Pickvibe
A fascinating and slightly nostalgic journey into the past - with music that looks to the future. Even if this sentence seems contradictory, this is how I would like to present this concert. Japanese Satoko Fujii is a pianist, composer and one of the most creative and original figures in jazz today. And we feel nostalgic, because it was her performance in 2002 that launched the first Vilnius Mama Jazz festival.
It is not wrong to say that for the curious Vilnius jazz audience, meeting this musician was love at first sight - it was a start worthy of a festival history. This is hardly surprising - music lovers interested in more interesting sounds cannot remain indifferent to Satoko's inclination, skill and free musical thinking.
She is also the leader of five orchestras playing in the US, Germany and Japan. One of the world's leading composers for large jazz ensembles. This is all about Satoko Fujii, who is sometimes described by critics as "the Ellington of free jazz".
Tokyo-born Satoko Fujii played piano from an early age, but became interested in jazz in her twenties. After studying at the famous Berklee College in the USA, she quickly joined the avant-garde jazz scene, releasing her first album with her teacher, pianist Paul Bley, in 1996, and a year later she founded the New York Jazz Orchestra. Satoko has been remarkably active since the beginning of his career. Returning to Japan with her husband, trumpeter Natsuki Tamura, she recorded a dozen albums in the first few years of her professional career.
Today, that number is breathtaking: in 2022, Satoko Fujii released her 100th album. In 2018 alone, her 60th birthday, she released 12 albums, featuring a wide range of music, from solo to big bands. Even during her quarantine, she recorded several albums.
Satoko Fujii is often presented as an avant-garde jazz artist (she is also known to music lovers as the founder of the bands Ma-do and Kaze), but music experts who dig deeper say that her work also incorporates rock, folk, and contemporary classical music.
"It's music that moves the bones and soothes the soul," says the website All About Jazz. Again, opposites, extremes, but Satoko Fujii has been successfully proving throughout his career that it is possible to reconcile things that are hard to reconcile.
He returns to Vilnius with one of his latest projects, a trio with two talented younger generation Japanese musicians, bassist Takashi Sugawa and drummer Ittetsu Takemura. The trio, which formed in 2019, only managed to play a few concerts - the third of which, recorded during a concert in Tokyo, was later released on the album Moon On The Lake. Shortly after this performance, all concert plans had to be put on hold due to a pandemic. However, the joy of playing together was so great that, after the quarantines ended, the trio returned to the stage and started working together again.
On stage, the musicians instantly feel each other's pulse, playing with a captivating combination of speed and excitement, subtlety and colour. Not unlike a typical piano jazz trio, though respectful of jazz traditions. A music full of inventiveness and freedom, energy and romance.
These are some of the compliments in the jazz media about this trio. Satoko herself adds that the very existence of this trio can be considered a great success. Both of her partners are very busy in the Japanese music scene and their fresh approach is not so common in the country's music scene.
"From the very beginning, it was great to play in this trio. The musicians I play with have to be open to my ideas. I am not a classical composer who knows and prescribes exactly how everything should sound. The most important thing is the end result. I know that their ability to improvise is of the highest level. How open they are to playing different kinds of music - I'm not even surprised. Twenty years ago, free jazz and classical jazz were separate worlds. But these two musicians play without preconceptions. Music must and can transcend religions, genders, nationalities, generations," says Satoko Fujii.
The result of this musical communion is a new album Jet Black, to be released at the end of January, and a series of concerts, one of which will be in Vilnius.
You can be sure that the music will be full of subtlety, surprise and grace, full of attention to detail, pushing the boundaries of musical perception and breaking down the boundaries of frames. "This is music for those who are fascinated by the unexpected," one review of the trio by Satoko Fujii puts the band in this way. There could be no better recommendation. After all, musical surprises are one of the foundations of free-breathing jazz. 


The project is funded by the Lithuanian Council for Culture and Vilnius City Municipality.