Harold Koch, Pianist

Harold Koch at Keyboard

Harold Koch at Keyboard

by Nick Ribush
Harold Koch was born in Manchester NH and has always lived in that area.
He started playing piano when he was 5. There was a piano at home (his mother and elder brother played) and he found that he could pick out with one finger any tune he heard. People were quite impressed with his ability and sometimes suggested he should take lessons but at that point he didn’t see the need. He found he was reasonably advanced playing out of the John W. Schaum piano book that he didn’t really need lessons.
Then one of his friends who had taken lessons played “Mary Had A Little Lamb” for Harold with a stride left hand, so he grabbed onto that to go with his one finger right hand melody picking.  Several years later, however, he took some lessons from a teacher who taught him the more advanced chords, from adding sixths, sevenths and ninths to diminished and augmented chords, which really helped his playing.
His brother used to listen to jazz on the radio, in particular the Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street on the Blue Network with Henry Levine and his Dixieland Octet and other musicians. So his brother got to like jazz and bought Harold a couple of records, one by Bunk Johnson and the other by the Lower Basin Street band. He grew to love Dixieland, but the thing he really loved was his grandmother’s phonograph. His uncles were in their twenties in the 1920s and had bought a whole bunch of Victor scrolls 78s, and Harold thought that was the living end of music. He copied the arrangements on piano as best he could. He never had any favorite pianists or looked to any pianist in particular, but would simply try to imitate the arrangements on those records.
When Harold was in 8th grade in high school a drummer friend gathered together all the kids who could play music and created a big band. The friend loved Glenn Miller charts and stuff like that, so that was the first band that Harold really played with. He couldn’t read music and didn’t have a chord book; he was just able to hear chord changes by ear for most simple tunes. For songs with more weird changes he’d have to figure the chords out but could still get there by ear.
After school he played with small bands around Manchester. In the 60s he went to work at Sanders Associates, a defense contractor in Nashua, where he became a senior electronics tech. There was a band there and Harold played with them at the Nashua Club in Nashua for ten years.
Lee with clarinet compleely relaxed leanng on gate

Lee Childs on Hi-Line Jazz Boat, Cape Cod

In 1971, a friend at Sanders who played trombone told Harold about a job that he had at the Groton Inn with a wonderful banjo player called Jimmy Mazzy and a wonderful clarinet player called Elliot “Lee” Childs. So he joined the band and played there the whole winter of 1971, which for Harold was the best music job he ever had. And that’s how he met Jimmy. He recorded some of these gigs on reel-to-reel, the tapes of which he still has.
Some time after that he lost interest in playing with the bands around Manchester and found greater satisfaction in simply playing piano at home every day.
Occasionally over the years Harold would go the Colonial Inn to hear Jimmy and sometimes sat in, but mostly he didn’t play with bands, so this gig at Trail’s End on November 22, 2015 is a bit of a departure for him and a welcome one for us who got to hear him. We’re certainly hoping for more.

 

Lee Childs Memorial

Lee Childs, sitting, holding soprano sax, and enjoying ride on Jazz Boat

Lee Childs on Jazz Boat in 2012

Memorial for Lee Childs, June 19, 2013, by Marce.

JoAnne Childs gave Fans and Friends an opportunity to say a final “Goodbye” to  Lee Childs, at the Lighthouse Inn in West Dennis, MA, a year after his sudden, unexpected death in 2012. It was a terrible  shock for all of us!

Lee performed on clarinet and saxophone somewhere on Cape Cod and the Greater Boston area, many days a week for over 40 years. Some of the musicians who played with him were here to celebrate his life. A hot buffet and passed hors d’oeuvres were served.

The main band was led by Ted Casher, tenor sax, with Phil Person trumpet, Paul Schmeling piano, Michel Lavigniac banjo, Gary Johnson drums, and Laird Bowles string bass, playing many of Lee’s favorite tunes, Mood Indigo, That’s A Plenty; several musicians sat in.

Gary Johnson, Laird Bowles, Phil Person, Paul Schmeling, Ted Casher

Gary Johnson, Laird Bowles, Phil Person, Paul Schmeling, Ted Casher

Michel on banjo

Michel Lavigniac

 

 

Michel Lavigniac performed with Lee Childs for about 35 years. He continues Lee’s Sunday Jazz Boat out of Onset, with Rick MacWilliams tuba and Paul Nossiter reeds.  Rick was here today.

 

 

 

Michel, Stu Gunn tuba, Gary Johnson drums, and John Clark reeds represented the band that Lee had for years at the Edaville Railroad. Jimmy Mazzy couldn’t be here because he’s at the Colonial Inn every Wednesday. Just a Little While To Stay Here, John Clark had to learn Riverboat Shuffle  when he subbed for Lee. Just a Closer Walk With Thee; tuba and drum drove the band on Shine.

Gary Johnson, Stu Gunn, John Clark, Michel Lavigniac

Gary Johnson, Stu Gunn, John Clark, Michel Lavigniac

Gene Blood on drums

Gene Blood

 

 

 

Gene Blood sat in on drums for When I Grow Too Old to Dream and At The Jazz Band Ball.

Barbara Nye, vocals

Barbara Nye

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Barbara Nye, a real livewire vocalist from Monday nights at the Roadhouse Cafe, came up for rousing Cabaret.

 

 

Ted Casher singing

 

 

Gary and Ted returned, with Ted singing When You’re Smiling.
Ted picked up the soprano sax, and sang The Best Things In Life Are Free (or at least reasonable). Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans. Fantastic!   Back Home Again in Indiana was a hot one.

 

 

Pianist Bob Hayes was here with his grandson Kareem Sanjaghi. Kareem took over the drums for Honeysuckle Rose, with Ted, Paul and Laird all trading 4’s with the drums.

Kareem drums, Bowles string bass, Phil Person trumet, Paul Schmeling keyboard

Kareem, Laird Bowles, Phil Person, Paul Schmeling

Gary Johnson returned for the Finale, Lover Come Back To Me, and Lee’s special song “Think of Me”   an arrangement done by Lee and Kurt Wenzel of the song from The Miz.

Jimmy Enright and I first heard Lee Childs playing outstanding clarinet in 1975, when he was in John Fuller’s New Cabaret Jazz Band with Jimmy Mazzy at Billy Mitchell’s Post Time in Nantasket.  We’ve followed him since at some of the places he’s played: Jordan’s Furniture, Top of the Hub at the Prudential Building, Edaville RR, Embargo, Alberto’s, Cuffy’s, Del Mar Bar and Bistro, Isaac’s, on the Jazz Boat up and down the Cape Cod Canal, http://www.nejazz.com/oldsite/LeeChilds2011.htm .

JoAnne had a special tribute for her husband; a plane flew overhead, circling the Lighthouse Inn, trailing a banner that read “THINK OF ME.  WE HEAR YOU LEE CHILDS.  FOREVER!  LOVE  ME.

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