Unser Baby wird 80: Sommerfest 2023
With increased lifespans and improvements in health, 80 is the new 40 for some people. That was no more evident than in Dresden in late September when German percussionist Günter “Baby” Sommer celebrated his 80th birthday with three days of concerts at the city’s Semper Zwei concert hall and basement Jazzclub Tonne. Playing with the vigor and enthusiasm of a drummer half his age or less, Sommer didn’t overload the celebrations with showy percussion displays. Instead, and as he has in the past during a career that stretches back to the 1960s, he ceded most of the sets to group collaborations. Cementing his acceptance of constant change, these collaborations were not only with veteran contemporaries, but also featured newer playing partners.
One of the most spectacular displays of this climaxed opening night at Semper Zwei, the modern second stage of the city’s famous Neo-Classical opera house, when Sommer led his 12-piece Brother & Sisterhood of Breath. Musicians involved were from Germany, Austria, Romania and Scotland, and included trumpeters Niklaus Neuser and Martin Klingeberg; trombonists Gerhard Gschlößle and Micha Winkler, and alto saxophonists Silke Eberhard, Anna Kaluza and Raymond MacDonald. Matthias Schubert played tenor saxophone, Gebhard Ullmann tenor saxophone and bass clarinet with pianist Uli Gumpert; bassist Robert Lucaciu, and Sommer.
Working off a double bass pulse that vibrated with multiple string pops and flat-fingered piano pumps, the group moved through themes that touched on South African kwela, Mingus-like gospel-blues shouts, Latin-affiliated asides and horn-heavy swinging vamps. Themes were propelled by Sommer’s brisk moves from even pacing, ecstatic tone clipping and hammered plops as he switched among brushes, mallets and sticks. As tunes evolved, he also added frame drum pumps, metal bowl pings and shook a net filled with bells and chimes. Until the final number, during which each band member slapped, ratcheted or blew into Sommer-distributed percussion implements, solos were liberally passed around on the players’ usual instruments.
Adding to the excitement of the moments, jousts among the reed and brass players were featured, with Gschlößl’s cup- muted slurs contrasted with Winkler’s balanced slides. Neuser’s clear brassiness complemented Klingeberg’s half-valve work and scat singing, while Schubert and Ullmann came across as a Teutonic Johnny Griffin and Eddie Lockjaw Davis with Bluesy tenor saxophone honks. Ulmann’s bass clarinet tongue slaps plus the alto saxophonists’ dissonant whines and multiphonic yelps underlined the unconventional unfolding of some tunes. Additionally MacDonald, who also leads the Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra, did double duty on one extended piece, moving in front of the players’ horizontal line-up and used conduction hand signals and even a leap into the air to emphasize that exposition’s turns and accents. This left Sommer free to time-keep. His march-like passages subtly joined Gumpert’s emphasized Blues chording for the final climax.
A similar group exhibition took place on the elevated stage of the spacious and subterranean Jazzclub Tonne during the festival’s concluding set, when Sommer was joined by what was billed as an All Star band with Germans Till Brönner (trumpet), Nils Wogram (trombone), Daniel Erdmann (tenor saxophone) and Romanian-German bassist Lucaciu. Acclaimed as a best-selling trumpeter/vocalist, Brönner was the biggest surprise, ostensibly putting aside his commercial direction to fire off bright tremolo blasts or subtle flutters in solos, or to fit in with the other horn players during unison expositions.
Adapting to pseudo-Dixieland group improvising, the three extended their harmonies so that the saxophonist’s sliding doits and hard-toned honks plus the trombonist’s mellow, hand-muted sighs or bright pecks joined trumpet portamento for layered expositions. Sometimes there were interludes of unaccompanied horn work. However, these brief forays were brought back into linear affiliations with loping cadences from the drummer’s subtle brush work and the bassist’s positioned triple stopping. Mellow promenades were more prominent than staccato jabs, with the sometimes exploratory sonic forays expressed by the Brother & Sisterhood of Breath put aside for a more relaxed interface. Still the high level of skill exhibited by all concerned made this showcase anything but a conventional performance.
Another group that moved past conventional tropes as a FreeBop combo was Günter Baby Sommer & die Brüder Lucaciu featured the previous night at the Semper Zwei. With Robert Lucaciu on bass again, he and Sommer were joined by his siblings, alto saxophonist Antonio Lucaciu and pianist Simon Lucaciu. Having toured and recorded in this formation, the brothers were ready to pump out high-octave sounds as soon as the drummer signalled the beginning by waving his red sweat towel and then slapping the s...