From the audience perspective

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Killer Shrimp from the audience's perspective

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Killer Shrimp

At least part of Killer Shrimp’s name seems appropriate for the Scarborough Jazz Festival; the music was wholly right for opening Saturday’s musical feast.  Freewheeling they maybe, but the band’s musical roots are in hardbop, updated with some rhythmic feel from more contemporary musics of black origin.

Damon Brown’s flugel horn playing will be familiar to the wider audience who heard the ‘Blue Note put to beats’ group Us3.  Much of the music in this set, though, has a very different sort urban grit, more about cafes in North London and disputes with landlords than romanticised New York street life.  This is realised particularly well in the contributions of saxophonist Ed Jones, especially when counterpointed by the more romantic sound of Brown’s horn. 

Playing live, most of the investigations of electronic music found on the album were absent, but they lost none of the sense of adventure.  There’s traditional head and solo turn-taking, but far more interplay between instrumentalists than characterised the hardbop heyday.  The groove is far less important here than the measured individual playing. There are stimulating, intelligent horn solos that never sound mannered, and drum solos from Luke Flowers that never lose their musicality.

There’s been a strong line up of bass players at this festival, and Mark Hodgson is far more understated than the bass-leaders who were on stage yesterday.  However, I found myself increasingly mesmerised by his walking, fluent playing.  This guy is a strong team player, giving the band a lovely strong pulse, and the traded sixteens and eights with Flowers were beautifully measured and assured. Hodgson seemed far keener to give Flowers a springboard for some gentle and sophisticated percussion, than to push his virtuosity.  Deft and sensitive are the best adjectives here.

In concert here, and on their current CDs, there are lots of originals, but there are also compositions from slightly lesser known bop and hard bop composer-players like Tadd Dameron, Blue Mitchell and Harold Land.  As the set went along the music grew in stature, and the band members clearly became more confident and audacious.  The later numbers in particular had an appreciative audience engrossed.

The band have a lot in common with the spicy Thai fusion food suggested by their name: gently sweet and sour, varied textures, and at its best imaginative enough to be different.

 Tim Wall

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Luke Flowers drum solo with Killer Shrimp

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Killer Shrimp photos

 All images © Mike Jackson 2009  

                     
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Killer_Shrimp_photos_tag_Mike_.zip (758 KB)

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Ed Jones of Killer Shrimp puts his back into it

 Image © Mike Jackson 2009  

http://www.mjimagery.com
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Explore the festival
About 'Just Like Jazz'

'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.

The Just Like Jazz team
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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