Showing posts with label luminato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luminato. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Recording: Afrocubism

Artist: Afrocubism

Song: Djelimady Rumba

Recorded at David Pecaut Square (Luminato Festival), June 12, 2012.

Afrocubism - Djelimady Rumba

Full review to follow. As for the show: given the musicians involved here, it was tough to go in expecting anything other than excellence — which is probably an unrealistic standard. The band still managed a good dose of transcendent moments, and this was a really fabulous time. As for the recording: it is what it is — marred somewhat by wind noise and the enthusiasms of the clapping, cheering crowd around me. In time, I'll see if I can tease anything more out of this recording, but for now, this will do as a souvenir.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Recording: Abyssinian Roots

Artist: Abyssinian Roots feat. Henok Abebe

Song: Cheferaw Dera

Recorded at David Pecaut Square (Luminato Festival), June 10, 2012.

Abyssinian Roots feat. Henok Abebe - Cheferaw Dera

Full review to follow. Since making their debut back in February, this local all-star collective sounds a bit more like a band than a revue. Strong grooves for a scorching hot day.

Recording: Debo Band

Artist: Debo Band

Song: Belomi Benna

Recorded at David Pecaut Square (Luminato Festival), June 10, 2012.

Debo Band - Belomi Benna

Full review to follow. A fine introduction to Boston's top Ethio-groove band, who were reverent to the classics while asserting their own identity with a lineup that included accordion, tuba and two fiddles. Their debut full-length is coming out next month via Sub Pop's Next Ambiance imprint, so we can hope they'll make their way up here again soon.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Recording: Bassekou Kouyate and Ngoni Ba

Artist: Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba

Song: Ngoni Fola

Recorded at Luminato (Queen's Park), June 12, 2010.

Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba - Ngoni Fola

My notes for this set can be found here.

Recording: Béla Fleck

Artist: Béla Fleck

Song: unknown [solo banjo]*

Recorded at Luminato (Queen's Park), June 12, 2010.

Béla Fleck - unknown

My notes for this set can be found here.

* Does anyone know the title to this one? Please leave a comment!

Recording: Tony Allen

Artist: Tony Allen

Song: unknown*

Recorded at Luminato (Queen's Park), June 12, 2010.

Tony Allen - unknown

My notes for this set can be found here.

* Does anyone know the title to this one? Please leave a comment!

Festival: An African Prom

An African Prom (feat. Béla Fleck and The Africa Project featuring Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba / Tony Allen)

Queen's Park (Luminato Festival). Saturday, June 12, 2010.

The time gap between the afternoon and evening programmes was theoretically shrunk by the rain-induced late starting time for the afternoon acts. Doing what they could to keep things on schedule, the organizers scotched an appearance by local afrobeat-funksters Mr. Something Something. There were still behind-the-scenes problems a-plenty, though, as the soundcheck for the later acts stretched out to marathon lengths. That delay, added to incomprehensibly cold unseasonable weather on an entirely grey evening, meant for a bit of a dead zone between things. Luckily, though, I was joined by H., who wanted to see something both dance-worthy and not-indie-rock-ish. So the company filled in the time nicely, the disheartening cold tempered by promises of the banjo yet to come.

Once we eventually made our way over to the stage, there was still a lot of distressed sound-checking and gear-wrangling going on as the crowd began to get a bit eager for things to get going. As with the afternoon, the weather presumably cut into what would have been a more robust turnout, but the net effect was a pleasantly full-but-uncrowded area in front of the stage with a little bit of elbow room intact. After a "support the arts" talking-to from a city councillor, the music finally got underway with a wah-wah guitar, that beat, a fanfare of horns and then a mess of rhythm guitars. Ah.

Tony Allen had an eight-piece band behind him. Or beside him, as the case would be — he was perched over stage right. Not up front like most "name" performers, but not stashed at the back like most drummers, either. Just like his drumming, the seventy-year-old Nigerian master (most famed for his pioneering work with Fela's Africa 70) was a presence, but an unforced one. Allen's expression was semi-inscrutable throughout — he looked mildly grumpy at the late start time and compressed set length, but never griped. Didn't say much, either, besides noting that with so little time, he wasn't going to spend much of it talking.

