Sunday, May 18, 2014

Remi Harris - NINICK

Remi Harris
(source: YouTube)
Young talented guitarplayers are still attracted and inspired by the music, technique and tradition associated with the Gypsy genius, Django Reinhardt. The young English guitarist, Remi Harrisis a genuine example of the transition of Django's music into a contemporary context adopting influences from other fields of music as well.



Remi Harris (b 1988) is the son of a French mother and an English father, and his first name was named after the second and third notes on the major scale, "re" and "mi". At the age of seven young Harris started playing guitar, at twelve he formed his own rock band and started to gig regularly the following year. The band recorded an album in 2007 and was announced Best Classic Rock Band that year and again in 2008 by an English rock magazine. However, at the age of 20, Remi Harris' musical horizons had broadened and he left his rock band to concentrate on learning jazz guitar. He listened to Django's music, was also inspired by Wes Montgomery and in 2009 he formed his own trio to become a professional musician and soon had success with his new role as a leading Gypsy jazz guitarist of the young generation. Some months ago, Remi Harris released his debut CD as a jazzguitarist, NINICK, named so in honor of his late mother's nickname.

Remi Harris, NNINICK
(cd-cover, BearCD 53)
The CD is released by Big Bear Records and has twelve tracks. The personnel featured are, besides Remi Harris on lead guitar, Ben Salmon, rhythm guitar, and Mike Green, double bass. A couple of tracks replace bassist Green with Tom Moore, and some tracks have guest appearance by Allan Barnes (reeds) or Ben Cummings (trumpet). The repertoire has three original compositions by Harris: "Perrin", "I've Done My Bit" and the title track, "Ninick", two Django pieces: the swing waltz "Montagne Sainte-Geneviève" and "Django's Tiger" and further a couple of tunes associated with Django, "Joseph, Joseph" and "I'll See You In My Dreams". Trumpet player Ben Cummings is featured on the Chalie Parker bop anthem "Donna Lee" and reed player Allan Barnes gets his chance to show off his excellent chops on barritone sax on the George Benson tune "The Man From Toledo" and as an alto sax player on the Harry Warren standard "There'll Never Be Another You". A reading of the lyrical "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" by the trio alone is complemented by a version of Lennon & McCartney's rock classic "Lady Madonna" including modern jazzimprovisation of the catchy theme while "Somewhere..." sticks close to the melodic theme played as written. Altogeter a mixture of musical themes from different periods of time and style, but here performed in a contemporary setting that frames the remarkable and mature playing of Remi Harris.

To give you an impression of some of the included music on the CD, I'll insert a couple more of uploaded YouTube videos featuring live performance by Remi Harris. -  Here is first "Joseph, Joseph" as performed by the trio



In the next video Allan Barnes is featured guest on clarinet, Charlie Parker's "Donna Lee"



Here's another example of Remi Harris doing solo practise on his own composition, "Perrin"



Finally, to end this short presentation of Remi Harris, here's the trio's rendition of the Gypsy swing standard "I'll See You In My Dreams"


---
Jo
keepswinging@live.nl

The debut CD by the young English Gypsy jazz guitarist Remi Harris, NINICK, shows the influence from both Django Reinhardt and modern jazz and rock, the repertoire of the disc provides examples of music with roots in different traditions. Every track is executed with tasteful playing by the involved musicians and frames the mature talent of Remi Harris. The CD is released by Big Bear Records and is available for purchase from Remi Harris' website.
Recommended!




