Liszt is to piano playing what Euclid is to geometry.

Alan Walker

Big Band vs the Big White Screen

18 November 2014

The acronym BJO resonates with promise. This is true if you happen to be thinking about a Hungarian big band. But this time it’s not the Budapest Jazz Orchestra but the Brussels Jazz Orchestra that will be delighting both eye and ear on November 19.


 

The Belgian BJO celebrated its twentieth birthday last year and looked  back to what has been a rich career, during the course of which they have  welcomed guests such as Maria Schneider, Kenny Werner, Dave Liebman,  McCoy Tyner, David Linx, Maria João and Lee Konitz. Local stars who  have played with the band include Philip Catherine and Bert Joris, and  the results of these collaborations have been recorded on disc.

The Brussels Jazz Orchestra – and this is true of its Hungarian peer too  – is firmly determined to look well beyond jazz standards and traditional  arrangements from the swing era, so they regularly colour their programmes  with their own arrangements, or those created especially for them. As a  result, the specialist jazz paper DownBeat ranked them in 2004 as one of  the top eight big bands in the world. Thanks to plaudits such as these, and  not least their energetic playing style and the convincing individual  achievements of their musicians, they are regularly celebrated at festivals  and concert halls in Europe and the United States.
 


This big band steered by saxophonist and artistic director Frank Vaganée  is now turning its back on both jazz standards and the customary concert  style of performance – and not for the first time. In 2003 emerged the idea  to work with the Royal Belgian Film Archive by providing a complete  musical background for silent films. The first piece in the BJO vs The Big  White Screen series was Big Cities in the Twenties, and for three years  they had great success with their programme Piccadilly. This was only  surpassed by the triumph of their music for the 2011 multi-Oscar winning  film The Artist.
  In autumn 2014 they set off on tour with the third edition of their silent  film series, in which three films made between 1919 and 1920 get the BJO  treatment courtesy of trombone player and composer Lode Mertens: the  moving Pollyanna starring the American big draw of the time Mary Pickford.  The other two films feature Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton's rival Harold Lloyd, The Eastern Westerner and Captain Kidd's Kids – the  concert title is inspired by the two stars: The Sweetheart and the Daredevil.  The musical accompaniment to the screened film is not just about replacing  the usual honky-tonk with a more "colourful" sound; it also presents a bridge  for the today's audiences between the world of a hundred years ago and  the present. 

Words by Barbara Bércesi, originally published in Fall 2014 issue of the Liszt Academy Concert Magazine.