The set led off with "Elewon po", the closer from his recent Secret Agent album. With Fela-esque political lyrics ("Too many prisoners / Too many prisoners / Too many, far too many") this had the feel of classic afrobeat and a helluva funky groove. Allen sang some deadpan lead vocals, but ceded most of the singing to the rest of his ensemble. He was certainly something to watch, in a "how does he do it?" sense. His drumming style is so economical, relaxed and unhurried and his gestures completely unforced. So much so that you might not pick up on how good it is.

Despite the delays, the band was never happy with the sound on stage during the set. Fortunately, they were in top form regardless and it all sounded pretty good in the crowd, and it was, more or less, nonstop dancing fun. There was a delicate mix of a full pot not quite simmering over, where suddenly keyboards would bubble up to the forefront, then the horns, boosting the whole thing up but without upsetting the unified groove. I couldn't pick out too many of the songs, but that seems a bit besides the point. I did dig the punchy "Ijo", with lead vox by Orobiyi Adunni, who wrote the lyrics as well.

All told, with the stage manager signalling for the band to wrap things up we got just under fifty minutes of music, but there wasn't a second wasted. More would have been welcome, but it might also have been exhausting — suffice it to say after this set I was not feeling cold any more. This was apparently Allen's first time in T.O. as a leader and a return trip would certainly be welcomed.

Listen to a track from this set here.

There was a quicker turnover after that, but by now it was past ten, and I was feeling antsy as Béla Fleck took the stage, worried about that eleven o'clock curfew that tends to stop T.O. outdoor events dead in their tracks. Fleck, widely considered to be one of the world's most proficient banjo players and known for his work with his group The Flecktones, started off playing solo. Seated on a stool, he unspooled a simple tune that quickly got dexterously complicated.

Everything he played in his solo set was sheer virtuoso stuff, including one track that sped up to a dizzyingly unimaginable pace, like a clockwork toy amped up nearly to the point of breaking a spring, but knowing what was yet to come I must admit after the first couple songs I was looking at my watch and worrying about how everything was going to get fit in before the curfew. Perhaps most interesting was when Fleck blew past the inherent bluegrassiness of his métier to play a song that he learned on one of his trips to Africa, where he'd ventured to learn about the origins of his instrument, as documented in the film Throw Down Your Heart.

Listen to one of Fleck's solo selections here.

After four tunes, Fleck gave way to Malian master Bassekou Kouyate — as much of a virtuoso of the ngoni as Fleck is of the banjo — who took the stage playing solo, as if returning tribute to Fleck. Meanwhile the members of his band Ngoni Ba took the stage and quickly kicked into a full-fledged groove. There were some sound problems at the outset, and once again, the bandmembers weren't entirely happy with the monitors, but this was another fabulous set.

The band was powered by four ngonis (including a large ngoni bass) plus percussion and the vocals of his wife, Ami Sacko. The music was powered by the interweaving ngoni lines, with runs of notes whirling out at blinding speed. While introducing "Ngoni Fola", Kouyate — who radiated a sort of serene beneficence throughout — was delighted to learn he could get away with speaking to the crowd in French1. The song turned out to be an eleven-minute tour de force, about the same length as the following barnburner, which included a chance for each of the players to step forward and solo as well as for some showy co-ordinated dance moves. And, in case it hadn't been mentioned, it was all as groovy as heck.

Béla Fleck then returned, adding one more set of strings to the interlocking lines weaving around each other on stage. The American banjo meshed well with its older cousins, Fleck watching the ngonis carefully and generally playing as another part of the ensemble until called upon to solo. Cue another storming number before the band brought it down for an ancient griot number, the mournful song giving everyone a chance to catch their breath. At first, the slower pace felt like a bit of a deflation after the previous cookers, but it turned out to be as engaging as the rest of the set with Sacko's showstopping vocals over the stately ngoni line. After introducing the band, the set then closed out with "Musow (For Our Women)", wrapping up at 11:30, well past curfew, but so very worth it. Rather a fabulous show, weather notwithstanding, so kudos to Luminato for putting a world-class concert like this for free.

