More live shots of Dave O'Higgins Septet
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Friday night ended on a high and entertaining note with a strong British jazz band and a group of dancers reinventing the jazz dance tradition.
I’ve long admired Dave O'Higgins through his many changes of musical style. In particular he has a nuanced sense of time on a ballad as well as any twisting headlong fast-tempo song the band throws at him. His solo tonight on ‘You don’t know what love is’ is a great example of the former. Part of the standard repertory, here he brings out its slinky essence. At its close he dedicated it to his baritone-playing wife who helped shaped the front-line of this set.
O'Higgins has a long and continuing interest in jazz fusion, but the septet he presented here is a more mainstream post-bop band displaying interesting and shifting arrangements and great ensemble playing. There’s strong support from a great rhythm section and the two sax, trumpet and trombone horn section made a joyous noise, especially when playing for the jazz dancers in the latter part of the set.
Jazz dance has its origins in the same folk culture that gave birth to jazz as a music, but reached its zenith in the lindy dancers of the swing-era. Jazzcotech take this tradition and, as their name suggests, give it a contemporary twist. The band play fast and furious, providing the dancers with a brilliant pulse on which to improvise, and lots of colour to shape their moves. Dancing to jazz takes enormous energy and skill (I can tell you from personal experience), and the twists and turns of the latin-infused numbers they danced to demanded even more.
Scarborough Grand Hall has a large stage which comfortably accommodates even a big band and provided enough room for the dancers, but I am not sure it gives them the best surface to dance on, nor the best space to perform on. It is great, though, to see dance programmed at a jazz festival, and O’Higgins clearly gets a lot from the collaboration. The band certainly do not give the dancers an easy ride; if anything their playing during this section was more complex. Both band and dancers, though, are gifted improvisers, and just as the musicians take standard themes and make innovative performances out of it, the dancers take a whole series of classic moves and twist them into personal long-lines of strikingly modern dance.
I think I’m right in saying that O’Higgins is a Brummy, and as the team that brings you this online report from Scarborough Jazz festival is from Birmingham City University we think of him as our own, even though he is a professor at Leeds College of Music. Our very own Jeremy Price, from Birmingham Conservatoire was also there on trombone. We’ll overlook that members of the band and the dancers are from elsewhere, and celebrate a great end to a great evening of music and, of course, dance.
Tim Wall
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'Just Like Jazz' is a collaborative project between Interactive Cultures, a research unit at Birmingham City University, and the Scarborough Jazz Festival. We're media academics who happen to be jazz fans and we're working with the Scarborough Jazz Festival to explore the ways in which jazz festivals can be portrayed online.
Rather than creating a brochure website around the festival, or simply filming the festival and putting that online, our goal is to capture the spirit of the festival using a range of techniques such as photography, text and handheld, personal digital video. We have given small, cheap, portable video cameras to select audience members, musicians, backstage staff and the festival organisers and asked them to capture whatever they think is interesting: the buzz of the audience, the surrounding environment, snippets of the music performed, and any discussions that take place around jazz.

Left to right: Prof Tim Wall, Andrew Dubber, Dr Simon Barber, Jez Collins.
We're gathering together all of this video, photography and text from our contributors and publishing it live on this website as the festival happens. We're also tagging the content in order to experiment with the ways in which the characters and stories that are captured can be navigated by you, the visitor. This process gives audiences the opportunity to experience the festival in their own way and makes the event accessible to those who may wish to attend the festival in future years, or who may never have considered visiting a jazz festival at all.
Although we've worked on projects like this before, with Aftershock in Italy and with the Copenhagen Jazz Festival, we don't have a fixed idea of what we're going to end up with. We're working with a loose structure and quite a lot of improvisation - in a way, it's just like jazz.
Do come and say hello if you see us around. We hope you enjoy exploring the festival online with us,
Tim, Andrew, Simon and Jez.
http://interactivecultures.org
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