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Review: Klezmer at Jazz Café

What do you get when you combine the celebrated classical clarinettist Emma Johnson with Klezfest?

August 17, 2009 14:13
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ByLawrence Joffe, Lawrence Joffe

3 min read

What do you get when you combine the celebrated classical clarinettist Emma Johnson with the serried ranks of Klezfest Jewish music practitioners? Air on a K-String might be one answer. Yet the truth, as revealed at the Jazz Café last Wednesday night, was considerably more dynamic, surprising and downright funky.

London-born Johnson was young musician of the year in 1984; as a soloist she has entranced audiences on virtually every continent, and she has recorded some 20 discs, of which her recent “Mozart Album” rode high on the classical music charts for several weeks. So how would she cope with the krechts (sobs) and syncopations of klezmer? Like a seasoned veteran, it proved. With her instrument’s rich chalumeau register and her brilliant sense of timing and vocal nuance, it sounded like she was born playing klezmer.

Emma hit the stage when the atmosphere was already electric, and proceeded to launch into a friendly cadenza duel with American klezmer trumpet maestro, Frank London, that had the audience on their feet.

London himself provided the Balkan-tinged punch that drove up to twenty enthusiastic fiddlers, accordionists and tootlers on a packed stage. A leading light in the klezmer revival and kingpin of the legendary Klezmatics, he also revealed a penchant for that other element of the klezmer universe – the badchan, or jester/ compere.