NE Trad Jazz May 2015

This has been a busy Spring!  I’ll be 80 years young next month; there’s no way I can keep up  with all the wonderful Jazz we’ve had in this area since the last newsletter April 15th.  But I do try.

Neville looking to the left and smiling

Neville Dickie

 

 

Highlight of this month (so far) was the annual visit of Neville Dickie on May 12th at the Bella Costa Restaurant in Framingham, MA.

 

 

This year Neville was joined by Stan McDonald soprano sax, Jeff Hughes trumpet, and Steve Taddeo drums.

drum, trumpet, piano, soprano sax

Neville Dickie Quartet,

The Quartet rotated with a duet of Neville and Steve, with the irrepressible Dickie pushing Taddeo to the max!

Steve slam-baning drums while Neville plays piano and laughs

Neville challenges Steve to keep up with him – he did!

They ended the evening as always with four-handed piano when Neville is joined by our own stride master, Ross Petot. They obviously enjoy this duet!

both laughing

Neville pauses as Ross goes into full stride.

Neville Dickie will return next year, for his 15th Annual sojourn to New England.  He always begins here with Stan McDonald, before performing all over the country. Then he’ll  return to Surrey, England.


April 16th Wolverine Jazz Band at Primavera Ristorante, 20 Pleasant St. Millis MA

7pc Trad Jazz Band

Wolverine Jazz Band

Dave Didriksen drums, Dan Gabel trombone,Jimmy Mazzy banjo/vocals, Jeff Hughes trumpet, Rick MacWilliams tuba, John Clark leader/clarinet/bari sax, Herb Gardner keyboard.
With their intricate New Orleans Polyphony and glorious horn solos, the Wolves are one of the most popular Dixieland Jazz Bands in this area and at Festivals.  They are now celebrating their 20th Anniversary, and played many tunes from their upcoming CD, their 13th,  that should be issued sometime next month.  Don’t miss them!!
Dan Gabel subbed for regular trombonist Tom Boates.  Tom is the Music Department Chair at Guilford CT High School, and accompanied the Guilford High School Chorus at Disney World.  (He’s forgiven for not being here!)

Tuesday, MAY 19, 7-9:30pm, The Wolves will be at the Sheraton/Needham. $10 cover – They will hopefully have their new CD ready to go for that day! They aren’t taking reservations, so just show up anyway! Sheraton Needham, 100 Cabot St, Needham, MA 02494 Phone:(781) 444-1110 .


April 24th High Society Jazz Band at Primavera Ristorante

High Society Jazz Orchestra with Elise Roth

High Society Jazz Orchestra with Elise Roth

Elise Roth

Elise Roth

Personnel:
Dan Gabel: trombone, Elise Roth: vocals
Clarinets/Saxes: Tyler Burchfield, John Clark,
Richard Garcia
Trumpets: Pat Stout and Jeff Hughes
Piano: Ross Petot
Guitar/Banjo: Bill Doyle
Tuba: Rick MacWilliams
Drums: Steve Taddeo
Jazz, Big Band, and swing are American musical art forms that are being perpetuated by a young musician, and we are extremely grateful!!  Dan Gabel  brought his High Society Jazz Orchestra to Primavera Ristorante on April 24th, with Vocalist Elise Roth lending her expert talents on vocal numbers of the era, bringing back rarely heard verses and a classic vintage singing style.  Dan Gabel and John Clark are experts at adapting original arrangements that were created in the early 20’s and 30’s.  They played Ellington’s The Mooche, made famous at the Cotton Club, Irving Berlin’s Alexander’s Ragtime Band, Pat Stout trumpet was heard on St. Louis Shuffle by Fats Waller. Bill Doyle, manager and guitar, was featured on Glad Rag Doll by Milton Ager.  Reeds played a stomping arrangement of Putting on the Ritz; Hughes trumpet was featured on  Stardust that just went right through you!  It was a fantastic evening of Jazz, Big Band, and Swing – and we’re looking forward to hearing much more from this band. Check them out at www.facebook.com/highsocietyorchestra.

 


April 30th Eli and The Hot Six celebrated International Jazz Day at Primavera Ristorante.  Click on photos to enlarge.

Eli and The Hot Six

Eli and The Hot Six

Bob Winter keyboard, Jim Mazzy banjo/vocals, Eli Newberger tuba, Jeff Guthery drums, Herb Gardner trombone, Bo Winiker trumpet/flugelhorn, Ted Casher clarinet and tenor sax

April 30th was International Jazz Day, spectacularly celebrated by Eli and The Hot Six at Primavera Ristorante.  They began with The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise, featuring tunes form many countries.  Eartha Kitt’s C’est çi Bon,  Irish Black Bottom, (which is really authentic American Jazz), Hindustan, Ted Casher sang Bei Mir Bis Du Schoen in Yiddish, playing authentic Klezmer clarinet.

Bo holds handkerchief, and smiles like Louis

Bo sings Louis’s Wonderful World

 

 

Bo put heart and soul into Louis’s Wonderful World.

 

 

 

 

Jeff Guthery recalled the 20’s and 30’s drumming, tapping on graduated temple blocks befitting that early jazz.   You’ve never heard Oh By Jingo played like Bob Winter, with blazing runs up and down the keyboard!  Thanks to Kathy Wittman, we have a video of it back at the Sherborn Inn.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QvWIIwCU-jg

Eli and The Hot Six will be joined by renowned pianist Butch Thompson at Sculler’s Jazz Club on May 21st for their CD release of Eli & The Hot Six LIVE, Contemporary Classic Jazz.


May 3rd Wolverine Jazz Band started a new monthly series at Ken’s Steak House, Rt. 9 Framingham, MA.  We had Tom Boates back from Disney World!  Please read the fine REVIEW by Myron Idelson!  It was a great success!

7 pc Trad Jazz Band

Wolverine Jazz Band at Ken’s Steak House, on a Sunday afternoon

Tom Boates trombone (he’s back!) Dave Didriksen drums, Jeff Hughes trumpet, Rick MacWilliams tuba, Jimmy Mazzy banjo/vocals, Ross Petot piano, John Clark clarinet/bari sax.


May 7th Blue Horizon Jazz Band played the first Thursday of the month at Primavera Ristorante

Blue Horizon Jazz Band

Blue Horizon Jazz Band

Steve Taddeo drums, John Kefalas trombone, Gerry Gagnon tuba, Jeff Hughes trumpet, Dave MacMillan guitar, Stan McDonald soprano leader/sax/vocals.
This is fine Traditional Jazz!  Jeff’s trumpet took the melodic lead, with Stan flitting around the melody with  embellishments, and John’s trombone filling in the “holes” with extensive use of the slide.  The solos were filled with exemplary improvisations,  Gerry Gagnon is one of the finest tuba players in this area; he coordinated with Steve on his 1938 Slingerland Drums, tapping on a tiny Grecko cymbal attached to the bass drum, keeping perfect time.  It was great to have Dave MacMillan back on rhythm guitar after a long recovery from an accident.  Welcome back, Dave!!


