Page 428 - Guildhall Coverage Book 2020-21
P. 428

While listening through the album, the big surprise for this particular listener was Gillam’s
               cover of James Blake’s Retrograde, in an arrangement by Benjamin Rimmer. The surprise
               in this case was the vocal qualities of the instrument. “I think it’s an underrated element of
               the saxophone, it’s almost insane the vocal quality that it has! The way a sound is produced
               is quite akin to how you would sing, and quite similar to how you would produce the sound
               if you were a singer, and the things you would think about where the sound is being made
               are similar through your vocal chords. Whatever you put through the saxophone is a direct
               representation of how sound comes out. If you’re shouting or whispering, it would be totally
               different. You get that to some extent on a piano, but it is so connected to our bodies and the
               physicality of it is just like singing. When I was recording Retrograde it was about looking at
               how James Blake had got that sound, and replicating some of it on the saxophone.”


               Jess has shown through her concerts how adaptable the saxophone can be, showing in an
               hour-long recital at Wigmore Hall how composers from the last 400 years can find their
               music in a new dimension. “It is unbelievably versatile, and I have been saying for a while
               how it’s like a chameleon of instruments. I was reading the famous David Bowie quote
               where he says people describe him as a chameleon but he’s not a chameleon of styles,
               because a chameleon puts a lot of effort into changing its colour! It’s the same with the
               saxophone, you don’t really have to change that much. Of course there is a whole different
               set of equipment and techniques to play jazz and classical, and you can learn to do it very
               well, but on a very basic level you don’t need to change anything to be able to play baroque
               music or Motown or classical, whatever it might be. It has the versatility of sitting right in
               that hole.”

               She may be two albums in, but Jess is still at a very early point in her career – which is
               something of a double-edged sword. “It’s amazing but also terrifying!” she exclaims. “There
               is so much to explore with the instruments. The way we consume music now means that
               people have such eclectic tastes, because you can listen to whatever you like whenever you
               like on a streaming platform, and you don’t have to sit down and listen to a whole album
               before getting up and changing the gramophone. It’s a lot easier listening to music now, so
               the styles we like and are listening to I find are much more based on mood and what we
               feed our emotions, to inspire or to concentrate. I think people are using music in quite a
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