Swing Times Five with Debby Larkin and Jack Senier

5-piece band and vocalist

Swing Times Five with Debby Larkin                                                                   by Marce

Happy 75th Birthday Jerry Wadness – at the Sherborn inn  August 27, 2013

Photos by Bennett Green

Jeff Hughes trumpet/flugelhorn, Dan Wiener guitar, Pete Tillotson string bass, Dave Didriksen drums, Debby Larkin vocals.  Pianist Ross Petot was taking his eldest son to college so Jack Senier filled in.  Jack is  Boston’s greatest jazz and swing pianist, a seasoned veteran.

All the tunes played this evening came from 1938, the year Jerry Wadness was born.  It was a good year – great tunes for a great guy.   Jerry and Geri Wadness are ‘regulars’ at the Sherborn Inn.  Last week, Jerry filled several CDs with tunes from 1938, complete with details of each tune, and offered them to Jeff Hughes; he made good use of them.

Jack Senier smiling at the piano

Boston’s Jack Senier           (Marce photo)

Special guest pianist Jack Senier kicked it off with Artie Shaw’s Theme Song, Back Bay Shuffle, followed by Benny Goodman’s Don’t Be That Way, Hughes on Elden Benge trumpet, the band soaring with him.  Dan Weiner’s guitar began Who Could Ask For Anything More?  Indeed!

How about charismatic  Deb Larkin singing a popular torch song of 1929, Moanin’ Low. From Young Man With a Horn, I Should Care.  Jeff moving to flugelhorn for Gershwins’ Nice Work If You Can Get It.

Jack Senier’s pearly notes and chords were featured with the rhythm boys on two tunes,  I’ll Never Be The Same, and Lullaby In Rhythm.  No wonder he’s considered one of New England’s finest pianist.  And Jack came to realize that this is an extraordinary audience – they LISTEN passionately to the music and support the musicians.

Lynn Sickle, former Rockette, now in her 80's and still beautiful.

Lynn Sickle

 

 

Bob and Lynn Sickle were here as usual, sitting next to the piano.  Debby sang Lynn’s favorite song for her,  All of Me.  Bob’s birthday was coming up, so I Put a Spell On You was dedicated to him.

 

Hughes singing, holding his trumpet

Jeff Sings “You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby”

 

The 1938 Harry Warren–Johnny Mercer tune, You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby was dedicated to Sue Lewis’s upcoming birthday with Jeff singing and playing crisp, clear trumpet.    Sue is often seen dancing on the Inn’s but fine dance floor.  Senier made the piano sing, Tillotson’s string bass trading fours with the drums.  John & Gisela Brunaccini have been married for 65 years – they skillfully glided across the dance floor all evening!

guitar and string bass

Dan Weiner and Pete Tillotson

Tenderly featured Dan Wiener on  guitar with the Rhythm Boys.    Jeff was into Count Basie’s Lester Leaps In, when Jeff Stout leaped in for fantastic two trumpet interplay.  Drummer Dave Didriksen kicked it up, driving the band.

 

Waitress Sara Green arrived with Jerry’s birthday cake, large enough to share, and we all wished Jerry a happy 75th birthday.

Young waitress Sara Green brings in Jerry's Birthday Cake

Sara brings in Jerry’s Birthday Cake

Jerry Wadness blows out the candles

Jerry Wadness blows out the candles

Myron Idelson

Comedian Myron Idelson

 

The band took a break for our favorite comedian, funny man Myron Idelson.  Myron can go on for hours telling new jokes appropriate for mixed company.   “My Mother-in-law took a trip to the Thousand Islands.”  “Why didn’t she spend a week on each?”

Deb sings, Stout plays trumpet

Deb and hubby Jeff Stout

 

Jeff Hughes played a wistful Kurt Weill September Song.

More 1938 tunes – Bunny Berigan’s I Cried For You, I Wished On The Moon, Artie Shaw’s Begin The Beguine,  Duke Ellington’s Prelude To a Kiss.

 

Deb also did Ms. Brown To You and The Things We Did Last Summer. Dakota Staton recorded a tune that everyone thought came from the 70’s – but it was Irving Berlin’s Late, Late Show.

Approaching the finale, Deb hit lilting rhythm with Billie Holiday’s What a Little Moonlight Can Do, with the two soaring trumpets.   We’ll Be Together Again – Senier and  the rhythm boys kept playing while Deb and Jeff Stout, Gail and Stan Brown hit the dance floor.  Jeff Hughes danced with Sue Lewis.   The front line returned to the stage, finishing the tune with swinging piano, flugelhorn and trumpet.

1938 was a very good year for great tunes.  Swing Times Five was happy to oblige and performed wholeheartedly for this special birthday.   Many happy returns, Jerry!  Thanks for a great evening.

 

 

Swing Times Five, Tribute to Al Vega with Deb Larkin and special guest Jack Senier, piano

a smiling Jack Senier
beautiful Debby Larkin

Jeff Hughes’ Swing Times Five lived up to its name at the Sherborn Inn on January 31st.  Pianist Al Vega had been scheduled to be here, but unfortunately, he passed away just a few months after having performed here in October with the Jeff Hughes Swingtet.  He will be sorely missed in the Greater Boston Jazz Scene!

We were fortunate to have one of New England’s most renowned pianists, Jack Senier.  Jack was happy to keep the music going.  We couldn’t possibly have had anyone better!  He made that baby grand piano sing, backed by the “Rhythm Boys,” Pete on string bass and Dave on drums, with Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea. 

Vocalist Debby Larkin, also a friend of Senier’s, was here fresh from her successful performance at Ryles.  Dan Weiner guitar, Pete Tillotson string bass, and Dave Didriksen drums completed the Quintet.  Unexpectedly, Craig Ball, arrived with his hot clarinet to make it a Sextet.  He said “I couldn’t stay away.”

Dan Weiner on guitar

Dan Weiner blew us away with Count Basie’sTopsy, backed by string bass and drums. 

Weiner and Tillotson are old friends.  They met at a jam Session in Newton around 1980-81 and then played together regularly. 

They had lost touch and were looking forward to performing together again.  The synchronization was evident in Sweet Georgia Brown.

Pete Tillotson

Craig requested I’ll Always Be In Love With You, a tune he does with his big band, The White Heat Swing Orchestra. 

Craig on clarinet with the band

Jeff on flugel horn

Jeff took out the flugelhorn for Debby’s fine vocal of You Go To My Head.

Hard Hearted Hannah featured Jeff’s singing tone on cornet, with Senier intuitively behind him, and the band just went WILD!

And Jeff played Jimmy Enright’s favorite tune for me, By The Sleepy Lagoon. Thank you!

a smiling Dave Didriksen

Time keeper Dave Didriksen was having a ball!  His whole body was swaying with the beat of In A Mellow Tone.

Debby gave a sterling performance with Slow Boat to China, Embraceable You, her parents’ favorite.  She even had me reminiscing and in tears, when she sang I’m Glad There Is You.

What a fantastic evening!!

book page with Al's signature

Al Vega  put his reminiscences in a book, The Al Vega Story.  Last October, when he played here with The Jeff Hughes Swingtet, he gave Jeff an autographed copy that Jeff will cherish forever!

“Jeff, I had a ball playing with you!” Al Vega