May 9th Seacoast Stompers Quartet at ACT III in Littleton, MA
ACT IV in Lowell ran into another bureaucratic headache and could not open.
Thank you Gwenn and Josely for your immeasurable patience!!  Seacoast Stompers had to trim down to a Quartet to play in ACT III in Littleton.

Frank Stadler piano, Jeff Hughes trumpet, Jim Mazzy banjo/vocals, Al Bernard tuba.

Cornet, Banjo, Piano, Tuba

Seacoast Stompers Quartet

Jeff Hughes has many faces, Bix Beiderbecke, Bunny Berigan, Joe ‘King’ Oliver, Buddy Bolden, with his lyrical style and melody-based improvisations.  He and Jimmy Mazzy are brothers at heart, having played together since the 1980’s, especially with Ray Smith’s Paramount Jazz Band.  Frank Stadler’s piano set them free to exchange riffs, play intricate melodies and counterpoint, and Albie Bernard provided the perfect  bass lines.  It was a memorable afternoon!!
Act III is a small venue, but has a bar and serves a fine assortment of Mediterranean cuisine.   When Act IV in Lowell is finally allowed to open, the full 7-piece band will play on the 2nd Saturday of the month from 2-5pm.  We hope!


In the meantime, we are all extremely grateful to these wonderful musicians for making this a great life for ALL ages!!

Marce

Wolverine Jazz Band at Ken’s Steak House May 3, 2015

7 pc Trad Jazz Band

Wolverine Jazz Band at Ken’s Steak House, Sunday afternoon

Review of Wolverine Jazz Band at Ken’s Steak House, May 3, 2015 – by Myron Idelson

On May 3rd, 2015, the venerable restaurant, Ken’s Steak House in Framingham Massachusetts launched a new venue for Traditional Jazz.  Hosted by the Wolverine Jazz Band, led by John Clark, the music made by seven formidable talents from 4pm to 7pm blew all credibility by reaching new heights of Jazz brilliance.

The members of the Band: John Clark clarinet and bari saxophone, Jeff Hughes cornet, Jimmy Mazzy banjo and vocals, Ross Petot piano, Tom Boates trombone, Rick MacWilliams tuba and Dave Didriksen drums… were all guilty of playing excessive, appealing, ingratiating, bright, inventive, and intense extraordinary music causing a seismic shaking of Musical Joy, registering a 10 on the Richter Musical Scale.

The music played by the Wolverines was a Blue Ribbon Salute to their talents… and the audience became immensely wealthy.  The unusual arrangements, the swinging tempos, the integrity of the Jazz in the slow tempos, the exciting refreshing impressive new insights showed the seven Giants were possessors of fantastic tone and range with never a hint or sound of a pallid solo.

The pleasing Hot choruses, the brilliant arrangements, were infusing and sparking the boys to unmitigated and scintillating new heights.  There was never even a minor flaw the entire evening.  It was a full and rich shattering experience – we were in the presence of  ‘Musical Diety’.  The future of Ken’s is predictable – more of the same with a parade of other bands to follow.

The Opening Night of our second new venue takes place on May 19th, 2015 at the Sheraton Inn in Needham, Massachusetts, 7pm to 9:30pm.  The Wolverine Jazz Band as our host ensures us, once again, of another arousing night of Great Traditional Jazz.

Ken’s Steakhouse and The Sheraton Inn will offer a “Who’s Who” of Traditional Jazz.

Myron Idelson

Wolverine Jazz Band at Primavera Ristorante, April 16, 2015

7 pc Trad Jazz Band

Wolverine Jazz Band with Dan Gabel and Herb Gardner

Jeff Hughes cornet, John Clark clarinet and bari sax, Dan Gabel trombone, Jim Mazzy banjo/vocals, Herb Gardner keyboard, Rick MacWilliams tuba, Dave Didriksen drums

Wolverines are a favorite, not only in New England, but across the country.   They had a couple of substitutes this evening.   Dan Gabel was on trombone, subbing for Tom Boates, whose High School Jazz Band was on stage at the Epcot Center.

Herb Gardner has been ‘pianist of choice’ here since Ross Petot teaches on Thursday evenings.  John Clark spent about 30 seconds explaining arrangements to the two substitutes, and then they all fell in together and soared.

It was the day after tax day, so they began with an upbeat We’re In The Money, from their 1st CD.  They took When My Dreamboat Comes Home  from The Paramount Jazz Band, who took it from the Jim Cullum Jazz Band, with Jimmy doing the vocals as he did with Paramount.  From the 1920’s, Dardanella, fine tuned duet between cornet and clarinet, tuba pushing the beat, Jimmy took it out on banjo..

Jimmy singing and playing banjo

Jimmy is always Jimmy, remarkable!

 

 

Jimmy Mazzy was featured on a Muddy Water’s tune, playing himself, incredible as usual, with a little bit of support from cornet and clarinet.

 

 

 

 

Some Rogers and Hart was on the docket.  Bless That Mountain Greenery was recorded by Jabbo Smith.  It will be on the Wolves’ upcoming CD,  #13. (They don’t really count No 1 because there was no trombone.)

Rick took a tuba solo on a dreamy, bluesy Michigander Blues, with the three on the front line slipping into a deep glissando slide.  They finished with smiles on all their faces; it must have been signaled at the last minute and played on the fly!

Jim and Jeff alone.

Jim Mazzy and Jeff Hughes play Sleepy Lagoon.

Jimmy Blythe’s Oriental Man is Chicago jazz,  with Clark playing hot Johnny Dodds clarinet.  I Want to Linger was done by Rosy McHargue and his Dixieland Band as well as the Andrew Sisters.  John  Clark did the vocal with Hughes playing soulful vibrato on his Olds Recording cornet, vintage 1953. It looks like new with offset ergonomic valves and trigger slide, it plays excellent and has a wonderful sound.  But then any instrument in Hughes’ hands has an excellent sound.

Jeff and Jimmy played a song for the late Jim Enright – his favorite, Sleepy Lagoon.  Thank you both for remembering Jim!

Jimmy Mazzy’s choice – he has a million of them in that genius head of his, but this was a relatively new one.  The front line followed with inventive solos. The You and Me That Used to Be was voted Best Record of the Year in 1972, and Jimmy Rushing voted Best Male Singer in the Down Beat music poll.

