To a late evening jazz concert in the crypt of St John’s Smith Square. The Harry Baker Trio. A young bunch. We’d not seen or heard of them before, but that’s our problem, not theirs.
Here’s the SJSS stub for the event. If SJSS ever mess up their stubbing or something, click here instead.
A small, select audience. A few younger people, plus one or two other tables of seasoned folk like ourselves.
Here’s a short video of the three of them playing one of Harry Baker’s own moody compositions, which we thought were rather good:
But most of the evening comprised them playing standards, the most effective of which were the livelier ones: St Thomas by Sonny Rollins, Empty Pockets by Herbie Hancock, something less well-known by Thelonious Monk and Tempus Fugit by Bud Powell.
These three know what they are doing and play without pretention and with evident joy.
We very much enjoyed our evening. Good luck to them.
How incredibly refreshing and reassuring to see such young kids playing jazz of this quality. I remember seeing Stanley Turrentine in 1999at the Jazz Cafe (in Camden Town) shortly before he passed away, and that he had to use an emergency stand-in drummer (he might even have been conscripted from the audience – I can’t exactly recall), who turned out to be a 16-year old boy. His surname was Fagin or Fagan (?), and he was excellent too. Good to know that the future of jazz is in such safe hands.