is strongly rooted in traditional Armenian music.

    Tonight's show opened with a fellow Armenian playing folk songs on
    the oboe-like duduk, and you can see the link between those haunting
    melodies and the melismatic phrases Tigran plays with his right hand.

    But, egged on by Gurtu's rabble-rousing percussion, he also dipped
    into Keith Jarrett-style gospel, country and funk.

    The duet was a little rough around the edges, but it was a chaotic,
    exhausting, unrepeatable show that pushed two very different talents
    to their limits.

Working...
X