Jeff’s favorite, After You’ve Gone, recorded by Johnny Dodds’ Black Bottom Stompers, realased in 1927, was a nice danceable tune, melodic and lyrical clarinet with trombone playing harmony, and Jimmy singing,

Dip Your Brush In The Sunshine, Ted Lewis 1931,  Uplifting and warm with Jim vocal and Jeff responding.

Rick and tuba in back of the band

Rick MacWilliams pushes the band on tuba

 

 

 

Rick MacWilliams let go on a fine tuba solo on Johnny St. Cyr’s Oriental Strut.  He provides a cushion of solid beat with the right chords supporting the band every note of the way.

 

 

 

Stomping at The Savoy swings from beginning to end; you never heard anything like it!  Pity no one was recording.  They haven’t played Blues in My Heart in a long time,  Sweet.

full band

Band played a unique Stomping at the SavoyA

Jerry Wadness requested Herb play trombone.  Herb joined Dan in a hot fiery duet backed by the buoyant rhythm section on Harry Warren’s Lulu’s Back in Town, with Herb also singing it.  They are a combustible combination!

Dan and Herb on trombone

Rose of The Rio Grande, high spirited playing with Dave Didriksen tapping on wood block and hi hat, then he let go with excited commentaries; crashes and rolls.  Jeff followed on cornet with John on clarinet for an exciting duet, with Dan responding with short bursts on trombone.

Didriksen on drms

Dave Didriksen keeps a fine beat

Lawrence Brown wrote another Jim Enright favorite, Memories of You, played by piano and clarinet. Superb. Jimmy singing with Jeff support, as they used to do with the Paramount Jazz Band.   This will be on their 13th CD.

Time for one more.  What, already??

John Clark on bari sax

He’s dangerous on that baritone sax.

 

 

They closed with a special version of Dinah with a soft 16 bar intro on cornet.  John Clark’s full-throated lower register on baritone sax caught us right in the solar plexus!

 

 

 

 

Dan Gabel’s exuberant trombone followed, Herb’s fingers flying over the keyboard, Jimmy was carried away with his infamous holler. Dave’s drum cymbal rolled into the final ensemble chorus, with a closing cymbal crash for a WILD finale!.  We were left breathless!

Where do we go from here??

Herb Gardner at keyboard

Herb Gardner keeps busy

Herb Gardmer keeps busy. The following week, after the usual Wednesday night at Swing 46 in Manhattan NY, Friday the 24th he’s playing with the Black Eagle Jazz Band at Amazing Things Arts Center in Framingham. Saturday he’s on trombone for a Benny Goodman ’38 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert tribute at Merrimac College in North Andover. Then Sunday down to Piermont, NY for two shows with Red Molly at The Turning Point. He says “Who has as much fun as us jazz musicians?”

Dan Gabel

Dan Gabel is always phenomenal.  He teaches at Holy Cross College in Worcester, barely makes it here on time and always arrives hungry.  He wolfs down a fine Italian dinner during the first ten-minute break.

Extending the slide to its maximum length, he’s constantly improvising, sometimes being forced to, as when playing trombone to a saxophone chart (not with the Wolves).  Here he was given the chart to the wrong tune, but still performed with such passion that we never knew.  His High Society Orchestra will be here at Primavera April 24th, 7pm.

 

As for the Wolverine Jazz Band, mark your calendars.  They will be at Ken’s Steak House, Framingham MA on May 3rd, 4-7pm FLYER and the Sheraton Needham May 19th, 7pm, a new venue at 100 Cabot St, Needham, MA.  Come hear the Wolves in a beautiful new setting – great menu, easy parking.  On June 18th they’ll be back at Primavera, 7pm.  John Clark keeps their site update!  www.wolverinejazzband.com.

Swingin’ at the WunderBar, Dave Whitney Orchestra featuring Sophia Stevens

picture of Dave Whitney at  Ruth's Wunderbar

                    Photo by Sarah Musumeci

Photo by Sarah Musumeci

Theme/ Swingin’ at the WunderBar Tuxedo Junction Tangerine
Skirts Caravan Our Love is Here to Stay
B.P. (Ellington) All of Me New Concerto for Cootie
Massachusetts A Baker’s Dozen Boogie Blues
Honeysuckle Rose My Adobe Hacienda Pete Kelly’s Blues
Roll ‘Em

CD is $15 or $18 by mail. To purchase:
email Dave at davjazzer64@yahoo.com or call 978-667-5524

Recorded in 2009 with Dave Whitney – Leader, Trumpet/Cornet and Vocals
Sophia Steven, Vocals

Trumpets – Joe Musumeci, Mel Deveau, Don Heathcock and
Scott Philbrick (also guitar)
Trombones – Scott Hills, Jay Keyser, Stu Gunn
Sax and Clarinet – Sil D’Urbano, Bob Drukman (alto),
Ben Goldstein, Blair Bettencourt (tenor)
Kathleen Howland (baritone),
John Clark (alto, tenor and clarinet),
Ben Goldstein – tenor solo on Skirts, Clarinet solos on Tuxedo Junction and Roll’ em
Piano- Steve Dale, Bass-Dave LeBleu, Drums – Reid Jorgensen.

arrangements by Chris Powers except Theme and Pete Kelly’s Blues by Steve Dale
recording and mixing by Peter Kontrimas PBS Studios, Westwood MA
photo credits-Harold MacAleer, Sarah Musumeci (full band).
Thanks to Joseph J. Grassia at the WunderBar Recording Studio, Concord MA

In Loving Memory – Lorraine Whitney and Mel Deveau

Dave Whitney Orchestra with Sophia Stevens

Dave Whitney Orchestra with Sophia Stevens                                           Photo by Marce

Dave Whitney Orchestra 2011

Dave Whitney Orchestra 2011                                                                Photo by Marce

 

 

Good Ole Salty Jazz Band

2014

2011:
Left to right: Bob Landoni, Al Robinson, Gid Loring, Bob Tuffley, Frank Stadler, Dave Saginario, Bill Grillo, John Hicks.
Grillo got a day job and was replaced by Charlie Vaughn. Frank Stadler was replaced by Jack Senier.

The Good Ole Salty Jazz Band on the first three Mondays of the month from 1-3pm (unless there’s a Holiday) at the Rose Baker Senior Center, 6 Manuel F Lewis St. Gloucester, MA (978)281-9765.

