Category Archives: Music

General Music information and posts

Kokomo at Tauranga Jazz Festival 2012 review

Glad to be performing again after a couple of disjointed years, this famous local band delivered a good mix of new songs from their latest CD, and classic Kokomo crowd pleasers like Plastic Jesus.  As always great musical skills and tight arrangements from Derek, Mike, Nigel, Phil, Sonya and Grant. Great to see you again Kokomo and the new album went home with us – well worth the twenty bucks!.

The Hispanics at Tauranga Jazz Festival 2012 review

Sadly due to clashes with other bands I also wanted to catch, I only saw a couple of numbers by this talented and highly energetic band from Auckland.  I think they will probably rate as “the best Tauranga Jazz festival band that I didn’t see enough of”.

What I did see was great, high energy funk and soul crossover of much loved classics including a sort of souls funk, reggae version of the Beatles Come Together.

It all sounded good from this 9 piece band with real attitude. I just wish I had been able to catch more of them.  Such is the nature of festivals, too much to see in too many places.  Happily spoiled for choice though!

Malcolm McNeil at Tauranga Jazz Festival 2012 review

With a guitar and a bass (Nigel Masters from Kokomo), this didn’t seem like the tightest performance, but hey that’s Jazz, and maybe they haven’t played together much.  His voice faltered at times and some of the improv seemed out of synch but we can live with that.  Malcolm has been in this business a long time, is highly talented and has a large repertoire so was still very pleasant to watch,  Some excellent scatting and generally high musical standard to keep everyone happy

Adam Page at Tauranga Jazz Festival 2012 review

What can you say when you see someone this musically talented.  Adam plays everything from a U-bass (tenor sized bass ukukele), to flute, great Jazz Sax (his instrument of choice), to two PVC pipes that made a key changing Digeridoo, kalimba (african thumb piano), indian flute, keyboard and more, plus beat box vocals and Tuvan throat singing.  This totally improvised performance using looping pedals and raw talent had the audience spellbound from the onset.  Adam also played his beard (yes, his beard) in a highly musical and Muppet like song. Great entertainment! His incredible musical skill, including the ability to make up sequences on the fly using names of audience members or anything else, combined with his hugely engaging character made this one of the best musical performances I have seen anywhere. One of those special performers and performances which stand way out above others!!

Adam also ran interesting, informative and entertaining workshops at the Jazz Village

Mike Garner Trio Review Tauranga Jazz Festival 2012

Actually a foursome this time with special guest Paul Garner here on holiday from London.

Mike has been one of New Zealand best blues exponents for years and continues to excel. Their good strong groove and tight performance was only enhanced by the sensational guitar skills of Paul. A great set with plenty of great originals and standards to keep the audience enthralled.

Crosby, Stills and Nash, Auckland 2012, Review

Waitakere Stadium, Saturday March 24 2012

Reviewed by Graham Reid

One thing you can say for Crosby, Stills and Nash, they might not come here often – but when they do turn up on the stage with alarming punctuality. The previous time they played the Trusts Stadium I arrived at the very early unrock’n'roll time of 8.20 to find them three songs in.

This time I took no chances and by my watch they took to this stage eight minutes short of 8pm.

I guess they know their audience doesn’t want to hang around and get impatient.

And, they also know what that audience wants to hear. But although they included all the right crowd-pleasers (Southern Cross, Wooden Ships, Marrakech Express, Deja-Vu, Our House etc) CS&N also delivered a performance full of pleasant surprises.

Among the many unexpected delights was an amusingly ragged and heart-in-mouth inclusion of Suite: Judy Blue Eyes which Crosby said they hadn’t played for about 20 years (True.)

It was certainly rough around the edges and here — as in many of their old classics – the harmonies are a little less bright and seamless than they once were. (Stills’ voice weak and often wavering). But the enjoyment they took in it (Stills on guitar especially as Crosby beamed away) was infectious and pulled a standing ovation.

Even more surprising came in the encore between Love the One Your With and Teach Your Children Well. Stills found his voice on For What It’s Worth by his pre-CS&N band Buffalo Springfield and the room rocked once more.

And backed by a cracking five-piece band (which included Crosby’s son James Raymond on keyboards, and that’s a story in itself) they certainly didn’t stint on the firepower when required, especially Stills who pulled out fierce sharp solos all night. You’d love him to come back with a bar band and really let loose.

And throughout the set – Crosby noting they could just play all their old hits – they included new material including longtime sailor Crosby’s Radio about rescue at sea but with a more universal meaning. There was also a tetchy Almost Gone written by Graham Nash and Raymond about the imprisonment of Bradley Manning for allegedly passing secret memos to Wikileaks.

And Nash’s country-flavoured In Your Name (about killing in the name of your God) sounded like a weary update of his old and angry Military Madness.

But of course it was the old songs which people responded instantly too – and Crosby (who often looked like he was pacing himself) unleashed exceptional vocal power on Almost Cut My Hair.

His “weird shit” on Guinnevere was much appreciated in the acoustic set which opened the second half. And there was a charmingly off-kilter version of Dylan’s Girl from the North Country with Stills taking wobbly lead vocals.

Crosby, Stills and Nash made a point of saying that this was the opening night of a world tour, but it never sounded like we were getting an open rehearsal. They were (mostly) on top of their game and you’d have to think that a few shows in this will become even more powerful.

You’d also observe that all these years on and against the odds – drugs, internal conflict, obesity and so on – that they could have coasted through this night just pulling out reasonable facsimiles of great days long gone.

But with the new songs, the humour, the flinty politics from Nash and Crosby, and Stills’ guitar playing this was clearly an outfit that isn’t going to go gently into that goodnight.

Graham Reid is a long established Auckland music writer and award winning journalist who hosts his own music, arts and travel website: www.elsewhere.co.nz