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 Besides the large contingent of French speakers from Mali and neighbouring countries in attendance, Torontonians tend to play along with a sort of noblesse oblige when visitors act as if this is truly a bilingual country.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Festival: Rock the Casbah

Rock the Casbah (feat Rachid Taha / Karim Saada / Maryem Tollar Ensemble)

Queen's Park (Luminato Festival). Saturday, June 12, 2010.

Say what you will about Luminato1 they have put on some worthwhile free music shows every year. And here, with the rumble of the subway underfoot by a stage set up against a closed-off Wellesley Street, there were some promising names indeed. It was a grey, rainy day, dark and overcast throughout. That pushed the schedule back, and I ended up seeing more of the undercard than I was expecting, to mixed results.

Based on what I had read, I wasn't in a rush to catch the Maryem Tollar Ensemble, an Arabic Pop project that is an adaptation from the band's previous incarnation as Mernie! I'm not familiar with that grouping, but perhaps the loss of that exclamation point underlines a groping for increased seriousness. As it turned out, there was too much Adult Contemporary refinement on display here for the music to do much for me. Tollar is talented singer, no doubt, and the on-stage dancers livened things up some, but the extended instrumental breakdowns (such as during "Issalam") verged on the limpid — a bit more smooth than I'm into, bordering on fusion-y muzak. Not at all unpleasant, but not particularly exciting.

Continuing the Northern African theme was Karim Saada, Algerian-born but now Montréal-based, making his Toronto debut. Playing banjo, mandolin and guitar — and proving to be a nimble picker on all — Saada had five-piece band behind him. This set also had a faint whiff of too-smooth as well, but his "pop" also had a melancholy undercurrent of chanson, which kept things more engaging. Plus, there was a hint of North African drone in there, too — I think "chaabi" is the word I'm looking for here, genre-wise — and that made the forty-five minute set reasonably interesting.

That would be it for smoothness on the afternoon, though, with the headliner as smooth as an unshaven cheek.

Who said there's no more rock stars? Surely no one informed Rachid Taha, who fits the bill to a tee. Algerian-born and Paris-based, Taha plays le stadium rock, with all of the reach-the-bleachers expansiveness that the term implies. But that doesn't discount the fact he presents it with his unique version of raï-influenced global groove and punk attitude. Taha himself was goofy fun on stage, rumpled and louche, full of mugging, obscene gestures2 and slouchy swagger. Revelling in his role as shit-disturber, he greeted the crowd with a jovial "hello Chicago! I mean... Toronto!" — substituting different cities after almost every song.

The set started slowly, the sounds depending heavily on the two synth players3 before amping up into the more rockin' "Shuf", which was pleasingly groovy. And then, all kinds of musical gestures thrown into the mix, including a Bo Diddley beat on one song. A string of hits were followed by a couple tracks from his most recent, last year's Bonjour, including "Je T'aime Mon Amour" and the title track. In one of those signs of being too cool to care that something is uncool, he namechecked Kenny Rogers as an influence on "Ha Baby".

The peak of it all was probably "Bent Sahra", which was particularly awesome — something like the beat from "Live is Life", but cut with a bit of the darkness of "London Calling". And speaking of The Clash, we got, duh, "Rock el Casbah" — perhaps the song that has gained him the most attention in North America — to close things out in everyone-sing-along style.

Taha was ready for more, but was told by the stage manager that the next song was the band's last. Still, we got nearly an hour, and a totally awesome time. I'd sampled and dug some of his stuff, but it was nothing compared to the full-on rocking-ness of this. Given the cool, grey, damp weather, a lot of people stayed home, so it wasn't packed in at Queen's Park. That meant we got a pretty up-close appearance from a band that regularly plays the big festivals on the other side of the Atlantic, and the effect was totally irresistible. Top notch.


1 Y'know, official culture as bourgeois affectation, too much high-brow folderol, too much middle-brow crap, ridiculously expensive ticketed events, etc. etc.

2 In a topical aside, he found a moment between songs to lead the crowd in a chant of "Fuck B.P.!"

3 With no bass player on stage, these guys would be adding to the bottom end throughout the set.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Gig: Bell Orchestre

Bell Orchestre

Luminato Festival. Harbourfront Centre. June 13, 2009.