They do Dixie and swing, and the number of players (all volunteers) ranges from 7 to 13, frequently about 9 or 10.
Regular players are usually Bob Tuffley (trumpet), Gid Loring (cornet), Al Robinson (trombone), Mark Earley (tenor, bari & clarinet), Bob Landoni (tenor, alto & clarinet), Rikki Razdan (tenor & clarinet), Alek Razdan (clarinet, soprano & alto), Jack Senier (keyboard), John Hicks (guitar & banjo), Dave Saginario (upright bass), and Charlie Vaughn (drums). Jack Senier is a very busy part-time player, and Alek Razdan is only there when college is not in session. There are several other players who sit in occasionally.
Dave “Sag” became the “leader” (really a manager & coordinator) when Frank Stadler decided to bow out at the end of 2011 after over 6 years in that spot. Dave is a very capable and talented bass player who has had his own “blues party” gig at the Rhumbline bar for a long time. He wanted to learn Dixie and swing, and has very effectively done so.
Bob Tuffley makes up the weekly tunelist. Some of the tunes are less than inspiring, but overall, the band is very good, especially considering that most players are not reading, and the harmonies and interplay is mostly ad-lib.
A group from Danvers usually provides about half of the audience. That same group attends the Danvers Senior Center weekly music, presented every Thursday (except holidays) from 1:15 – 3:00pm. With other attendees, the DSC room is usually full, and there are many dancers. Frank Stadler, Bob Landoni, and Mark Earley play frequently  at the DSC with the Maple Sugar Band.
Maple Sugar Jazz Band 1:15-3pm at the Danvers Senior Center, 25 Stone St. Danvers MA 01923 Phone: (978) 762-0208 John Kendrick, leader

Seacoast Stompers at Bemis Hall April 11, 2015

7 pc Dixieland Jazz Band

Seacoast Stompers at Bemis Hall, Lincoln MA

By Marce,
Videos by Harold McAleer

Scott Philbrick cornet, Craig Ball clarinet, Steve Piermarini trombone, Jimmy Mazzy banjo/vocals, Frank Stadler leader/piano, Al Bernard sousaphone, Bob Reardon drums

The Seacoast Stompers were back at Bemis Hall at their regular daylight time, 2-5pm, Saturday afternoons – great time to listen to great Jazz.  They are wonderful, lyrical players, inspire one another, enjoying what they do, pleasing their audience.  We especially enjoy Jimmy’s many songs.  (We’ve been listening to Jimmy for over 43 years, and he is still unique.)

They began as always with their theme song, At The Jazz Band Ball.  Frank Stadler leads the band, but Scott Philbrick is their ‘music’ leader.  Frank held a list of tunes they would play.  Something new had been added – all the endings were kept short and abrupt.  Each one caught us by Surprise!

This was Craig Ball’s first sorti after breaking bones in his hand when he slipped on ice four weeks ago.  He still should have had at least two weeks recovery, but was climbing the walls.  So he returned to playing clarinet with a swollen left hand, clarinet still reaching for the stratosphere!

Everybody Loves My Baby – check out that clarinet.

I Would Do Most Anything For You, Scotty racing so fast on cornet, it almost made us dizzy, it was a Wowzer!

Moving to more moderate tempo, Mama’s Gone, Goodbye, Jimmy at his best with Albie’s powerful brass, Stadler offering just the right chords,  drum tapping on crash cymbal.

Piano, banjo, and sousaphone

Jimmy solo backed by Frank Stadler on piano and Al Bernrd tuba, plus drum not pictured

China Boy (video by Marce)

Baby, Won’t You Please Come Home had Scott playing sweet smooth cornet with Jimmy backing on banjo.

Upbeat Lady be Good, band in great New Orleans polyphony with exciting individual solos, Scott sneaking in tidbits of other tunes, Jimmy’s banjo pushing the beat with Bob beating hard on every drum he had!

Frank said that half of the tunes in this idiom seem to be in the key of F.  So they moved to Rose Room, in the key of A♭,  Scott’s cornet almost talking.  Nice dance tune; there’s room at the back of the hall for dancing.

Alt on sousaphone with left arm waving

Al Bernard wrapped in sousaphone

 

 

 

Albie not only pushes the beat wrapped in sousaphone, but softly responds to solos In My Honey’s Loving Arms. 

Strutting  With Some Barbecue was wild!

 

 

 

 

Mood Indigo  had an extraordinary cornet and trombone duet, with Scott throwing in some wa wa on muted cornet.

cornet, tuba behind him, and trombone

Scott Philbrick and Steve Piermarini in great muted duet

Jimmy’s choice, Nagasaki, in B♭, cornet leading, trombone playing counterpoint, Jimmy startling vocal.  Piano took the intro to My Monday Date  with Jim vocal.

It’s been a long time since they played I Ain’t Got Nobody, Pieranunzi playing fine growling muted trombone.   Blue Lu, Bob Reardon with left stick on snare drum, right on splash cymbal, pushing the band.

Bobby’s choice of tunes – he always picks my favorite, Limehouse Blues.  Piano intro,   Bob’s brushes on tom tom drums, arms flailing in the air.

Bobby, jacket off, flailing wire brushes

Bobby Reardon hitting all the drums!

E♭ banjo 16 bar intro into Louisiana, band following with exciting Dixieland Jazz.

Chicago was HOT, a barn burner with Jimmy scatting.  Another upbeat, Found A New Baby with Jim vocal, Bob ended it with a stinging crash cymbal.

Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate.  Frank loves playing this 1870 Steinway!

They closed with another rouser, Swing That Music.  Bobby  wouldn’t let it end, playing two moving drum encores.

They also played Swing That Music here in January, with Dave Whitney on cornet and Scotty on banjo.  This was before Craig broke his hand.   That tune is always an excellent closer.
.

This music touches the heart and spirit. The musicians consider themselves lucky to be jazz players; they love this music. The don’t use charts, they listen to each other, improvising, sometimes challenging each other.  They don’t necessarily get rewarded, except from the crowd that shows appreciation by applauding their marvelous talent.

Seacoast Stompers will be moving to a new venue.  It’s been fun being here at Bemis Hall, thank you Harold McAleer and Vern Welch for making it possible.  Next month on Saturday, May 9th,  the Seacoast Stompers move to ACT IV, (formerly Acton Jazz Café)  now at Jameson’s Restaurant, 26 Andover St, Lowell, Massachusetts 01852  still from 2-5pm.  Come have a good meal (5 ½ Stars), a drink, and enjoy this great band!!   We hope to see you there – bring a friend.

Harold video taping

Harold McAleer with trusty video camera

 

 

We expect Harold will be taping at Jameson’s restaurant also.  We hope they have good lighting!

Eli & The Hot Six + Rebecca Sullivan at Barrington Stage Company, Pittsfield

Barrington Stage header

Barrington Stage Company Presents

SWINGIN’ GERSHWIN
with
Eli & The Hot Six + Rebecca Sullivan
Bob Winter, Bo Winiker, Jimmy Mazzy,
Ted Casher, Herb Gardner & Jeff Guthery
Monday, June 22, 2015 | 8:00 pm

Pittsfield, MA–Barrington Stage Company will present Swingin’ Gershwin with Eli & The Hot Six + Rebecca Sullivan on the Boyd-Quinson Mainstage, Monday, June 22 at 8:00 pm.  Eli & The Hot Six are a fabulous jazz group just formed by the world-renowned tuba player and keyboardist, Eli Newberger and the band has a superb new CD, titled Eli & The Hot Six LIVE Contemporary Classic Jazz.

