A couple more shows to add.
Nels Cline Singers with Jeff Gauthier's Goatette at Yoshi's in Oakland. First was the Goatette with Nels on guitar, Alex Cline on drums, Gauthier on electric violin and bass and keyboards by other guys. Not bad, not remarkable in any real way and electric violin is mostly annoying. Nels was cool and Alex was pretty boring. Then Nels played with his trio the Singers, with a different drummer and bass player. All three are great musicians but it was a little out there and too avant rock jazz. Most "songs" were untitled new pieces and for the most part I was disappointed. JP felt deceived because I told him I thought that it would be relatively song-based jazz not just noise. More noise than not, as it turned out.
Last night, however, we saw the incredible Branford Marsalis Quartet at the Palace of Fine Arts in SF. We sat in the front row, on the drummer side because I love Jeff Tain Watts. First thing I noticed from the program was that Tain Watts was not playing drums. What?! The new album Metamorphosen is promoted as being recorded around the tenth anniversary of this quartet's existence without any personnel changes which is indeed rare longevity in jazz combos. Kinda reminds me of the interview from The Kids Are Alright where the interviewer points out that they had been together for a decade and had not yet decayed, and then Keith Moon gets up and says "I'm leaving!"... I don't know why Tain wasn't there, but they played a couple of his compositions and he got lots of applause every time.
When the band came out, the drummer looked 12. Turns out he was 17. But damn, can this kid play. He is Justin Faulkner and he is known as a phenom apparently. YouTube is full of his solos and songs from even younger years. This kid kills. And not just fiery solos and showing off. He's got skills and the tools of a very accomplished player. JP pointed out that it would have really sucked to be sitting up front on the drummer side if he were terrible, but instead it was a thrill to watch the Keith Moon of jazz fly.
They played two solid hours like they it was a walk in the park. Branford sounded fantastic on tenor and soprana sax and his tone is just amazing. Eric Revis is an amazing bass player and he was really in great form. Joey Calderazzo is always solid on the piano and JP suggested he was channeling Monk during Rhythm-A-Ning. The kid on drums integrated very well with the long-time members, and Branford gave all of them lots of room. Do not miss this quartet if you like jazz at all.