Billy Novick’s Blue Syncopators at Amazing Things Art Center March 9, 2018

7 pc band and vocalist

Blue Syncopators with Gabriela Martina

videos by Barbara Golder

Mike Peipman trumpet, John Clark and Billy Novick reeds, Dan Fox trombone, Ross Petot piano, Stu Gunn string bass and tuba, Bill Reynolds drums, Gabriela Martina vocals

“Gatsby” is a remarkable event, an evening of explosive, ticklish and swooning live Jazz.  It was brought to life in February 2010 with the Washington DC ballet by Septime Webre.  The score consisted of classics from the 1920’s, Ellington, Louis, Bix, as well as some music Billy wrote just for the ballet.

Timing is very important for the ballet, so this Jazz was carefully written, and not improvised like jazz.  Billy opened the Gatsby book with That’s a Plenty, narrating the story.

The ballet  begins with What’ll I Do?, a silky, melodic waltz, with Billy on soft, low register clarinet, and Ross’s haunting and elegant piano, then kicks it up with a flaming hot At The Jazz Band Ball.

The story enfolds, the rich and influential Gatsby falls in love with the very rich, the very elegant, and the very married Daisy.

An outstanding vocalist with a sense of phrasing that creates many moods, Garbriela scats Creole Love Call.

Garbriela and Billy’s poignant back-and-forth scatting on Wild Man Blues characterizes a touching,  emotional  telephone conversation between the two lovers.

Dance of the Ashes is remarkable, Garbriela  scats in her own effervescent style, while the whole band responds as one.

He May Be Your Man, But He Comes To See Me Sometimes.

Duke’s East St. Louis Toodle-oo features Mike Peipman’s fiery trumpet, with fine backing by Stu Gunn on string bass.

In Billy’s composition, Manhattan Thoroughfare, the instruments cunningly reproduce the haphazard cacophony of a busy New York thoroughfare.   In a tennis match scene, Billy’s drumming replicates the sound of tennis balls being batted back and forth.  Brilliant.

trumpet with drummer in background

Mike Peipman

 

A scene where a couple are dining at the Waldorf was portrayed by  Broadway Tango, with Mike on muted trumpet, backed by Ross’s supple fingers on piano and Stu on that massive B & S German tuba.

 

 

To fill in a gap in the action where 20 ballet dancers need to change from white into red tap shoes, Billy wrote Maids to Order.   Yellow Dog Blues and the Charleston recall some wild parties that were held in Myrtle’s apartment and Gatsby’s mansion.

two clarinets and double bass

John Clark, Stu Gunn, Billy Novick

In Tight Like That, Billy and John are both featured on alto sax, giving this small group a very big band sound!  John Clark had four of his instruments with him – clarinet, alto, tenor and bari sax. He played the the hefty baritone while he was following the score on The Sheik of Araby.

Ross off- beside the stage playing piano

Ross Petot

 

They did a very soft reprise of the Charleston, Billy on clarinet, with fine backing by Ross on piano.  Ross is quick and steadfast, with embellishments behind every solo

 

 

Billy Novick needed a wartime tune for a scene where somebody goes into the army, but had difficulties finding a recording of an American World War I march. Diligent probing paid off when he discovered a tune from an old vintage phonograph, We’re All Going Calling on the Kaiser.   (We’re going to make him wiser.)  He wrote a Sofa Dance and Pocket Dance, especially for the dancers.

In a lovely rendition of the heartrending What’ll I Do, Garbriela maintained a high range throughout the whole song, finishing the last verse in a  sultry, low voice.

She ignited the room with sassy and sensuous hinting of carnal content in Bessie Smith’s Put a Little Sugar in My Bowl!

Skip Dat Pop Dat represents the breakout of a fight in the city.   Trombonist Dan Fox took a great plunger solo on Exotique, which epitomized the scene where Daisy is killed by a hit and run driver and George is filled with grief and sorrow.  He suspects Gatsby.

Bill Reynolds has the final scene, the most dramatic moment in the ballet, where George is stalking Gatsby, his anger building with the drumming. The drum is the sole instrument in this whole ballet scene.  He finds him swimming in the pool; then comes the final single drum beat – the gun shot.