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Thursday, May 8, 2014

Eddie Bush & The Biltmore Trio

Eddie Bush (1911-1969)
(photo featured at STYLO MAGIC SM 2002 cd)
Eddie Bush (1911-1969) was born in Milwaukee as son of Hawaiian parents, who were entertainers in a Hawaiian show on the mainland, and young Eddie began his own career performing with them. In 1924 the family moved to Los Angeles where Eddie was spotted playing by two local youngsters, Bill Seckler and Paul Gibbons, who invited him to join them to form a trio. In 1927, the trio had an audition with bandleader Earl Burnett and was hired as members of his orchestra that performed at the prestigious Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel Trio
L-R: Paul Gibbons (g, lead voc), Eddie Bush (steel g, falsetto voc), Bill Seckler (uke, voc)
The trio soon became a major attraction within the orchestra and had their solo spots during the orchestra's performance featuring Paul Gibbons on guitar and lead vocal, Eddie Bush on steel guitar and falsetto vocal and Bill Seckler on ukulele and vocal. The trio mainly performed and had success as a vocal harmony ensemble with Burnett's orchestra, however, when the trio made their first recordings for Okeh in April 1928 as Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel Trio, two sides were instrumentals showcasting Eddie Bush's remarkable and tasteful steel guitar playing. Bush's own "Clowin' the Frets" and the popular Tin Pan Alley tune "Hard to Get Gertie" were recorded as instrumentals on April 6th and issued on OK 41064, while two other sides recorded at the same session had vocals on "Coquette" and "Indian Craddle Song" issued on OK 41043. Here is a YouTube audio video of "Clowin' the Frets"




The other instrumental recorded on April 6th, 1928 for Okeh was "Hard to Get Gertie" inserted below from another YouTube audio video



The above two instrumentals featuring Eddie Bush on acoustic lap steel guitar were the only two instrumentals recorded during his career, however, a new CD released by Grass Skirt Records on the STYLO MAGIC label reveals more tasteful steel guitar playing on recordings with vocal harmony singing in focus among the twenty featured tracks on the CD.

CD front cover, STYLO MAGIC SM 2002
As members of Earl Burnett's Orchestra Bush, Seckler and Gibbons would be featured regualarly on Burnett's Brunswick records as a vocal trio labeled Earl Burnett's Biltmore Trio. On the shown CD are reissued ten of these sides recorded 1928-30, here's an example of the trio's sophisticated vocal arrangement of "Love Me Or Leave Me" as recorded April 1st, 1929 on Br 4336



In 1930, Eddie Bush left Burnett's band and performed for some time at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles followed by nationwide tours as a member of Henry Busse and Buddy Roger's orchestras, but in 1934 he revived the Biltmore Trio name and recorded some sides for Victor labeled as Eddie Bush' Biltmore Trio, among these sides was the popular "My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii", also featured on the CD above.
In 1934, Eddie Bush switched to electric lap steel guitar and recorded two sides for Decca in November that year, again as Eddie Bush's Biltmore Trio; one of the tunes was "The Object of My Affection" also featured on the CD. Five years later, in 1939, Eddie Bush is featured on recordings with trumpeter Mannie Klein's Hawaiians at the Bluebird label, three sides from October that year are reissued on the CD and one of them, "Maori Brown Eyes" features Bush's falsetto vocal while the two others have short statements by his steel guitar.
Tracklist with discographical info, STYLO MAGIC SM 2002
The above info is extracted from the featured notes at the STYLO MAGIC SM 2002 CD which gives the listener an outlook of recordings made by Eddie Bush at the peak of his career. The CD is released in limited numbers, only 100 copies are made available for purchase, a true collectors' item designated for people with a general interest in the Hawaiian steel guitar legacy and a special interest in the career of Eddie Bush. Sound restoration is provided by Bill Dalton at Earwig Studios that distributes the CD by contact here. The CD may also be ordered from Grass Skirt Records, here.
---
Jo
Keepswinging@live.nl


A new CD from Grass Skirt Records, STYLO MAGIC SM 2002, featuring 20 tracks of 78 rpm recodings by Hawaiian steel guitar ace Eddie Bush compiles examples of Bush's work with the Biltmore Trio 1928-34 and with Mannie Kleins Hawaiians 1939. The CD showcasts a repertoire of music popular at the time of recording mainly with focus on close harmony vocals but also with some interesting spots of tasteful steel guitar playing. The CD is released in a limited numbers, only 100 copies are available for purchase designated for collectors of historically important material. Recommended!