And all at once, it felt like summer had arrived. Maybe part of it was just making the trek down to Harbourfront, but it just felt seasonally adjusted outside. Harbourfront was pretty packed — Luminato crowds out for Cirque de Soleil and gourmet food booths lining Queen's Quay. Met up with J. & J. and we went for some fancy ice cream before winding our way over to the stage and finding ourselves some spots. Although we were there in good time, the seating area was filling up quickly, with a not-unusual Harbourfront mix of people there to see the band and people hanging out just because there's something free coming up — plus a healthy dose of people who'd came down to see Québecois circus performers and thought this might be part of the Cirque programme.

Things were running a little behind schedule, and by about ten past seven the crowd was clapping and calling for the show to start. J. & I killed time by exchanging Angel Riots jokes, and eventually a pair of Cirque performers led the VIPs onstage. Indicating that this wasn't just your usual night out at Harbourfront, the show was preceded by some speechifying from the heads of Harbourfront and Luminato and the Mayor in person, who went on to mutually admire each other. After putting a pitch in for everyone to call their councillor and get them to vote for the Queen's Quay revitalization, hizzoner introduced the band, somewhat misguidedly — to their later delight — suggesting that everyone get up and dance.

Bell Orchestre took the stage running seven deep and played for about seventy minutes. Their swelling brand of indie rock played with symphonic tools was a good fit for the venue, giving a chance to enjoy moments of both quiet ambiance and rousing crescendos. It might have helped that right as they hit the stage, my drugs kicked in,1 but I was in a good frame of mind to lean back and soak it in. The band was attentive to their arrangements, but relaxed enough to not make it feel too stiff. They took some pains to try and get the audience involved and clapping — and by the end, when the tempos picked up, even dancing.

Meanwhile, after the first number, a certain segment of the crowd grudgingly accepted that this concert wasn't going to include leotard-clad clowns leaping from trapezes and fled the joint. But the seats were quickly filled up by those more keen on the music, including a family that settled in in front of us. Dad was really into the music, and Mom had the Younger Brother on her lap, leaving Older Brother, about seven or eight, to squirm around and see me as an object of interest.

"Hi!" he shouted. I nodded.

"Hi!" and he shouted something else. I gave a vague 'can't quite hear you shrug', so he shouted it again louder. I turned my head and tapped at my ear.

"Oh," he said brightly, "you're wearing earplugs!" And in one of those brilliant bursts of kid logic, he stuck his fingers in his ears, squinted his eyes and shouted "HELLO!" at me. He was honestly confused as to why I'd want the music to be quieter, not louder, and seemed convinced I couldn't hear anything at all.

Such is part of the experience at Harbourfront, just like the party boats going past, booming their music. One big boat going by actually stopped for a few minutes, the decks filled with people standing and listening to the show. The final number was especially affecting, the strings and horns playing off each other just so, evoking a sort of etherial melancholy, well matched by the kid in front of me, who was now a little tuckered out and feeling a bit cranky and ready to leave. The band put down their instruments and left the stage to a looping ambient swirl, before being called back for one more. A hightly enjoyable show, and hopefully the first of many at Harbourfront this summer.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Postscript: in a tidy bit of synchronicity, we ambled away from Harbourfront after the show, and made our way north looking for some eats. Getting out of the subway at St. George, who should be headed into the station but hizonner himself? Small world.


1 On my way down to the Waterfront, I'd stopped in to visit A.'s cat while he's out of town for the weekend. Though I quite like the wee beastie, my allergies came on strong, and by the time I was at Harbourfront I was red-eyed and sneezey, so I popped a pill for it, which always puts a pleasant downer effect on me — "non-drowsy", my ass. Good for langourously focusing on the show at hand, but it put a real crimp in my plans to operate heavy machinery later on in the evening. There'll aways be other tractor pulls, I guess.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Gig: Daniel Lanois / The Campbell Brothers Band

The World of Slide Guitar (feat. Sonny Landreth Band with Cindy Cashdollar / The Campbell Brothers Band / Daniel Lanois)

Luminato Festival. Yonge-Dundas Square. June 7, 2009.

