Jack DeJohnette in 2006, http://www.flickr.com/photos/imjackhandy/ / CC BY-SA 2.0 Last week, the legendary jazz drummer Jack DeJohnette graced the stage of the Berklee Performance Center to present a program charting the past and future directions of his music. The show was divided into two sets—the first, DeJohnette’s jazzier, earlier work and the second a glimpse at his current projects, which combine the harmonic ideas of modal jazz with those from North Africa and Spain. During both sets, DeJohnette was accompanied by Berklee students. Though they were a far cry from DeJohnette’s usual colleagues—he has played with everyone from Miles Davis to David Murray—the students more than held their own on the stage, at some points dazzling the audience with their chops. Pianist Christian Li, in particular, had a deft hand behind the keyboard. His first solo, during the “Zoot Suite,” sounded to this reviewer like something utterly new—a gentle, tinkering set of rolls on the high notes that DeJohnette adorned with cymbal crashes. Li and DeJohnette had some of the tightest interplay of the night, and, if Li continues his career in jazz, rather

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Hope for Children: Jack DeJohnette with Berklee Students