by Peter Feher

The result was maybe a more relaxed setup but with no less serious music-making. Ten mainstage acts made up the schedule for the 42nd annual Festival, and if there was a connecting thread through this diverse lineup, it was that artistry always came first.

Like many gifted young artists, Joy has a stellar ear that occasionally errs on the side of imitation. She introduced “If You Could See Me Now” as a Sarah Vaughan number and all but recreated that singer’s lower-register richness. Another diva’s signature stylings — Carmen McRae’s front-of-nose sound — rubbed off on Joy’s delivery of “If You Never Fall in Love With Me.” The set’s closer, “Everything Happens to Me,” offered an instructive difference, with Joy finding a smoothness all her own.

The Cleveland pianists were the standouts on this sometimes sprawling but always enthusiastic program. Jackie Warren pulled off an impressive balancing act — both starring as soloist and driving the rhythm section — in an infectious Latin number. Lafayette Carthon soloed in variations on “Amazing Grace” that started solemnly but took on the chord-pounding proportions of a piano concerto by the end.

The full-throttle approach — “bringing the heat,” as Hernández said, in contrast to the cooler jazz earlier in the day — had some of the audience out of their seats and dancing to end the evening.

The effect was contradictory: quirky but calculated. Skonberg clearly has technique to burn, but her project takes a toll on the music. On trumpet, she’s always on the move, rarely holding long notes. Singing, she sometimes limits herself unnecessarily. “From This Moment On” kept her voice in a small, smoky register. But in “Blackout,” she burst forth with a three-octave range, and some of the best singing of the weekend.

Virtuoso passages on both harps had a certain highwire thrill, but just as engaging was a slow, lazy number, filled with pitch bends and moving, melancholy harmonies.

But Russell was ultimately shaping a living legacy here, and she had the whole festival standing on its shoulders by her final number.
Published on ClevelandClassical.com September 29, 2021.
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