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Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Fork And Knife

Oscar Alemán 1978 in Pelo magazine
In the late 1950s and during the 1960s Oscar Alemán experienced a decrease in the public success he he had benefited from during almost two decades in Argentina. New music styles like rock'n'roll displaced the public interest from jazz and swing, a young generation of musicians was taking over the scene in show business leaving older musicians little chance to have a steady work as performers or recording artists.The impact of these factors was in Alemán's case that he gradually chose to retire from the public scene when his contract with Odeon ended in 1958. He spent the 1960s in semi-retirement and had fewer public appearances than previously, although he from time to time was a featured guest performer in radio and TV shows. - But how was Alemán's attitude to the changing musical taste of the public? In a 1978 interview published in an Argentine music magazine for young people, he expressed his candid opinion about rock music and  rock musicians. Below we have the pleasure and honor of publishing Luis "Tito" Liber's record of the contents of that interview, which he kindly forwarded to share with our readers. The original article interview was in the Spanish language, of course, but Luis's version is in English.

Frontpage Pelo magazine #99, July 1978
Oscar Alemán in a 1970s "Rock" Magazine
by Luis "Tito" Liber
In many radio, newspapers and magazines interviews along Aleman`s career, the topic was Oscar incredible Ellington-Reinhardt-Baker anecdotes, but not music. This article from argentine Pelo ("Hair") magazine (#99, July 1978) is most about music... and it`s in a yougster`s rock magazine, not a jazz one!!! Notice that the same number includes an article about Gato Barbieri, and previously had included an interview with jazz pianist Mono Villegas.

In Argentina, in the late 1950s-early 1960s, with the arrival of television, came the "new wave": kids that sang rock and roll tunes in spanish. Along with the military regime prohibition of night-meetings (it was the end of the massive danceballs called "milongas"), the old stars of tango and jazz lost their jobs. But the 1970s were the days of fusion, and Oscar didn`t seem to like that union of styles. We know that jazzmen and rockers have never fit very well. And Oscar hasn`t been the exception. The old jazzman felt that the new young musicians were stealing his place in showbusiness (that is to say, they are leaving him without his job). Though he didn`t understand the incipient rock movement (the kids were essentially troubadors, not musicians), he thought that rockers weren`t skilled musicians at all.

"Rock is a rhythm that doesn`t satisfy me, as boogie doesn`t satisfy me too. Boogie is four phrases invented by Mr. Fats Waller for the left hand, and you have to improvise on that. And what improvisation is? It´s jazz. If you want to improvise on rock, what are you going to improvise? You are not going to improvise tango or rancheras, but jazz." Now a great sentence:

 "Rock musicians eat the food with their hands. The dish is ready but they have to be educated, to learn to use forks and knives. Jazz is good education. To evolve, rock has to go to jazz. It`s the basis."

Oscar critizises Bill Hailey`s performance during his show in Buenos Aires ("the man of the curly"), saying that the only good player in his band was a black guitarist; the others only did the clown.

"Rock musicians are too much noisy, they play very loud. They use to lose the sense of accompaniment for the solos; they all want to highlight increasing the volume; then, you can`t distinguish anything."

Alemán says that once he had a rock musician as a pupil: Claudio Gabis, a blues guitarist, member of the group Manal. "He said that he was leaving to USA because the public from here didn`t understand him" (Claudio went to study at Berkley, and he returned to Argentina in 1980s democracy times to give seminars of improvisation at the Centro Cultural San Martín; a very recommendable player!).



Oscar didn`t play rock'n'roll very well. If you listen to his version of "Bailando el Rock" (Rock Around the Clock -Freeman/De Knight-), you can appreciate he didn`t know the classical yeites and runs (Chet Atkins, Scotty Moore and Chuck Berry for instance). He does a correct performance, but using "boogie" phrases. That`s because, he wasn`t influenced by R&B or country and western music.

