Advertisement
Advertisement

Kevin Figes Quartet: Changing Times

In brief:
"I’ve enjoyed the playing of saxophonist and flautist Kevin Figes on several occasions while visiting Bristol, where he is based. He’s an endlessly imaginative composer and improviser"

I’ve enjoyed the playing of saxophonist and flautist Kevin Figes on several occasions while visiting Bristol, where he is based. He’s an endlessly imaginative composer and improviser, making a great deal of absorbing music with his quartet. He has also composed for the big band Resonation, also based in the West Country, and he toured Portugal and Canada with the late pianist Keith Tippett.

This is Figes’ fourth CD as a leader, following the release of Circular Motion on Edition, and Hometime and Tables And Chairs on Pig.

Advertisement

A rippling arpeggio figure on the Prophet synthesiser – played by the excellent Jim Blomfield – ushers in the opening track Sea View, with the leader playing long lines on flute. It was inspired, says Figes, by the work of Soft Machine, the band which motivated him to graduate from playing rock to playing jazz. The same group is credited with inspiring the closing track, Toothpick, with Figes on alto and Blomfield this time on Fender Rhodes, underpinned by solid bass playing from Thad Kelly and drumming from Mark Whitlam. There’s a very fine but all too brief solo by Blomfield on this track – what an excellent player he is. It builds to a wild climax, the synthesiser underpinning the leader’s wildly spinning saxophone line.

These tracks form bookends to six more original compositions showing a wide range of inspiration: Strange Place is aimed at evoking the atmosphere of a horror film and has an effective wordless vocal line from Emily Wright. Kenny Wheeler’s writing for Norma Winstone is evoked here.

Stone Lion opens with a simple keyboard figure, and rather strange crackling in the background (like a badly worn vinyl LP, a curious effect which ends when Thad Kelly’s bass guitar leads the way to a rocky baritone sax theme and solo by Figes).

A perky solo flute line, doubled on keyboard, opens Radio Play, a composition inspired by the work of Paul Hindemith. It evolves into a very effective, spacious abstract passage with subtle percussion and interplay with the Fender Rhodes. The melodic ballad Soft Escape Bed features both Figes and Emily Wright singing the theme. Enid Dodd’s Ruler, another perky even-quaver piece with the leader on alto and a firm bass guitar line, is followed by the ballad Guiding Light, inspired by the work of Hermeto Pascoal, with a lovely line on soprano saxophone over Blomfield’s piano chords.

A very enjoyable disc, packed with engaging musical ideas.

Hear/buy Kevin Figes Quartet: Changing Times at kevinfiges.bandcamp.com/album/changing-times

Discography
Sea View; Strange Place; Stone Lion; Radio Play; Soft Escape Red; Enid Dodd’s Ruler; Guiding Light; Toothpick (44.40)
Figes (s, f); Jim Blomfield (kyb, Hammond org); Thad Kelly (b); Mark Whitlam (d); Emily Wright (v). Rockfield Studios, Monmouthshire, 29-31 October 2019.
Pig Records PIG 10

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Nicolas Meier World Group: Magnificent

A very generous three-CD set that shows the impact of the pandemic on yet another artist releasing music at the moment. Multi-talented guitarist and...
Advertisement

Still Clinging To The Wreckage 04/20

Thanks to its anchoring by Alyn Shipton, BBC Radio Three’s Jazz Record Requests has a permanency in the jazz calendar bestowed on it by...
Advertisement

Clifford Brown, trumpet titan /2

Lionel Hampton, encouraged by his formidable wife Gladys, had a reputation of being less than generous with salaries but the lure of a 1953...
Advertisement

Hidden Man – My Many Musical Lives

Hidden? Well, not anymore, if he ever was. He has been well known in music and entertainment circles for many years for his composing,...
Advertisement

Green Book

Fifty-six years after LBJ officially ended racial discrimination in the USA with the pen-stroke that signed the Civil Rights Act, the years immediately preceding...
Advertisement

JJ 02/90: Wynton Marsalis – The Majesty Of The Blues

With this, Wynton Marsalis has come up with his most interest­ing album thus far. That is not to say that it is entirely flawless,...
"I’ve enjoyed the playing of saxophonist and flautist Kevin Figes on several occasions while visiting Bristol, where he is based. He’s an endlessly imaginative composer and improviser"Kevin Figes Quartet: Changing Times