Jazz Tuber Trio Plus Four at the Sherborn Inn, November 12, 2013

Piano, Banjo, Vocalist, Tuba, Drum, Ten Sax, Trombone

Jazz Tuber Trio Eli, Jimmy and Ted, Plus Bob Winter piano, Rebecca Sullivan vocals, Jeff Guthery drums, Herb Gardner trombone, Carolyn Newberger washboard

It certainly was an exciting evening at the Sherborn In on November 12, with Boston Pops’ pianist Bob Winter joining The Jazz Tuber Trio.  Bob Winter has been the pianist for the Boston Pops for over 30 years, but also has extensive experience in clubs, television, radio, and theaters, including performances with Henry Mancini, Teddy Wilson, Buddy DeFranco, Mel Torme, Luciano Pavarotti, Eddie Daniels, Stan Getz, Cleo Laine/John Dankworth, and Airto Moreira.

Bob Winter on piano

Bob Winter

Bob set the mood with piano intro to an upbeat Found a New Baby, just as New York’s  Herb Gardner walked in carrying his trombone case.  Surprise!

Herb Gardner moved to NY in 1963 and  began touring with Wild Bill Davison, Kenny Davern and Dick Wellstood, was a regular at the Metropole, Jimmy Ryan’s and Eddie Condon’s nightclubs. He’s appeared with virtually all of the classic jazz musicians in the New York City.  He just walked in, took out the trombone, sat down and started playing.

Ted on clarinet, Herb trombone

Ted Casher and Herb Gardner

 

 

We love this marvelous hot jazz.  You never know what’s going to happen next!  Instrumental titans playing delectable hot jazz!

No holds barred – combustible combinations of piano, tenor sax, trombone, Eli’s tuba maintaining a deep underpinning bassline, Jeff Guthery laying down the beat with brushes.

Jeff with brushes on snare drum

Jeff Guthery mostly uses brushes

Eli introduced vocalist Rebecca Sullivan, an accomplished vocalist and teacher, with a three-octave range.  She’s learning something new at the New England Conservatory of Music, with Eli Newberger assigned as her mentor.  She’s an emotionally powerful performer, singing very slowly, which takes considerable skill.

Squeeze Me.

Eli called for a fast tune, Bob responded with a lovely solo on Ida.  (Here he is at the Tavern Club in Boston 2010.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtAF92TCxtE)

Rebecca singing, Jimmy on banjo

Rebecca makes the songs personal and passionate.

 

 

Silky-smooth Satin Doll, Rebecca sings it in her own style, stretching out words and syllables, adding unexpected emphasis, going from low to high when least expected.

 

 

In a more romantic tune, a lovely Someone To Watch Over Me.  We were mesmerized and only caught a partial video.

I can’t Give You Anything But Love, Rebecca almost talking the vocal, backed by Winter on piano.  Eli said “He plays in unconventional keys to support her exceptional range, with an amazing lower register.”

The unpredictable reed-man, Ted Casher began the Ukrainian Ochi Chyornye with tenor sax in Klezmer style,  the band slipping in with Dark Eyes.  Eli’s turbo charged bass riffs gave it energy and drive.

Rebecca, with Jimmy and Eli

Rebecca, with Jimmy and Eli

 

 

Mean to Me,  Rebecca feeling the song.

 

 

 

Jimmy took off in his own unique single-string banjo with Fidgety Feet, Jeff backing him with brushes on snare drum.  Fans had fidgety feet!  Winter finished the last chorus with multi-layered intense piano.

Carolyn Newberger had spent most of the evening listening to the music while drawing  portraits of members of the band.  Carolyn’s Portraits.
(Her works “In The Moment” had a Showing last month at The Harriet Tubman Gallery Boston.)

She sat in on washboard for Louis Armstrong’s 1936 Don’t Forget To Mess Around When You’re Dancing the Charleston, Jimmy on vocal.  The washboard began to come apart, but Carolyn maintained her cool, set it on the floor, holding the instrument vertical and in one piece, never missed a note playing spoons through the whole tune.  Bravo!