"In one occasion I made a rock. I used to say it was a rock, but it wasn`t. I improvised on some boogie chords played faster. Rock chords are the same of blues and boogie." He`s talking about his own theme "Improvisaciones sobre Boogie Woogie", where he plays a much better performance, with a great scat. During the rock-era, he played this theme live, announcing to the public that it was a rock...but it wasn't.



Oscar even was a skilled blues player. Of course that he had black roots (Afro-American-Brazilian rhythms), but all in a jazz venue, not bluesy at all (listen to "Saint Louis Blues", "Oscar Blues Nº 1" and "Nº 3" i.e.).



This interesting interview also includes an almost poetical description of his triumphant come back to the bench of the park in Guarujá in 1946 (where he had slept in his childhood): "At that time I returned to sit on that bench with a whisky and a brilliant in my hand. To sit and cry. I was no longer below it, but sat ON that bench."

Oscar flatters bandoneonist/composer Astor Piazzolla and pianist/composer Horacio Salgan for playing tango arrangements with a jazz tendency, in a time when almost nobody had that opinion in Argentina (the conservative narrow-minded "tangueros").

Oscar Alemán 1978 in Pelo magazine
By the time of this interview, in January 1978, Oscar was proud of receiving a letter from France notifying him that his biography was to be included in an upcoming guitarplayers encyclopedia (I think it was 'Histoire de la guitare dans le Jazz' by Norman Mongan; published in 1986 by EPI Editions Filipacchi, France).

Alemán, knowing that he was a genius, was a very proud man, almost selfish (sorry Oscar). He was the leader and nobody could be over him (this led him to separate from Hernán Oliva). This attitude wasn`t excessive, because during two decades (1940s-1950s) he was the best South-American jazz player, and no-one had his international background (later would appear Lalo Schiffrin and Barbieri). Opposite to his public sense of humour, in his last years he became an angry and sad man, rensentful and frustrated for considering that his genius deserved more acknowledgement.

T.L.
---
Posted by Jo
keepswinging@live.nl

In the late 1950s and during the 1960s Oscar Alemán experienced a decrease in the public success he he had benefited from during almost two decades in Argentina. New music styles like rock'n'roll displaced the public interest from jazz and swing, a young generation of musicians was taking over the scene. But how was Alemán's attitude to the changing musical taste of the public? In a 1978 interview published in an Argentine music magazine for young people, he expressed his candid opinion about rock music and  rock musicians. Luis Tito" Liber gives his account of the contents of that interview, which he kindly forwarded to share with our readers




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Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Pixinguinha and Choro Day

Pixinguinha (1897-1973)
Alfredo da Rocha Vianna Filho (1897-1973), better known as Pixinguinha, was a choro composer, arranger, flutist and saxophonist born in Rio de Janeiro. Through the legacy of the
pioneering choro composers of the 19th century and of the Afro-Brazilian tradition, Pixinguinha produced some of the most important choro works of all time. His work as a composer, bandleader, flutist/reedplayer and originator
of the choro genre is of invaluable importance, historically and from a musical point of view. The work of Pixinguinha may be considered important at the same level as the work of initial American jazz composers like Duke Ellington - both helped shaping a musical form that had success nationally and internationally.


The name and legacy of Pixinguinha is kept well alive in Brazil, in September 2000 President Fernando Henrique Cardoso signed an official document to announce April 23th the National Day of Choro in Brazil in honor of Pixinguinha. Every year since then choro has been celebrated officially on the 23th of April through countless events in Brazil and around the world where Brasilian culture is a part of the local community. Let's follow this tradition and celebrate the day by playing some choro music by Pixinguinha.