The group’s approach honors the New Orleans tradition of ensemble improvising while featuring the solo brilliance of its distinctive, contemporary musical personalities. Jazz singer Rebecca Sullivan adds an additional instrumental voice to the ensemble, in addition to her own deeply-felt interpretations of iconic vocal masterpieces, from “Honeysuckle Rose” to “Perdido.” The new disc and show at Scullers also feature some of Boston’s finest, legendary musicians: Eli Newberger on tuba, Bob Winter on piano, Herb Gardner on trombone, Bo Winiker on trumpet, Ted Casher on clarinet, soprano and tenor saxes, Jimmy Mazzy on banjo and vocals and Jeff Guthery on drums.

Barrington Stage Company and its Boyd-Quinson Mainstage is located at 30 Union Street in Pittsfield, Massachusetts 01201. Tickets at $45 and $35 go on sale now at www.BarringtonStageCo.org or call 413-236-8888.

Eli Newberger is a famed musician. Classically trained at Juilliard and Yale, he is a virtuoso jazz tuba and keyboard player who has cut more than 40 records with the New Black Eagle Jazz Band, which he co-founded in 1970. Dr. Newberger also won three national readers’ polls for best jazz tuba player! Often with banjo player/singer Jimmy Mazzy, he delights his audiences with musically illustrated lectures on character building.

Eli Newberger is also a highly-lauded and world-renowned pediatrician affiliated with Harvard Medical School and Children’s Hospital in Boston. Known for his ability to apply good sense and up-to-date science to unresolved issues of family life, he has been a pioneer in identifying and treating child abuse and family violence.  He is often called to testify in legal cases and is a high profile media personality, having appeared nationally on The Today Show, ABC World NewsTonight, CBS Evening News, NBC Nightly News, Nightline, CNN News, The Oprah Winfrey Show, 60 Minutes and National Public Radio programs such as Here and Now.  In the Boston market, he has appeared on The Connection and Radio Open Source with Christopher Lydon, CBS News Boston, WCVB 5 News, 7News Boston, NECN News, NECN’s Broadside with Jim Braude, Boston Public Radio, Greater Boston with Emily Rooney, WBUR FM’s Radio Boston, WCVB TV’s Chronicle among others.

With girlish sophistication, gleaming intelligence and three-octave range, jazz singer Rebecca Sullivan, a Pennsylvania native, is at 31 already a full-blown original—someone who stands apart from all the standards singers now crowding the field not only with her distinctive style, but also her eagerness to take risks. Rebecca received her Masters of Music Degree in Contemporary Improvisation and Voice from New England Conservatory of Music in May 2014. In a quirk of circumstance, she and Eli Newberger were assigned to one another as mentee and mentor.  After sitting in with his band in 2012 at their gig at the Sherborn Inn, the Hot Six and fans wanted her back!  She’s now based in New York, works in the offices of the Metropolitan Opera and shows up in Boston for gigs with the Hot Six.  Rebecca has a fine website,http://www.rebeccasullivanjazz.com.

Bob Winter, unassailable dean of Boston jazz pianists, is a veteran performer in all manner of musical situations and styles,  in solo, duo, trio and small group settings. Since 1980, Bob has been the pianist with the Boston Pops and Pops Esplanade Orchestras, with Keith Lockhart and John Williams, conducting at Symphony Hall and for many tours and recordings. Bob joined the faculty of Berklee College of Music in 1972, where he is still a professor of piano.

Bo Winiker, a graduate of New England Conservatory, plays trumpet, flugelhorn and vibraphone. Bo recently fulfilled his lifelong dream of conducting and soloing at Boston Symphony Hall, where he led the Boston Pops Swing Orchestra during the opening night of both the 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 Symphony Orchestra seasons as well as the sold out 2013 and 2014 New Year’s Eve galas. He toured worldwide with the NEC’s Grammy® Award-winning Ragtime Ensemble, under the direction of Gunther Schuller as well as with the Stan Kenton Orchestra. In addition, Bo has appeared as a soloist with the New York Philharmonic and the Cleveland Orchestra and has also recorded on the movie soundtrack A League of Their Own with Billy Joel. Bo performed at the White House for President Ford and at two Presidential Inaugurations, for Presidents Carter and Clinton.

One of the busiest jazzmen in New England, clarinetist and saxophonist Ted Casher grew up in Skowhegan, Maine in a family of musicians.  Ted’s career spans studying and teaching at the Berklee College of Music, clarinet performances with front-rank traditional jazz stars like Louis Armstrong, starring as solo clarinetist in bands that revive the legacies of Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw and playing tenor sax in big bands from the legendary Duke Delaire Big Band at Bovi’s Tavern in East Providence and Peter Duchin’s Orchestra performing everywhere at society dances.  Ted is renowned for his fluent improvisations, exquisite sound, klezmer inflections and boffo sense of humor.

Jimmy Mazzy enjoys iconic status as both a banjoist and vocalist on the American jazz scene.  For more than forty years, this consummate musician has delighted followers of traditional jazz with his uniquely lyrical banjo style and his wonderfully haunting vocals.  He is featured on more than 30 albums, many of them on the famous Stomp Off label including the Paramount Jazz Band and his own Jimmy Mazzy & Friends.  In a New York Times review of Jimmy and Eli’s Stomp Off recording, Shake It Down, critic John S. Wilson wrote: “Mr. Mazzy sings with husky-voiced intensity and a sentimental enthusiasm that sometimes suggests a cross between Ted Lewis and Clancy Hayes. His banjo-playing is relaxed and flowing, providing light lines that help the tuba rise up and shuffle around.”

Drummer Jeff Guthery won the “fastest hands” division of the World’s Fastest Drummer competition at the Anaheim Winter NAMM Show in 2007. He has been playing drums for ten years and performed traditional and bebop jazz in Kyrgyzstan and South Korea for five years prior to coming to Boston, where he is currently a student at Berklee College of Music’s Percussion Department, majoring in Jazz Drum Set Performance.

Soon after moving to New York in 1963, trombonist Herb Gardner began touring with Wild Bill Davison, Kenny Davern and Dick Wellstood as well as becoming a regular at the Metropole, Jimmy Ryan’s and Eddie Condon’s nightclubs. During the ‘60s and ’70s, he appeared with virtually all of the classic jazz musicians in the New York City area such as Roy Eldridge, Gene Krupa, Henry “Red” Allen, Bobby Hackett, Jimmy Rushing, Doc Cheatham, Max Kaminsky and even Wingy Manone.

