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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
John Fordham

Paul Dunmall: Bright Light a Joyous Celebration review – infused with the spirit of Coltrane

Pushing the story on … Paul Dunmall.
Pushing the story on … Paul Dunmall. Photograph: Brian Homer

Plenty of saxophonists learning the game in the 1950s made John Coltrane their lodestar for his famous ferment of spiritual gravitas and storming improv intensity – but his best disciples took that sound as a call to freedom, not idolatry. The modestly masterful Kent-born saxophonist Paul Dunmall reveres Coltrane’s emotional eloquence to this day, but has also been profoundly affected by the very different, ’trane-influenced digressions of his UK sax contemporaries John Surman and Evan Parker: Surman’s lyrical affection for global folk musics, Parker’s contrasting drive toward a powerful jazz language independent of conventional tonality and form. The open imagination of UK improv-piano genius Keith Tippett, a longtime playing partner, has also been a gamechanger.

Paul Dunmall: Bright Light a Joyous Celebration album artwork
Paul Dunmall: Bright Light a Joyous Celebration album artwork Photograph: Publicity image

From those sources and many more, Dunmall has cultivated a gift for juggling abstraction and songlike shapes, punchily boppish tunes and free-collective maelstroms – stories that are sketched all over Bright Light a Joyous Celebration, made in his 70th birthday year. He’s joined here by saxophonist Xhosa Cole (the 2018 BBC young jazz musician of the year), freebopper, rapper, poet and MC Soweto Kinch, subtly harmonious vibes-player Corey Mwamba, Midlands bassist Dave Kane and former Don Cherry African-American drums maestro Hamid Drake. The grittily repeating hook of You Look Away finds Dunmall in early-Coltrane hard bop mode, but jazz’s old and new stories enthrallingly flank him in Kinch’s off-the-register alto wails and the gruff warmth and directness of Cole’s engagingly old-school tenor sound. I’ve Had a Lot diverts quiet vibes musings into a skipping, sax-riffing folk-dance that launches Dunmall’s airborne soprano, before wailing Cole and Kinch choruses precede Drake’s closing drums tumult. The title track, whooping with the clamour of 60s South African townships, is the highlight of an exultantly conversational set inscribed with a multitude of post-Coltrane jazz stories.

Also out this month

Expat Australian vocalist Nell Greco, a startling participant on bassist/composer Ruth Goller’s magically dreamy 2021 album Skylla, releases Inanima (Clonmell Jazz Social), a set of poetic lyrics full of delicate reflectiveness, restrained anger and intimate confidings richly embroidered by Goller on bass and Maria Chiara Argirò on keys. The spontaneous empathy of the UK duo of saxophonist/composer and flautist Tori Freestone and pianist Alcyona Mick blossoms on Make One Little Room an Everywhere (Horus Music) – including seven globe-hopping originals, and a stripped-down and engagingly insouciant account of Both Sides Now joining vocalist Brigitte Beraha and Freestone’s swooping tenor. And the Harper Trio’s Passing By (Little Yellow Man Records) offers a glimpse of just how distinctively Greek-born musician Maria-Christina Harper’s jazz-inflected exploration of the electric harp might stretch across southern European song forms, especially with the sonically experimental saxophonist Josephine Davies murmuring her way inquisitively through the soundscape.

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