Os Oito Batutas (c.1922-23)
Pixinguinha demonstrated ability on both flute and cavaquinho as a kid and started composing at an early age. By the age of 14, he had composed his first choro, 'Lata de leite', and was already an accomplished flute player. In 1913, he made his first choro recordings, and by the time he was 15, he was playing professionally - at 18 he was one of the most popular musicians and choro composers in Rio de Janeiro. In 1919, Pixinguinha formed the legendary Os Oito Batutas (- meaning 'The Eight Remarkable Players' in English). The group consisted of flute (- and later saxophone), guitars, cavaquinho, bandolim, bandola, pandeiro and assorted percussion. - Led by Pixinguinha, Oito Batutas was formed to entertain the audience of Rio's prestigious Cinema Palais in its foyer. Opening on April 7, 1919, the group was a success from its debut. The Carioca élite were taken by surprise by the repertory of maxixes, sertanejo songs, batuques, cateretês, and choros. In 1920, the group performed for the King of Belgium and in the next year they toured Brazil. Returning to Rio, they went to play at the luxurious Assírio Club, accompanying the dancing duo Duque & Gaby. In January 1922, the group departed for Paris, France, financed by millionaire Arnaldo Guinle. Introduced as Les Batutas at the Scherazade club, they performed there for six months with great success. - Also in 1922, they left for Argentina, performing at the Empire Theater (Buenos Aires) and recorded 20 sides for the Argentinean Victor label. Upon their return to Brazil in 1923, they diminished their performances until they soon dissolved the group. - Among the recorded material by Oito Batutas there was a composotion by initial guitar choro originator, João Pernambuco, who was a member of the group for some time - here his choro 'Graúna' is performed by Pixinguinha on flute accompanied by the Batutas 



In the late 1920s, Pixinguinha was hired by RCA Victor to lead the Orquestra Victor Brasileira, and during his tenure there he refined his skills as an arranger. It was common for choro musicians at the time to improvise their parts based on a simple piano score, but the growing demand for radio music from large ensembles required fully realized written scores for every instrument, and Pixinguinha was one of the few composers with this skill. It was in this role that he created some of his most famous compositions, i.e. 'Lamentos' and 'Carinhoso' - Here is inserted the original recording of 'Lamentos' from 1928 



Benedito Lacerda (flute), Pixinguinha (saxophone), c. 1940
In 1939, Pixinguinha left Victor to join flautist Benedito Lacerda's band, where he took up the tenor saxophone as his primary instrument and continued to compose music for the group. Lacerda's band was a conjunto regional, the name given to in-house bands hired by radio stations to perform music and accompany singers, often live in front of a studio audience. It was with Lacerda that Pixinguinha began another fertile period of composing and recording. Due to economic troubles as the regionais fell out of favor in the late 40s, Pixinguinha had to sell the rights to his compositions to Benedito Lacerda, who for this appears a co-composer of many of Pixinguinha's tunes, even those composed while Lacerda was still a boy. In the recordings with Lacerda, Pixinguinha plays secondary parts on the saxophone while Lacerda plays the flute part on tunes that Pixinguinha originally wrote on that instrument. - Here's an example of the co-work between Pixinguinha and Lacerda, the recording of Pixinguinha's choro 'Vou vivendo' (1946)



By the mid 1950s, changing tastes and the emerging popularity of samba and American jazz in Brazil led to the decline of the choro regional as other genres became dominant on the radio. Pixinguinha spent his time in retirement, appearing in public only on rare occasions. - Here's a rare film from this period showing Pixinguiha and his conjunto playing his famous choro 'Um a zero' - enjoy!



Pixinguinha's music continues to inspire and challenge musicians of all kind to play their version of his famous compositions, here's a new uploaded video showing the harmonicaplayer Vitor Lopes performing 'Lamentos' as a solo piece to end this small celebration of Pixinguinha and Choro Day



---
Jo
keepswinging@live.nl

Alfredo da Rocha Vianna Filho (1897-1973), better known as Pixinguinha, was a choro composer, arranger, flutist and saxophonist. Pixinguinha produced some of the most important choro works of all time. His work as a composer, bandleader, flutist/reedplayer and originator of the choro genre is of invaluable importance, historically and from a musical point of view. The name and legacy of Pixinguinha is kept well alive in Brazil, in September 2000 Pixinguinha's birthdate on the 23th of April was officially announced the National Day of Choro in Brazil, which has been celebrated every year through various events both in Brazil and other countries since then.