Swingin’ Gershwin
Eli & The Hot Six + Rebecca Sullivan
Barrington Stage Company’s
Boyd-Quinson Mainstage
30 Union Street,
Pittsfield, Massachusetts 01201
Monday, June 22 at 8:00 pm
Tickets:
$45 and $35
BarringtonStageCo.org
Call: 413-236-8888

Media Contacts:

For Eli Newberger:
Sue Auclair, Sue Auclair Promotions
617-522-1394 | jazzwoman@earthlink.net
www.sueauclair.com

For Barrington Stage:
Charlie Siedenburg, BSC Press Director
551-655-0968 | charlie_siedenburg@yahoo.com
www.barringtonstageco.org


Media materials & musical sample here:  http://sueauclairpromotions.com/Sue_Auclair_Promotions/Eli_%26_The_Hot_Six_On_The_Road.html

 

Bill Reynolds’ Back Bay Ramblers at Primavera Ristorante, April 9, 2015

7 pc trad jazz band, with guitar and 2 reeds

Bill Reynolds’ Back Back Ramblers

Mike Peipman trumpet, John Clark clarinet/alto, tenor, and baritone sax, Billy Novick clarinet/alto sax, Dan Gabel Trombone, Scott Philbrick guitar,  Herb Gardner keyboard, Stu Gunn tuba/string bass, Nancy McGhee vocals, Bill Reynolds leader/drums.

Back Bay Ramblers are the result of the late Ed Reynolds dream.  He created a great Traditional Jazz Band in the 1980’s that would record the rarely heard tunes of the 1920’s.  Ed passed in 2014 at age 90.  (More about Ed and his band below.)

His son, drummer Bill Reynolds, promised him he would continue the Back Bay Ramblers.   Ed would be proud of the band that Bill has meticulously created; it is absolutely outstanding!!  (He added tuxedos for class par excellence.)  Most of these talented musicians lead bands of their own.  This band uses structured arrangements, as did the larger earlier bands.

In New Orleans Traditional Jazz Bands were all improvisation, with emphasis on musicians’ solos.  But as the music spread northward in the 20’s and 30’s, the bands grew larger to play in bigger rooms around the country, in restaurants and hotels in Chicago, Detroit.  Their music became Hot Tunes, they played to larger dancing crowds.  This obviously made written arrangements necessary, with tight sections playing in syncopation.  The music was written and arranged so they could play together, sometimes on the same note, sometimes in harmony.  It’s a balance of simplicity and complexity.

Tonight’s Back Bay Ramblers began with a tom-tom drum beat intro to Dream Sweetheart, words and music by Bud Green, 1932.  Bill Reynolds has made this their theme song.

pretty and talented blonde vocalist

Nancy McGhee

 

They continued with Daddy, Won’t You Please Come Home, introducing the lovely and talented Nancy McGhee (who happens to be Bill’s cousin).
She is a classically trained vocalist. She graduated from Berklee and then went to the New England Conservaory.  She is currently choral director at Lawrence High School

 

She continued with a tune written by Walter Donaldson and sung by The Boswell Sisters  in 1931, An Evening in Caroline.   It starts slowly with two clarinets, backed by guitar, then the brass comes in and it jumps up into two-beat barn burner!

Dan Gabel trombone, Mike Peipman trumpet, Bill Reynolds drums

Dan Gabel trombone, Mike Peipman trumpet, Bill Reynolds drums

Structured arrangements mean many rehearsals.  Billy Novick and John Clark were familiar with the Back Bay Ramblers Book, but Dan and Mike were not.  This was especially difficult for Mike, who was home in Australia at the time they were rehearsing and missed all but the last full band rehearsal.  Mike and Dan played spectacular solos, and representing the brass section of a big band, they nailed it!

1929 Little by Little, four piece front line, nice exchange between Billy on clarinet and Scott’s guitar.  A great Tiny Parham tune, Congo Love Song, played by two mellow alto saxes, and a vivid Congo drum beat.

Nancy was back with  Top of The Town a 1937 Jimmy McHugh tune made for the movie of the same name.  McHugh was a Boston native.  His songs had an infectiously swinging quality that instantly endeared them to the listener.  Perfect for Nancy.

The Ramblers used arrangements from various people.  Cho King, a tune by Sonny Clay was arranged by Robin Verdier.

Scott on guitar

Scott Philbrick

The 1919 Alcoholic Blues was written by Edward Laska with music by  Albert  Von Tilzer.  (Tilzer also wrote Take Me Out To The Ball Game in 1908.)

Some of these tunes the Ramblers played were written for guitar, others for banjo. Scott and Stu stayed in sync.  Scott switched between guitar and banjo.  When Stu Gunn played string bass, Scott played guitar.  When he played tuba, Scott played banjo.

Scott is  like vanilla extract in a cake; you can’t taste it when it’s there, but you know when it’s left out.

 

Stu on string bass

Marvelous bass man, Stu Gunn

 

 

 

Stalwart Stu Gunn instinctively moves from string bass to tuba, playing chords that maintain that very essential Traditional Jazz beat.

When he isn’t playing in a Jazz Band, you’ll find him playing classical music in several local symphonies.

 

 

 

 

Nancy returned with I Have to Have You, backed by soft trumpet; and one of Bill’s favorites, a Bob Connors arrangement, That Wonderful Something (is Love).

For those who don’t know Bob Connors, he led a marvelous band in the 1970’s, The Yankee Rhythm Kings; they excelled at Lu Watters two-beat California jazz. Bob was the original leader of The Back Bay Ramblers.  Their book has 121 arrangements; Connors wrote 91 of them.

He and his wife now live in Florida.  He’s retired from music, but keeps busy restoring archived movies and silent films.  If you’re interested in movie history, he has a vast collection of rare films that you won’t find anywhere else.

A Bennie Moten tune, That Too, Do had audience participation and everyone in the band responding “Yeah” and “Right”; another Bob Connors arrangement.

Herb at keyboard

Herb Gardner

 

Herb Gardner was invaluable, transitioning the musicians from one section to another and offering just the right chords behind soloists.

He’s been the pianist-in-residence here at Primavera, playing with numerous bands on piano, trombone and vocals.

 

 

Mike on trumpet

Mike Peipman is originally from Australia

 

Bill did the tom tom drum intro to their newest tune – 1951 – the Australian Nullabor.  Robin Verdier’s Monte Carlo Jazz Ensemble plays this all the time.

Mike says it means ‘flat plain with no trees’ –  “null arbor”?   It may have come from the Australian aborigines, with heavy drum accents.