The ballet closes  with Billy Novick on clarinet and Ross piano, for a brief reprise, a tragic waltz, What’ll I Do.

Billy took the Blue Syncopators to San Diego the beginning of April to conduct and perform (for the 40th time!) his Great Gatsby score with the California Ballet.  Stay tuned – they will be back at the Homegrown Coffeehouse in Needham, MA on June 2nd.

New Black Eagle Jazz Band at Ken’s Steak House

7-pc real Trad Jazz Band

New Black Eagle Jazz Band at Ken’s Steak House, November 22, 2015

Tony Pringle cornet/vocals, Billy Novick reeds, Stan Vincent trombone, Peter Bullis banjo, Moishe Feldman piano, Jim Gutmann string bass, Bill Reynolds drums.

by Peter Gerler and Marce

November 22, 2015, Framingham, MA. The New Black Eagle Jazz Band brought their romping classic New Orleans Jazz to Ken’s Steak House and were greeted by a colony of loyal fans. They came from all over—New York, Connecticut, even London—including many from the former Sticky Wicket. Marilyn Charkins, present in the house, was in her 20’s when she first heard the NBEJB at the Wicket.  Elizabeth Mazza sold CDs at the breaks.

Ruth Schwab was there, driven by Joe Grassia. Ruth’s husband Walter created the first Black Eagle CD in their cellar. The Bob Chicoine family was here celebrating Bob’s birthday–his fervent wish. Artist Joe Mathieu accompanied them; he created our logo and has illustrated many Jazz CD covers. This band has faithful, steadfast friends.

Guttmann bowing bass

Jim Guttmann excellent bowing string bass

 

 

 

 

They started the set with a prescient When I Grow Too Old To Dream, then Special Delivery Blues, Jim bowing bass for the first time of many.

 

 

 

Tony on muted cornet

Tony Pringle

 

Of Jelly Roll Morton’s Froggie More Blues, Tony Pringle said the title was supposedly taken from a contortionist who did frog imitations. (On the other hand, there is a corner of Joe “King” Oliver’s hometown, Donaldsonville, LA, known as “Froggie Mo’”) Pringle played lovely muted cornet (as did Oliver), underscored by rollicking piano and rhythm from Feldman,  Pameijer, Guttman, and Reynolds.

 

 

 

On Roaming, Billy Novick rendered some great alto sax. The tune was recorded by Luis Russell’s Band in 1930, with Henry “Red” Allen on vocal.

Stan playing passionate trombone

Stan Vincent

 

 

 

Stan’s trombone was featured on Ain’t Misbehaving, along with a Pringle/Feldman muted cornet/piano duet. Guttman and Reynolds followed, laying down fine bowing against soft brushes.

 

 

Following Cole Porter’s It’s All Right With Me, the band rolled out Paul Barbarin’s New Orleans chestnut Bourbon St. Parade. Second liners with parasols were nowhere in sight. We’ll have to fix that!

On Sam Morgan’s Bogalusa Strut, Novick played dance-step angulations, his solo echoing the original from Morgan’s 1927 New Orleans recording. Moishe’s piano threw gossamer over the heat.
 Morgan’s band was first in New Orleans to record spirituals in jazz time—a marker, since the black church was a crucible for swing.

This band is one of the few that still plays authentic traditional jazz as it was played in 20s and 30s New Orleans.  Leader Tony Pringle is adamant that this beat be maintained, which is what these people come to hear – tight ensemble and challenging New Orleans polyphony.

Peter on banjo, mouth open, still wearing his red sox

Peter Bullis, original member since 1971

 

The band has just begun its 45th year.  The original members, still with the band since 1971, are Tony Pringle, cornet and leader; Peter Bullis (still wearing red socks), banjo and manager; and Stan Vincent, trombone.

Bill Reynolds started subbing on drums when Pameijer moved to Connecticut, but Pam pops back in for special occasions.  Billy Novick arrived in 1986 and has had a big influence on the band.

 

 

Moishe, wearing gamulka, at piano

Moishe (Michael) Feldman

 

 

Sitting in were Jim Guttman on string bass – he plays regularly with Novick at Gloucester’s Franklin Cafe –and pianist Moishe Feldman. Moishe revels in being part of it, his hands evoking soft riffs and touches, giving distance to the soloists. It’s a perfect, conversational alliance.