On J.'s suggestion, decided to head down to Dundas Square to check out Daniel Lanois. Looking up what else was on offer at the "World of Slide Guitar", thought that The Campbell Brothers might be worth checking out, do went on down a little early. For some reason, things were running an hour behind the posted schedule, so I ended up catching pretty much all of the Sonny Landreth Band with Cindy Cashdollar. Which, observed from the edge of the square, was pleasant in that bar-band rockin' kind of way.

Met up with J. & J. just as The Campbell Brothers Band were taking the stage, and we moved in for a slightly closer look. Billed as exponents of the "sacred steel" style, combining gospel songs within a bluesy musical framework, the band were certainly virtuosos. All of their selections were given extended treatments, with scorching solos aplenty, including guest appearances from the musicians that had already been on the stage. This was all slickly enjoyable, and wildly popular with the crowd. Perhaps it was just that I was feeling mildly under-caffeinated that it didn't make that much of an impact on me — but it may also have been the fact that I was kinda hoping for more sacred and less steel. The final number, with a jump-out-of-your-seat-and-testify vibe, put things closer to the mark I'd been seeking. More "rock" than "Rock of Ages" in the final analysis, but I guess that's okay too.

After that, Daniel Lanois was a shot of something else. Taking to the stage only with the accompaniment of a bassist to begin with, they settled into a lengthy improvised piece that would have sat well alongside, say, something from Kranky Records. After the feel-good populism of the previous acts, this felt really different and exciting. The piece lasted for about twenty-five minutes before Lanois moved over to the pedal steel and did a couple ambient/country pieces evoking with work with Eno on the Apollo: Atmospheres & Soundtracks album. Well-suited for the cement moonscape of Dundas Square, and as he was crouched over his pedal steel, barely visible past the crowd, it felt like the concert had collapsed into something more like an audio installation on a massive scale, and, for a brief moment, everything felt a little bit serenely altered. Very nicely done.

The second half was more conventionally "rock", and while good stuff, didn't have that same pleasantly dislocating quality, aiming more towards ragged glory. Bringing out a drummer to accompany him, Lanois started with a casual, slowly-unfolding take on "The Maker" and moved on through a few more of his own compositions. The Square, which had been pretty full at the end of the Campbell Brothers, had cleared out a fair amount by the end of Lanois' seventy-five minutes, but that probably had as much to do with a dour grey sky and bitingly cold wind as much as his sounds. I thought it was a real treat — that first half moreso, but still left a warm glow against the cold evening as we fled the square before the free country line dance lessons could begin.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Gig: "The Traveling Blues"

"The Traveling Blues" (feat. Harry Manx/Kevin Breit, Alpha Yaya Diallo Quartet, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Tri-Continental, Fiona Boyes, Mamadou Diabaté, Taj Mahal Trio)

Luminato Festival. Metro Square. Saturday, June 6, 2009.

So — the blues. Most venerated of genres yet also source of lots of dull, derivative crap. It was with less that 100% confidence that I decided to head down to Metro Square1 to check out this Luminato freebie show. Some of my apprehension also came from the fact that the two artists I wanted to see the most were scheduled for four o'clock and nine o'clock, leaving a bit of gap in between.

The square was busy but not too filled when I arrived, a small crowd on chairs in front of the stage, and people scattered around on the grass, casually taking things in. The event was impressively set up, showing how how big bucks can dwarf the usual logistical problems. The west side of the square was filled with a large double stage, so the one act could be set up and ready to go as the other finished. So it was pretty much non-stop music all day. I found a spot on the grass and settled in for the end of Harry Manx and Kevin Breit's set, catching a couple songs that seemed pleasant, including a nice take on "Summertime".

But it was the next up act that I came for. Canadian-Guinean Alpha Yaya Diallo gained some renown for his participation in African Guitar Summit project, but is talented enough to seek out in his own right. Diallo, a deft, lyrical guitar player, was backed by bass, drums and balafon. Diallo's songs tend to be in a simmering mid-tempo, leaving plenty of room for rhythmic interplay between guit and balafon and time for the hypnotic grooves to unfold themselves. The band played a half-dozen songs in his forty-five minute set — excellent stuff. The least formally "blues" thing I saw all day. Also the best. Lots of local world-music gentry out for this one — I saw John Leeson up front, no doubt getting some photos that will turn out much better than mine.2

Listen to a track from this set here.