 

 

 

Bill on drums

Bill Reynolds, leader

 

Bill’s drum continued the beat into ‘Leven Thirty Saturday Night.  This was a Frank Powers arrangement – he was a reed player from Chicago who did many arrangements for Ed’s band.

It is also the name of one of the albums that Ed Reynold’s original Back Bay Ramblers recorded for Bob Erdo’s Stomp Off Records. Some are still available. (See below)  All of the tunes played today came from these CDs.

 

Vocalist singing and pointing at the audience

Nancy is crazy about her man.

 

Nancy was back for Dreaming About My Man.  She really feels the words and puts heart and soul into her singing.

Fat’s Waller’s Concentrating on You was recorded by Hunter’s Serenaders, a territory band from Omaha, Nebraska.

Ed Reynolds liked territory bands and often used some of their tunes.

 

Ridin’ but Walkin’, a 1929 Fats Waller tune was played at The Cotton Club.  The Ramblers did it justice. It brought out Clark’s tenor sax – nice, Billy on clarinet with drum beat tapping on the choke cymbal, Mike on muted trumpet.    Short but in the groove!

The River and Me was recorded by the Absolut Duke Ellington, who played it every night at the Cotton Club.  It’s a fabulous swinging tune.  The Ramblers used the Frank Powers arrangement. Trombone, trumpet, clarinet and tenor sax, Stu Gunn pushing them on string bass, all the musicians pushed the boundaries with some profound, imaginative swinging!  They raised goose bumps!

Right Kind of Man was sung by Ruth Etting in 1929.  Nancy’s fine vocal was followed by two alto saxes taking 32 bars in multi-dimensional harmony.  Billy Novick and John Clark are always pushing music forward, expanding on it.

Back to instrumentals, Vipers’ Drag is a 1930 Fats Waller tune made popular by Cab Calloway.

Jungle Blues was arranged by Billy Novick.  He and Bill Reynolds have been ‘partners in crime’ for over 30 years.  Two clarinets harmonizing backed by steady drum beat.

Bill on alto, John on bari sax

Dynamite! Billy Novick and John Clark on various reeds

 

Nancy with arms outstretched

Nancy feels so blue!

 

 

Nancy was back with Nobody Cares, backed only by Herb Gardner on piano.  She’s so blue, you can absolutely feel it!

 

 

Ed would definitely be proud of this band; it is absolutely outstanding! Their passion for this music is obvious.  Hot Dance Music at its best!!   We hope to hear more from them really soon.

Meantime, you can still get the fine music.  Bill still has several CDs from Ed’s band.

Red Hot Band
Cuttin’ Up
‘Leven Thirty Saturday Night (4 left)
My Mom is in Town (1 left)
… also LPs and Cassettes of Boston Shuffle

Get in touch with Bill Reynolds at drumkits@verizon.net for any of these.

*             *             *              *             *            *              *

Ed Reynolds beaming with arms folded across his chest.

Ed Reynolds

Ed Reynolds, New England’s premier Jazz Historian and collector of Traditional Jazz records, deftly drew rarely heard traditional jazz ditties from 1925 to 1931 for his outstanding jazz musicians from our area and New York City.
Karen Cameron is originally from North Dakota.  She was with Fred Waring’s Pennsylvanians, and has sung with the Artie Shaw Band and other commemorative big bands around the country.

These are Ed Reynold’s Back Bay Ramblers 2001 at the Hot Steamed Jazz Festival.  This band played some of the finest 1920’s period music at the festival.  This is not swing – this is Traditional Jazz-Hot Dance Music at its best!
The musicians standing on a descending staircase, some in front

Blue Horizon Jazz Band at Primavera, April 2, 2015

7 pc Trad Jazz Band, with guitar

John Kafalas, Steve Taddeo, Mike Peipman, George Gagnon, Jack Soref, Stan McDonald

Stan McDonald kicked off this evening with a low-register clarinet intro to Meet Me Tonight in Dreamland,  introducing the music that embodies a joyful, timeless spirit, with marvelous improvised solos and intricate polyphonic jazz.

Jack Soref took the intro to Sugar on acoustic guitar backed by the rhythm section, followed by Kafalas’s fine trombone solo, with sax and trumpet together playing counterpoint.  Jack is the latest member of the band and we welcome him and his Gypsy Jazz guitar.  He has a unique talent.

Mike’s trumpet took the lead on Ole Miss with embellishments by Stan’s soprano sax, counter point support from trombone, backed by rhythm section.  They are all improvising, yet each  horn leaves space for the others; marks of professional musicians.  Gerry’s tuba took the first solo into Jelly Roll Morton’s Tijuana, with drum/guitar back up, and the band following with fine solos and polyphonic jazz.

Gerry on huge tuba

Gerry Gagnon, tuba and trombone player

 

Mike’s trumpet and Stan’s sax took the intro to Irving Berlin’s When I Leave the World Behind.  Stan sang it with Gerry Gagnon softly backing him on tuba.

Gerry can be quite relaxed, or highly flamboyant on that monstrous instrument!  He is a fine trombone player, but his tuba is so explicit, it just flows.

 

We had the pleasure of special guests here tonight, Henry & Jane Fischer from Orleans in Cape Cod.

McDonald standing between Jane and Henry

Henry and Jane Fischer of Cape Cod with Stan McDonald

Jane and Henry feature early jazz and pop music on Dixieland Jazz, etc. every 1st, 3rd and 5th Sunday of the month from 9am to noon on www.womr.org,  Their emphasis is on melody and traditional harmonies, whether played by original artists such as Louis Armstrong and Django Reinhardt or The New Black Eagle Jazz Band or Vince Giordano.  They play older popular hits, boogie-woogie, ragtime and swing; music from the heart and soul of New Orleans to the inventive West Coast masters Gerry Mulligan and Paul Desmond.

They enjoyed meeting and having conversations with the musicians.  Join Henry and Jane on  www.womr.org  for a fun filled three hours’ Jazz Brunch on Sunday mornings — you’ll have a hard time sitting still.

 The Blue Horizon continued with Memphis Blues, Steve using wire brushes on top hat and choke cymbal.  Great front line, backed by guitar, with drum and tuba playing closely in sync.

Stan playing soprano sax next toopen case with BHJB flyer on it

Stan McDonald, leader of the Blue Horizon Jazz Band

 

 

Stan took first chorus on soprano sax for Rose of The Rio Grand, with tuba playing every 4/4 beat. Extraordinary!

 

 

 

Jack Soref thrilled the crowd with his mastery on Old Fashioned Love, followed by fantastic trumpet and trombone solos with Gagnon’s tuba carrying dialogue/counterpoint, and Steve tapping upside down on bass drum.
Steve started Lotus Blossom with a four bar rhythm intro, followed by intricate ensemble by the band, and Stan taking the vocal.  He closed it with a sultry cadenza on soprano sax.