 

 

The last set was a short one. On Ellington’s Rent Party Blues from 1929, Billy’s alto sax echoed Johnny Hodges’ lyricism, while Stan’s trombone evoked a New York City nightscape. Swaying at the keyboard, Moishe answered the band’s every move.

Bill with drum stick raised over snare drum

Bill Reynolds

 

They closed with a fine solo by Bill Reynolds—one of New England’s best trad drummers–on the barn-burning Weary Blues. The Black Eagles have always burned that prairie fire—no different here. The tune symbolizes the New Orleans polyphony.  A 1978 recording has the Louis Nelson Band with Butch Thompson, Sammy Rimmington, and  Danny Barker, all of whom have played with the Black Eagles at one time or another.

Danny Barker, along with Tommy Sancton, were the last guests to play at the Sticky Wicket – it closed the next day, November 1990.  But the New Black Eagle Jazz Band continues with concerts all over the country, and the support of faithful fans.

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

Billy Novick clarinet, Guy Van Duser guitar, September 2, 2014

Billy smiling over Guy's shoulder

Billy Novick and Guy Van Duser

Billy Novick and Guy Van Duser were featured at the ongoing Tuesday Jazz Series at Sherborn Inn on September 2nd.

Billy NovickAbout Billy:  Billy moved to Boston from New York and attended Berklee College of Music for a year, met some musicians, and fell into the local ’70s music scene, playing in various bands.  While rehearsing for a dance performance in 1976, Novick was introduced to the innovative guitarist Guy Van Duser, and the two began a collaboration that continues to flourish.  In 1986 Novick became reeds player for the New Black Eagles Jazz Band.  He has also done considerable composing and arranging. “When I was a kid I wanted to be a composer even more than a musician.”  Billy wrote New Orleans Farewell.

A Studio Musician, Billy has been featured on more than 250 recordings as a sideman or arranger for other artists. He’s also written and played background music for commercials – you’ve probably heard him on TV or Radio.  He received worldwide recognition for his score of The Great Gatsby with the Washington Ballet at the Kennedy Center.  (They practiced on us at the Sherborn Inn.)

The delights of tonight’s performance were many, both are true artists and great story tellers.  They took off with a roaring Royal Garden Blues, followed by a fluid, sweet Embraceable You.   They tested the audience on a number they played when they first came together 30+ years ago, both singing and harmonizing on Ready For The River.  Sweet! Muscat Ramble, James P Johnson’s Love; a Scott Joplin Rag, Easy Winner, is easy on piano, but difficult on guitar. Not for Van Duser.

Victor Young’s Indian Summer. They faked their way through some Mariachi before moving back to our kind of music, a second line dirge played at New Orleans Funerals – Sing On.  Fats Waller’s Jitterbug Waltz.

St. Louis Tickle came from 1906 World’s Fair and then became a Dixieland Tune. Billy explained that Midnight in Moscow was originally meant to be Nightime in Leningrad, but The Soviet Ministry of Culture, one of the most important government offices in the Soviet Union, insisted it become Evening in Moscow.  They changed the lyrics and the version.  The British Jazz group, Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen had a hit with the song in 1961 under the title Midnight in Moscow. And there you have it!

Guitar verse and melody on Stardust were breathtaking!
Guy Van Duser

About Guy: We wondered why Guy wraps his fingers completely around the neck of his guitar; it’s because his fingers play both chords (down) and melody (up) at the same time.  He was recovering from a cut on his index finger on right hand. We’re thankful he was here, and that it wasn’t his thumb! He has practically invented a finger-picked guitar style, closer to jazz piano than guitar.

He explains it at Berklee, where he is a Professor in the Guitar Department: “I’m kind of the oddball. I’m here because a lot of people are curious about this technique, finger style. I show them how to take melodies on the guitar—solo line melodies—and play those melodies while playing the chords at the same time. You’re trying to get two layers going. You’re using mostly your thumb just to play the lower notes of the chord while the fingers pick out the melody notes on the upper strings. The fingerpickers do that in such a way that the thumb is alternating back and forth on the string, being the rhythm as well. So I’m not just playing the chord under the note, I’m recreating a beat: boom-chick, boom-chick, boom-chick.”

