Seeing Anat Cohen at the Village Vanguard was possibly the best thing we did in New York City. We hadn't heard of Anat Cohen -- I just thought we should go to the Village Vanguard to make the visit complete. But now she's my favorite clarinetist.
You can listen to her play at the Village Vanguard last year by clicking on this link and then clicking the link at the top of the page ("Listen Now: Anat Cohen Quartet Live At The Village Vanguard"). The first song (Fats Wallers' "Jitterbug Waltz") will give you a feel for what last weekend's show was like.
I love this niche: taking a decidedly non-modern musical idiom and reviving it for the present day. It's probably harder than it sounds. You don't want to be too tame and old-fashioned. You need to bring your own personality to the music, make it sound newly relevant. But you also can't be too self-conscious or heavy-handed about it. Anat Cohen's quartet got the balance just right.
We sat through 2 back-to-back sets -- about 3 hours of instrumental music -- and I don't think we were ever bored. The whole experience simultaneously felt "larger than life" and yet more intimate than I had expected (even though I was familiar with the venue). She seemed constantly excited about the music, even when she wasn't playing. She was never just standing around waiting for her solo -- she was always dancing or grinning or something.
As a bonus, the drummer, Lewis Nash, did a perfect wordless vocal solo that sounded like a saxophone.
I realize I haven't said much about the rest of her excellent band, but here's a whole blog post focusing on the pianist's performance. (That post is about one of the earlier concerts in her 6-night series at the Vanguard.)
She mentioned that they were recording the second set. I don't know if it was for an album. But if they do release a "Benny Goodman and Beyond" album from the Village Vanguard, definitely buy it!
She also plays classical music. If you happen to be in NYC at the time, I recommend seeing her playing Mozart's Clarinet Quintet as part of a concert that starts at 3 pm on Sunday, August 2, at Barge Music in Brooklyn (here's the website for directions, etc.).
By the way, she also composes, plays tenor and soprano saxophone, and is fluent in a variety of genres from around the world. (She said in an interview, describing her experience at Berklee College of Music, "I came to understand when a chart says 'Latin' on top it means almost nothing. You need to know if the music is from the northeast of Brazil, the west coast of Colombia, or someplace else on the continent. I was inspired to explore world music, starting with the music of South America, in detail.") Appropriately enough, none of these facets were on display when we saw her. She has a multitude of talent but also good taste about when to use it.
Here's another sample of her music, though quite different from the
show we saw -- playing with the popular singer/guitarist John
Pizzarelli (caution: this clip has been not working for some people, but it works for me):
No comments:
Post a Comment