Jon Lord • Lichfield Festival, 17th July 2009
Another Cathedral, another Jon Lord concert; last time it was the vast
cavernous confines of Durham, this time the smaller but beautifully ornate
Lichfield, the stage set at the far end of the Nave under the beautiful West
window. We were fortunate to find ourselves seated just three rows back with
an excellent view across to Jon’s Grand Piano and Hammond C3 placed stage
left. I’ve waited a long time to see one of Jon’s solo shows, the Durham
Concerto offering little of Jon the performer, mostly Jon the composer, I was
not to be disappointed.
I took no notes at the time so cannot give a detailed set list however the first
half began with one movement from Jon’s recently composed piece in memory of
his dear friend the late John Mortimer featuring the flutist of the night
(Bruce Martin I believe, also playing the piccolo which Jon told us Bruce
refers to as the Shrieking Twig). Various pieces followed not least being an
excellent performance of De Profundis from Beyond the Notes. It wasn’t just
his recent solo material that filled the programme, we also got a number of
pieces from Sarabande beginning with the title track itself played with
considerable energy, a joy to listen to. Back in the 70’s I recall I could
share my enthusiasm for Purple albums with my fellow heavy rock fans at school
but in my love of the compelling rhythms Sarabande I was pretty much on my own.
Now all these years later I could hardly believe I was watching a live
performance of these tracks. The first half ended with a fantastically
energetic performance of The Telemann Experiment, one of my favourites from
Beyond the Notes. It was fascinating to watch as Jon, by facial expressions
and gestures, counted in the other performers during this complex piece, they
all did a fantastic job of what must be a challenging piece to play with only
limited opportunity for practice. The Badke Quartet and the other performers
certainly had their work cut out tonight with Jon’s pieces demanding everything
from beautifully delicate playing to the furiously energetic, often within a
single piece. However they really seemed to enjoy their task with many
exchanged smiles and moving to the music when not actually playing.
Jon stuck with the piano almost exclusively in the first half, excepting one
single long note from the Hammond used to end one piece. However things were
different during the second half. Dave Brubeck’s Unsquare Dance gave Jon a
chance to let rip a little. Steve Balsamo and Kasia Łaska took on the vocal
duties of the evening. Steve did an excellent job with Pictured Within and
Kasia not only coped admirably with Sam Brown’s vocal parts, singing with great
feeling, but also the Sam penned The Sun Will Shine Again written for and sung
by Frida originally.
There was a second piece played not yet recorded officially (to my knowledge)
tonight: Air On a Blues String. Jon explained that this piece was inspired by
a comment by Durham Concerto soloist the cellist Matthew Barley when Jon heard
him encouraging young classical performers to embrace improvisation and other
genres of music as part of their experience to improve their classical
playing.
Jon didn’t just borrow from Dave Brubeck, he surprised me by introducing a piece
as written by his old friends David Coverdale and Ritchie Blackmore before
launching into a performance of Soldier of Fortune. Steve Balsamo might not
have the Coverdale deep growl, yet he and Kasia still did a good job with a
lovely arrangement by Jon.
We had other pieces from Sarabande including Bourée and Gigue, these with their
dance base often set feet tapping all around us. The audience, made up by the
look of it mostly of general festival goers rather than Jon fans, often seemed
to have little idea of who Jon was, certainly judging by comments heard around
us beforehand. However they seemed thoroughly won over by the end, we overheard
one lady say as she left “what a really lovely man”!
Overall this was a fantastic evening, we may think of Jon mostly as organist but
the delicacy and feel he displayed at the piano keyboard just goes to show what
an excellent pianist he was too. Watching his facial expressions was a treat,
even mouthing along to the words of songs on occasion. His choice of pieces
for the evening’s programme is hard to fault, mixing the deeply moving with the
joyously energetic to make a thoroughly enjoyable show. With a team of
accompanists having such a short time to prepare it’s no surprise that Jon
reads sheet music throughout sticking to the arrangements, no freedom here for
long wandering periods of improvisation expecting the band to just follow
along. Despite which Jon manages short breaks on both piano and keyboard. I
marvelled at how difficult it must be to pull off a show like this with ad hoc
groups of musicians yet it is a testament to their skill, professionalism and
Jon’s encouragement that I couldn’t spot a flaw in their performance.
Jon saved us something special for the final piece, introduced as something
written in 1969, when he was apparently just 11 years old (?!). Walking over
to the Hammond he sent shivers, not for the first time that evening, up my
spine by tapping out the opening notes of Child in Time. I didn’t think I’d
ever have the opportunity to see Jon play this one again but what a treat.
Tearing into the Hammond at times, this was no token run through. It was
slightly strange to see such a highly animated Jon Lord from behind, the
Hammond facing the band rather than us! The two vocalists did a fine job with
Steve singing and Kasia helping out where Ian would scream. What a treat to
end with, no surprise that almost the entire audience where up on their feet to
applaud at the end.
I guess I am not unusual among Purple fans in having a partner who doesn’t quite
share my depth of enthusiasm for Deep Purple itself but in Jon’s post-Purple output
Glynis is equally enthusiastic so it was a pleasure but no surprise to hear her
echo my feelings at the end by saying this was without doubt one of the very
best concert experiences she’d ever had. This was a show with no lows, no “I
wish they hadn’t done that”, just one high after another.
Thank you Jon!"
review: Peter Judd |