John Scofield Trio Feat Chris Potter Aarhus 2005 May 2026

Critics at the time noted that Potter almost stole the show. But that misses the point. Scofield has always been a generous bandleader. He doesn’t want sidemen; he wants partners . In Aarhus, he found one in Chris Potter.

Bill Stewart, meanwhile, is a drummer’s drummer. He doesn't bash; he converses . His cymbal work during Potter’s solo on was a marvel of controlled chaos—rustling, splashing, and snapping, pushing the saxophonist into a frenzy before pulling back for a whisper. The Highlight: "Scrapple from the Apple" The surprise of the night was a radical deconstruction of Charlie Parker’s bebop anthem "Scrapple from the Apple." Scofield took the head at a broken, slinky tempo, playing the melody as if he were a blues guitarist who’d accidentally wandered into a jazz club. When Potter entered, he played the changes straight for exactly eight bars—then detonated. John Scofield Trio feat Chris Potter Aarhus 2005

Potter, then in his early 30s, was already being hailed as "the best saxophonist alive" by many critics. In Aarhus, he lived up to the hype. On tenor, his tone is a brawny, Post-Trane roar, but with the harmonic clarity of a classical composer. When Scofield comped behind him—those spiky, angular chords—Potter didn't just solo; he navigated . He found pathways through Scofield’s harmonic mazes that seemed mathematically impossible, yet swung like hell. While the front line got the spotlight, the true magic happened between Swallow and Stewart. Steve Swallow, a pioneer of electric bass guitar, doesn't pluck; he plays with a pick, producing a round, melodic, almost guitar-like tone. His solos are less about groove and more about poetry. On the ballad "Since You Asked," Swallow’s lyrical intro made the packed Danish crowd fall silent. Critics at the time noted that Potter almost stole the show

As the final notes of the encore—a greasy, swampy —faded into the Danish night, the audience rose slowly, not with a roar, but with a knowing applause. They had witnessed a rare alignment: the grit of the blues, the math of bop, and the soul of two geniuses sharing a single stage. He doesn’t want sidemen; he wants partners