Time, intonation, concentration and control were perfect on every tune. Anderson was
Ernestine Anderson: eighty going on thirty-five.
Thursday, October 16: Jovino Santos Neto preceded his quinteto's concert with a demonstration-lecture tracing the development of Brazilian music. It amounted to a tour through significant parts of the history of Portugal and Brazil with samples of African and Caribbean influences on the music of his native land. If you have a chance to catch the educational aspect of this dynamic man's performance, I urge you not to miss it. That
The quinteto includes bassist Chuck Deardorf, drummer Mark Ivester, percussionsist Jeff Busch and Bay Area saxophonist and clarinetist Harvey Wainapel (pronounced WINE-apple). Santos Neto set up each choro, baio, forr or xote with an explanation of the form and rhythm. His Amoreira," dedicated to percussion guru Airto Moreira, was a highlight. Wainapel, whom I had somehow managed to miss until this night, was a revelation, inventive on all of his instruments, immersed in the Brazilian tradition, fully a complement to Santos Neto's conception of adventurous modern music.
Friday, October 17: Jerry Gonzalez and the Fort Apache Band threw the audience into momentary shock with the opening blasts of Thelonious Monk's Little Rootie Tootie." Powered by the overamplified bass of young Luques Curtis and the drumming of Steve Berrios, who had no choice but to compensate, the band was too loud for the hall, by half. The Seasons' exquisite natural acoustics were rendered meaningless by volume suitable for a
Gonzalez shone on congas, trumpet and fluegelhorn. His impassioned fluegel solo on In a Sentimental Mood" was a memorable moment of this memorable festival. Curtis soloed with an acute sense of the harmonic possibilities in Obsesin," the Pedro Flores Puerto Rican classic. Pianist Fred Hoadley came next with a solo that was hypnotically, and effectively, repetitive. Hoadley rushed across the mountains from Seattle at the last minute to substitute for Larry Willis, who cancelled following the death of a relative. Gonzalez wrapped up the set with Monk's Evidence," taken at a fast clip and -- what else? -- top volume. The evening ended with ears ringing and faces smiling.
Saturday, October 18: Every time I hear the Tierney Sutton Band, they have developed more bandness. After more than a decade, seven CDs and hundreds of gigs together, their musicality and shared goals have melded them into the antithesis of chick singer with rhythm section. It's a thinking man's, and woman's, band that knows how to have, and show an audience, a good time. Sutton opened with Irving Berlin's What'll I Do?" at a drastically slow tempo in keeping with the heart-breaking nature of the song. In the care of a less cohesive group, the time might have puddled. It's All Right With Me" was at the other end of the metronome and full of tricky time changes, which Sutton negotiated flawlessly.
Following a masterly solo by pianist Christian Jacob on Between the Devil and the Deep
Sutton sang sixteen songs from her repertoire of more than one hundred arrangements written jointly by her and the band. Toward the end, she called out the Toppenish High School chorus, which had opened the evening with a couple of songs. Together, the rhythm section and the kids did Ja Da" while Sutton stood by smiling. The chorus ended up swinging a little, and Sutton smiled more broadly. As they filed out, she returned to the stage for a blistering I Get a Kick Out of You" and a langorous encore, You Are My Sunshine." She announced that the band's eighth CD will be out in the spring. It will include What'll I Do?" I'm looking forward to hearing that again.
It is a rare jazz festival that can run more than a week without a few flaws -- a performance dud or two. Somehow, even the Fort Apache amplification sow's ear turned into a silk purse. This festival worked from beginning to end, on stage and in the schools. That's quite an achievement for an arts organization in a town of 90,000 in the hinterlands of apple and wine country.