Caroline Newberger, resourceful washboard maven, joins the rhythm boys

Carolyn Newberger, resourceful washboard maven, adds rhythm

Eli plays tuba like a solo instrument with energy and drive on Perdido, supported by Jeff’s brushes, the ensemble connecting in breathtaking tempo, led by clarinet and tenor sax.   Listeners were dancing in their seats!

They closed with romping polyphonic ensemble on Royal Garden Blues, Jimmy scatting, each instrument taking a final solo.

Great fun!   And we’ll be doing it all again on December 3rd, with the addition of another titan, Boston’s famous Bo Winiker on trumpet!  See you there?

Jazz Tuber Sextet at the Sherborn Inn

 

Eli on piano, clarinet, banjo, string bass, and drums

Jazz Tuber Sextet

Jazz Tuber Sextet at the Sherborn Inn,  October 1, 2013

Ted Casher clarinet, tenor and soprano sax, Jim Mazzy banjo/vocals, Eli Newberger piano/tuba, Rebecca Sullivan vocals, Andrew Schiller string bass, Jeff Guthery drums, Carolyn Newberger washboard

banjo and double bass

Jimmy Mazzy and Andrew Schiller

 

 

 

The Jazz Tuber Trio returned to the Sherborn Inn with three new members.  Rebecca and Jeff have been with us before, but this was bassist Andrew Schiller’s initiation to the Inn.

 

 

 

The Tuber Trio kicked it off with a rousing HOT Dr. Jazz.

Eli on tuba, Ted clarine, Jimmy banjo

Jazz Tuber Trio

Then Eli moved to piano for Bessie Smith’s Put It Right Here, backing Jimmy’s vocal.
Eli loves to play both tuba and piano.  His absolute rapture in making music is obvious, and he shares that joy with his audience.

Eli smiling, playing piano

Eli Newberger

Rebecca is a grad student at the New England Conservatory in jazz voice and contemporary improvisation, Andrew is also at NEC, Jeff is at Berklee College of Music.   Eli let them loose with a sauntering swing on Perdido, with Rebecca’s refreshing vocal, and Andrew’s relentless pulse on string bass.

Rebecca Sullivan, red dress, gray sweater

Rebecca Sullivan

 

Somewhere Over The Rainbow – Eli on piano backing Rebecca.  She has a unique approach to the music, slowly nurturing, passionately stretching it out, reaching deep into the soul of the song.  Summertime –   Marvelous!

 

Casher on tenor sax

Ted Casher

 

Back Home Again in Indiana, Andrew on bass, Eli was back on tuba, trading 4s with Jimmy’s scatting.  Ted’s soprano sax backed Rebecca on It Had To Be You.  On Satin Doll he moved to tenor sax enlivening Jimmy’s singing and scatting.  His moaning tenor backed Rebecca’s sentiment on Our Love is Here To Stay.

 

 

Jeff Guthery on drums

Jeff Guthery

 

 

The Tuber Trio with Andrew and Jeff went wild on Birth of the Blues.  Never gets dull!  Tenor sax took a whirling intro into I Got Rythm, with Eli on piano, Andrew bass, Rebecca vocal, featuring Jeff Guthery’s dynamic drumming.

And always in the wings, Carolyn Newberger came up front for her special Coney Island Washboard Roundolay – with the washboard that has been resurrected from the attic after 50 years.  Retirement has its rewards!  Jeff summed it up with one word: “Smokin!”

Carolyn now has more time to devote to her artwork, recently back from her showing, In The Moment, at the Harriet Tubman Gallery in Boston.  http://www.carolynnewberger.com/

The evening closed with Mean To Me, with Eli back on piano, Jimmy banjo, Ted on soprano sax, Andrew string bass, Jeff swirling brushes on snare drum.

The Jazz Tuber Trio will return November 12th with more surprises.  See you there?

Jazz Tuber Trio + 3

At the Sherborn Inn, April 2, 2013

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The Trio, with Ted Casher on reeds, Jim Mazzy banjo/vocals, Eli Newberger tuba/piano, have been joined by a fine drummer, Jeff Guthery drums, for some really Hot Jazz.