Kafalas is a fine trombonist

John Kafalas swings on trombone

 

 

 

Lover Come Back to Me emphasized Kefala’s supple fingers on trombone.  He was backed by Taddeo using splash cymbal for emphasis.

Jack on guitar

Gypsy Jazz guitarist Jack Soref plays all genres of Jazz

 

 

 

 

Jack was featured on I Can’t Give You Anything But Love  displaying his fantastic energy, chromatic ornamentation.   Finally, in a Trio with only drum and tuba, he let loose in a lush arrangement of Django Rhinehart’s Minor Swing. (Jack lived in Paris for half a year and had the honor of jamming with the old masters like Boulou Ferré and Romanian violin maestro Florin Niculescu.)

 

Mike grimacing as he pushes out notes on trumpet

Mike Peipman, from Australia

 

 

Mike Peipman was featured on Dardanella, playing hot trumpet with passionate intensity.  We are so lucky to have him here!  (Thank you, Australia!)  He’s been recruited by many local bands.

 

 

 

Stan McDonald took the first 32 bars with guitar back-up on Bechet’s Si Tu Vois Ma Mere with the band playing mellifluously behind him.

Steve Taddo beaming, on his antique Swingland drum set

Steve Taddeo on his antique 1939 Slingerland drum set

 

 

Taddeo’s drum beats kicked off Swing That Music, pushing the band into their free-wheeling jazz, flourishing and intensifying into a hot barn burner!

Steve exuded energy all evening, while not setting the dynamic level too loud.  He was great!

That should have concluded the evening, but there was still time left.

 

 

They finished softly with What Is This Thing Called Love, dazzling trombone solo, lyrical and seemingly effortless, like the Teagarden gate, with drum cross sticking.  It was a serene ending to another evening of jazz at Primavera Ristorante.

The Blue Horizon Jazz Band will be here with more energetic, timeless Traditional Jazz on May 7th.  Hope to see you here???  Bring some friends!

Riverboat Stompers at Primavera Ristorante, March 26, 2015

7 pc Dixieland Band

Riverboat Stompers

Steve Straus clarinet/soprano sax, Neil Flewelling cornet, Frank Bachelor trombone, Jimmy Mazzy banjo, Phil Hower piano, Pierre Lemieux tuba, Richard Malcolm drums

The Riverboat Stompers are a seven-piece ensemble specializing in Traditional and Dixieland Jazz of the 20’s to 40’s. They bring an air of authenticity, and you can easily tell this is the music they cherish and have played for many years.   Jimmy Mazzy sat in on banjo and vocals, free to sing many of his unique vocals.

The others all came from a distance, driving  through a downpour for their first performance at Primavera Ristorante.  We haven’t seen them since July at the Sherborn Inn; they were well received.

With tight ensemble they began Dark Town Strutter’s Ball, Honeysuckle Rose; heartfelt solos.  Ain’t She Sweet, Pierre’s tuba was bouncing off the back wall; Rich Malcolm stood up from the drums, just tapping two sticks together!

Jim singing and playing banjo

Jimmy Mazzy

 

Jimmy’s soul-warming vocals are encouraged; he really gets his head around the lyrics.  Lulu’s Back in Town, All of Me.  Phil’s piano offered just the right chords behind him, as well as all the soloists.

 

 

 

 

Steve Straus on soprano sax with Jimmy behind him

Steve Straus on soprano sax

 

 

Lazy River started nice and slow, Frank’s trombone playing with passion.  Then pushed by Steve’s soprano sax, the band surged upbeat.

 

 

 

Neil on muted cornet

Neil Fleweling

 

A new horn in the band, Neil Flewelling has admirable technique with solos that move lightly from phrase to phrase.  Neil has been playing professionally for over 50 years and teaching music for over 40 years in the Haverhill school systems.  He fits right in with this band.

 

 

They played serious Dixieland Jazz, no shtick.  Steve did ask the audience to “name this tune.” Hint: A Traditional Jazz barn-burner, based on a Sousa March.  Nobody remembered Fidgety Feet. (We’re all getting old!)  Straus on clarinet, hot cornet and tuba duet.

Pierre on tuba in front of fireplace

Pierre Lemieux

 

South, fine tuba.  Generally the tuba plays almost exactly the same bass lines.  Pierre Lemieux’s tuba  plays some melody and counterpoint.  He is heard all over the North Shore, leads his own group “The Mill City Jazz Band” and is a regular in “Jim Kilroy’s Jambalaya Jazz Band” and “The Jailhouse Seven”.

 

 

 

I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Jim vocal, sophisticated exchange between cornet and sweet soprano sax.  Tuba solo was backed by Rich Malcolm, standing, just clapping his hands for beat.  The drummer is the heartbeat of Traditional Jazz.    Rich may teach at Berklee, but he’s a knowledgeable Dixieland Jazz drummer and keeps a sensitive beat using anything at his disposal.  Baby Face was wild, another Jimmy vocal, with Malcolm backing him by tapping on bell and rim of the bass drum.

Riverboat Ramblers RhythmAnother New Orleans Chestnut, Bourbon St. Parade –“ Let’s fly down or drive down, to New Orleans.”  Not a bad idea.  They’re looking for volunteers for the upcoming French Quarter Festival on the 9th.

A 1922 original, Limehouse Blues, was recorded in 1922 by Red Nichols and his Five Pennies. Fancy drum solo, Rich twirling/spinning sticks in his hands, with the band playing behind him in low stop time.  My Gal Sal, soft clarinet opener, with tuba softly mirroring his notes.

Phil’s piano took the intro to a lively Putting on the Ritz. Phil Hower’s heroes are the great stride pianists of the 1920’s and ’30’s, and he does his utmost to emulate their technique and style. His strongly rhythmic left hand has enabled Phil to be continuously on the roster of trad jazz bands.

Exactly Like You, In My Honey’s Loving Arms, lyrical, hugging the melody, Jim singing.

Steve asked if we would like to hear a Gershwin tune?  Why not?   Piano took the intro to Lady Be Good, Neil’s cornet sneaked in a bit of Stumbling.   (They can make Trad Jazz out of any melody.)   The audience was paying attention, feeding off the band’s energy.

clarinet, cornet, trombone, also shows banjo, drum & tuba

Front Line

They closed with a zesty delivery of Kid Ory’s 1926 Muscat Ramble. It was excellent Dixieland Jazz from beginning to end.  We hope to hear them again, with better weather.  They do have a CD for purchase – check out their new website created by Frank Batchelor at http://www.riverboatstompers.com/.