Shuffled over to the other stage for a short solo set from Alvin Youngblood Hart, a W.C. Handy Award winner and generally well-regarded within the blues fraternity. Playing on an electric with a slightly distorted tone, his sound had a greasy, back-country feeling that brought to mind some of the Fat Possum artists. Pretty enjoyable stuff.

And then back to the other side. What I had seen originally billed as a set by Madagascar Slim — another African Guitar Summit veteran — turned out to be a three-headed collaboration known as Tri-Continental, teaming Slim up with Bill Bourne and Lester Quitzau. Neither of the last two were known to me, but they quickly demonstrated they were both excellent musicians. Looking over their c.v.'s now, it seems especially strange that Bourne's name had never crossed my path. Gifted with sonorous voice and steely eyes, he had the look of a mythic prairie hero.

The three musicians took turns on vocals and backed each other's songs, complementing each other's approaches. It had a very relaxed and loose feel as the songs stretched out and allowed the interplay of different styles to come to the fore. Most of the music was at a relaxed pace, the guitars trickling over each other like a quietly determined brook. Very nice stuff in a genteel way, and even better when it picked up — the highlight coming with Bourne's "Dance and Celebrate", with an old-timey Cajun dance feel.

Listen to a track from this set here.

The next act up was Alvin Youngblood Hart, back with his band. He launched into a high energy set of what sounded like very-well executed blues-rock. I decided it was time to go for a walk. Stretched my legs out for a spell, and came back to the square as the set was finishing off. Found a nice patch of grass to settle on and flip through my newspaper while Australian Fiona Boyes played a solo acoustic set. She was a very accomplished fingerpicker, but a less distinguished songwriter, and I didn't feel the need to stand up and move closer during her set. It was followed by a short set from kora master Mamadou Diabaté. I had actually seen Diabaté perform at Harbourfront a couple summers ago, so instead of getting in for a look, I craftily swooped in and got a sweet spot near the front of the other stage to be ready for the headliner, twisting the ends of my moustache and cackling to myself.3

Once the rest of the crowd did move over, I was curious to see how things would work themselves out between the (mostly older) crowd sitting down right up front and the (mostly younger) crowd pressing up to get close. In the end, even when the woo-yelling drunks showed up, things were mostly fine — the seated middle stayed seated, with people standing to the sides and in front. And a pretty decent crowd on hand by the time Taj Mahal took the stage. Long an advocate for "world music" even before that was a marketing niche, he started off with a "teachable moment", bringing Mamadou Diabaté over to sit in on the opening selection "Queen Bee". And after that, it was The Blues. Playing on an acoustic throughout, Taj was backed just by bass and drums, but it was a full-on, rockin' set. The 67-year-old was every inch the entertainer, full of praise for Toronto and Canada, recalling, in the late '60's, telling Canadians to cheer at his shows like their hockey team had just scored a goal. He was in good voice, switching from his gruff baritone to respond to himself in his lower, froggy register.

It was all very good fun, and worthy to see a master in action. At that, though, I found that the ninety minutes plus started to feel like a bit too much of a good thing by the end — after a baker's dozen of 12-bars, they start to blur together: the second time Taj sang about how the sun was gonna shine in his back door some day,4 I was thinking to myself, "haven't we been here already?" Still, there were no shortage of highlights, including "Fishing Blues" and "Corrina" back-to-back plus "Take a Giant Step". Taj even busted out the banjo in the tailfeather-shakin' encore, sending me from the Square feeling pretty good.


1 Motto: "Downtown's least-loved civic square." Which isn't to say that it's that lousy a space, but it just seems to be cloaked from our consciousness, generally. All things considered, it's rather nicer than, say, the ad bath of Yonge Dundas Square.

2 If you don't subscribe to Mr. Leeson's very useful e-mail list, focusing on local world music events, you should go to his site and sign yourself up.

3 Ed.'s Note: You should save this image for some occasion when you do something that's actually devious.

4 Neither of which were "Trouble in Mind" — I leave it to the blues scholars among you to work out what some of the other possibilities are.