The biggest surprise this evening was Rebecca Sullivan,  a grad student at the New England Conservatory in jazz voice and contemporary improvisation.  Eli is one of the NEC board members who’s participated in the mentoring program since its inception in the mid-1990’s.  She and Eli were “assigned” there to one another in the Fall as “mentor” and “mentee.”

Although Eli had heard that Rebecca was great, he had no idea how great.  “Did she ever bless us with her swinging and moving interpretations of this familiar material?” Eli. 

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She certainly did.  She’s a natural, charming entertainer, with passion for the music.

She began with Gershwin’s Our Love is Here to Stay, and Sunny Side of the Street.

I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Somewhere Over The Rainbow with her own unique version of the  verse.

She instantly captivated the audience with her phrasing and tempo, drawn out pearly notes.

My Old Flame

I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Baby

The Tubers pulled out an old war horse, That’s A Plenty. They deeply listen to each other and to the music itself, making it energetic and exciting.

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The inexhaustible Ted Casher began Bei Mir Bis Du Schoen mixing klezmer clarinet and swing, with Eli backing on tuba and Jeff wild on drums.  He introduced Just Squeeze Me (But Don’t Tease Me) on tenor sax, with Rebecca enjoying some  high spirited scatting with Ted.

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In complete control of the band, Ted is master on clarinet, tenor sax, soprano sax and even  a dynamic vocal of  Charlie on the MTA.

Now you citizens of Boston,
Don’t you think it’s a scandal
That the people have to pay and pay
Vote for Tom Menino
Fight the fare increase!
Get poor Charlie off the MTA.

You will hear him playing all over the six New England States, thanks to his most avid supporter, his wife Vel. (Thank you, Vel!)

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We’ve been listening to Jimmy Mazzy since the early 70’s when he was playing with the New Cabaret Jazz Band at Billy Mitchell’s Postime in Nantasket Beach.  He hasn’t changed a bit, and we’re still just as fascinated with his banjo and vocals: an exuberant Big Bad Bill (Is Sweet William Now), Just a Gigolo sounding like a soft love song, Jeff backing him on drums with  nice soft brushes. Put it Right Here (Or keep it out there) Eli playing barely detectable low notes on tuba.

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Jeff Guthery first played here last January with the Jazz Tuber Trio.  Jeff is enrolled in Berklee College of Music.

With rhythmic pattern and tempo, and whispering brush strokes and accents, he plays HOT Traditional Jazz as if he were born to it!

Eli has an enormous commitment to two professions, preventing child abuse, and music.  He is world famous for his tuba,  but also gets very emotional playing the piano!

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Jimmy Mazzy and Eli have been friends for close to 40 years. Weekend seminars on abuse at Children’s Hospital conducted by Eli and Carolyn Newberger in the early 70’s had intermittent breaks of tuba and banjo demonstrating abuse in the songs of the 20’s and 30’s.

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Carolyn Newberger was playing washboard back in the mid-1960’s when she and Eli were Resident Directors at Yale’s International House for foreign students. They started a Friday Night Café, where musicians could Jam, and she played washboard.

Eli and Carolyn, who is an artist (see drawings below), child psychologist, and musician, have succeeded in sharing both their personal and professional lives, working together on several projects and often sharing the stage.

On their 50th anniversary,  Eli pulled the washboard out of the attic, and Carolyn is back to being an enthusiastic player.  With Carolyn on washboard, Ted on soprano sax, Jimmy banjo and scatting, all backed by tuba, we heard a vibrant  rendition of Coney Island Washboard Roundelay.

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This evening was filled with fast moving, energetic hot jazz. It was also  an intimate, informal musical experience with friendship and camaraderie between the musicians and their followers and supporters.  We’ll all be back.

The Jazz Tuber Trio, with Rebecca Sullivan and Jeff Guthery, will return to the Sherborn Inn on August 6, October 1, November 12, and December 3rd.  Mark your calendars!