They played tunes we never heard of, and others recorded by many bands. S’Posing was recorded by Fats, Miles Davis, Sonny Stitt.  Billy sings it! “Mine” was the only popular song to come out of the Gershwin show ‘Let ‘Em Eat Cake.’   Scott Joplin’s Spicey Cake Walk. was a rouser!

1931  – I’ll See You In My Dreams.  Guy explained that nobody sets it up with the lyrics on the verse like Ukulele Ike  (Cliff Edwards) did.  He was the featured voice for Jiminy Cricket for all those Disney years.  Guy did it singing the lyrics on the verse just as Ike did.  Effective.

Isham Jones’ Wabash Blues sold two million records in 1921, cementing Jones’s niche in the musical pantheon of the early Twenties.  Billy and Guy closed this evening with their own captivating version.

This was a refreshing and informative evening with Billy Novick and Guy Van Duser. Billy Novick’s Blue Syncopators will perform again with the Sacramento Ballet Company in California October 23-26.  http://www.sacballet.org/  Tickets are available.

Logo for the program

The Great Gatsby with Billy Novick’s Blue Syncopators

Guy Van Duser will be playing solo guitar September 13th 8pm at Coffeehouse off the Square, Old Ship Church, Hingham, MA

You can find where Billy and Guy will be teaming up at http://www.billynovick.com/.                  marce@nejazz.com

New Black Eagle Jazz Band luncheon at Sherborn Inn, October 23, 2013

New Black Eagle Jazz Band

New Black Eagle Jazz Band

Tony Pringle leader/cornet, Stan Vincent trombone, Billy Novick clarinet and alto sax, Bob Pilsbury piano, Peter Bullis banjo and red sox, Jess Williams string bass, Bill Reynolds drums

Starting into their 43rd   year this month, the NBEJB still has it – the Traditional Jazz that draws crowds.   Everybody was elbow-to-elbow at the Sherborn Inn’s Wednesday luncheon, just like the old days at the Sticky Wicket.  People were bussed in from Senior Centers and enjoyed the Inn’s fine food and especially the music.  There were still some Stickey Wicket ‘regulars’ here, loyal fans, who have followed the band for all those years.

large crowd in back, couple at table for 2 in front, half of the crowd at the Sherborn Inn

Part of crowd at the Sherborn Inn’s luncheon

The Band played many of their old chestnuts, Tony singing When Your Hair Has Turned To Silver.  I’m Travellin’ –  Jesse Williams is the newest member; he injects new vigor into the band. (He was probably beginning first grade when the band started at the Wicket.)  Louisian-I-A, Tony on vocal.

Scott Joplin’s 1920’s ragtime by Arthur Marshall – Kinklets, is actually a pre-jazz number published in 1906. They didn’t improvise but Pilsbury played it as a fine ragtime number, Jesse bowing the bass.

Earl Hines 1930’s Rosetta. Together.  Duke’s East St. Louis Toodle-oo, Billy on super sax. Mahogany Hall Stomp. 

Jesse slapping bass, Tony on cornet

Jesse Williams slapping bass

Billy’s incomparable tenor sax was featured with the Rhythm Boys on Body and Soul.   Peter’s plink, plink, plink, banjo maintaining the Trad Jazz Beat, and still wearing his red sox.  (The Boston Red Sox won the World Series Pennant Race a week later!)

Billy and rhythm section, Peter wearing his red sox

Billy featured on Body and Soul. Note Peter’s red sox.

Stan Vincent on Trombone

Stan Vincent solo on Old Rugged Cross

 

 

Jesse’s string bass echoed Peter’s banjo on Old Rugged Cross.  Bill’s soft, skillful drum roll backed Stan’s fine tailgate trombone solo.

 

 

They finished with another Sticky Wicket chestnut – Panama.  Two hours went by too quickly!!  The crowd loved every minute of it!

The Eagles will be back here at 7pm on their usual 2nd Thursday of the month, November 14th.  Check out their site and available CDs at http://blackeagles.com/.

The Sherborn Inn lunches are held on the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month, 11:30am-2pm.  Good deal: Great music, 3-course luncheon, tax and gratuity, complete for only $25.