And remember the name – Rebecca Sullivan. You’ll be hearing more from her!  http://www.rebeccasullivanjazz.com

Jazz Tuber Trio At Massachusetts College of Art reception for Sol Schwartz’s Connection in Line

Book Drawing Music:  The Tanglewood Sketchbooks

“Live musical performance is ephemeral. It often feels as ephemeral as life itself….In his drawings of musicians, Sol Schwartz has achieved something amazing and marvelous of his own: he has over and over again described the moments of intense concentration, of communication, of effort, and of unselfconsciousness that we, as performers, experience.”              -Joel Smirnoff, Juilliard String Quartet

Eli Newberger and the Jazz Tuber Trio provided the music for the opening reception forConnections in Line: The Art of Sol Schwartz  at Massachusetts College of Art and Design, 621 Huntington Ave. Boston MA.

From August 27-October 5th the College is  presenting Sol Schwartz’s original drawings and sketchbooks, along with the creatively designed large scale prints that reflect his  enthusiastic love of color, graphic art, and digital technology.

Sol Schwartz must draw – any piece of blank paper challenges him. He uses whatever paper is handy, as well as any medium: coffee, tea, soy sauce.

Sol tells about Tanglewood in his own words.

Music Portfolio

In the 80’s he discovered computers, and has since been experimenting with computer art.

The Tuber Trio played in front of the portrait that Sol did of them at Lilac Park on July 28th. It is also featured in the centerfold of his book, Connections in Line, The Art of Sol Schwartz.

Actually this vibrant and lively trio has become a quintet, with Eli Newberger tuba, Jimmy Mazzy banjo, Ted Casher tenor, soprano sax and clarinet, Carolyn Newberger washboard, Carrie Mazzy vocals.

We hear Jimmy and Ted often, but it was real pleasure to have Eli back! They kicked off with a hard-driving Chinatown, Be Sure It’s True When You Say I Love You.  Ted let himself go on tenor sax for Melancholy Baby, Hello Dolly.

Carolyn Newberger joined them for Coney Island Washboard Roundelay, and Irish Black Bottom using spoons instead of thimbles.  She obviously enjoys being part of the group.

Carolyn was playing washboard back in the mid-1960’s when she and Eli were Resident Directors at Yale’s International House for foreign students. They started a Friday Night Café, where musicians could Jam. You might recognize some of the musicians, Sammy Rimmington and Barry Martyn. Peter Ecklund, Mark Finks, Tommy Sancton. Eli and Carolyn left for the Peace Corps in 1967 and the washboard was packed away. Eli retrieved it near their 50th wedding anniversary, and here she is, playing enthusiastically again – “It was just like riding a bike!”

 

YouTube: Carolyn playing Coney Island Washboard Roundelay” with the Tuber Trio at Lilac Park:

Carrie Mazzy joined the group for a couple of fine vocals, a nice ballad Nobody But My Baby, with  Jimmy joining in scatting, and a Dixieland tune, Beale St. Poppa.

The Tuber Trio continued with Wabash Blues, and Carolyn joined them on washboard for the finale, a bit of Klezmer with Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen.

The Design Media Center is the largest Private contemporary art center in New England accessible to the Community, providing 75% financial aid.

New residence hall designed by a diverse group of entities with a ‘can do’ optimism, built for 1st and 2nd year Students on Huntington Avenue.

They call it “The Tree House”.

The reception was attended by many supporters of the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, including contributors of the Bakalar and Paine Galleries.  It was held in The Tower – on the 11th floor.

Sunset on Boston – from the 11th floor of the College.

It was a fantastic evening!  But there was more Jazz for us the next night, when we joined the Jazz Tuber Trio at Tuesday night Jazz at the Sherborn Inn.  Never get enough of this exhilarating Trio!

Jazz Tuber Trio At the Sherborn Inn September 11, 2012

Ted, Jimmy & Eli

The Jazz Tuber Trio came about ten years ago when Eli Newberger, tuba extraordinaire, Jimmy Mazzy  banjo/vocalist, and Ted Casher, saxophone virtuoso, explored ‘the roots of jazz’ at Boston’s Flower Show.

Tonight they were joined by Carolyn Newberger washboard, and Carrie Mazzy vocals. Continue reading