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Monday, April 14, 2014

Rio, Choro, Jazz - A Contemporary Tribute To Ernesto Nazareth

2013 was the 150th Anniversary of the famous Brazilian composer and pianist Ernesto Nazareth, who is considered one of the fundamental sources of Choro - a genuine Brazilian musical artform. The 150th Jubilee of Ernesto Nazareth was celebrated all over Brazil through various events, festivals and new recordings. A renewed interest in the works of Ernesto Nazareth has also resulted in an amazing resource website (- in Portuguese language only), directed and produced by the tireless researcher and pianist Alexandre Dias in co-operation with Instituto Moreira Salles in Rio de Janeiro, to be reached clicking here

Ernesto Júlio Nazareth (1863 - 1934) was born in Rio de Janeiro and learned to play the piano as a child with his mother. After her passing away in 1873, Ernesto continued his piano studies and began composing. His first piece, the polka "Você Bem Sabe" was written and published when he was just 14 years of age. He had and open ear for the popular music beeing played in the streets and favoured by choro musicians, his own works for piano were influenced by maxixe, lundu, habañera and choro. Nonetheless, as a classical musician he would not allow such popular denominations into his own music, instead he would classify his pieces as i.e. 'Brazilian tangos'. - Nazareth worked as a pianist at the prestigious movie theater Odeon of Rio de Jainero, where he wrote one of his most famous compositions, "Odeon". Many musicians would go to the Odeon theater just to see and hear Nazareth play. Later he got a job at a music shop to support his living and growing family, there he was hired to play the sheets asked for by customers. Among the music sheets were his own compositions and according to some sources he was very demanding towards people, who themselves would try to play his pieces, frequently telling the possible buyer to interrupt the performance! - By the late 1920'ies Nazareth began facing hearing problems that worsened towards the end of his life. A depression following the passing away of his daughter and wife intesified the decay of his mental health - he was hospitalizied in 1933 and died the following year. - Ernesto Nazareth left a legacy of compositions favoured by both classical and popular musicians. His first composition labeled 'choro' is "Apanhei-te Cavaquinho", other well-known pieces are "Brejeiro", "Ameno Resedá", "Bambino", "Dengoso", "Travesso", "Fon Fon" and "Tenebroso". Nazareth's popular works remain a core repertoire of Brazilian choro, performed by numerous artists in various settings to this day. His extensive work is composed of more than 200 pieces.

CD cover: Rio, Choro, Jazz ... AAM Music, 2014
A new CD by the Brazilian pianist, composer, arranger and producer Antonio Adolfo is a tribute to the music of Ernesto Nazareth recorded last year and released a couple of weeks ago at Adolfo's own label, AAM Music. The CD has ten tracks, nine of them are compositions by Nazareth and the title track is a new composition by Antonio Adolfo, a contemporary interpretation of the different musical influences that are the inspiration of this project: choro and jazz. The musicians taking part in the recorded ten tracks are: Antonio Adolfo (piano, arranger), Claudio Spiewak (guitars), Jorge Helder (bass), Marcelo Martins (flute, soprano saxophone), Rafael Barata (drums, percussion) and Marcos Suzano (percussion). - The nine featured compositions by Nazareth are "Feitiço" (1897), "Brejeiro" (1893), "Fon-fon" (1913), "Tenebroso" (1913), "Não caio noutra" (1881), "Coração que sente" (1903), "Cuéra" (1912), "Nenê" (1895) and "Odeon" (1909) - the audio of the last mentioned in Antonio Adolfo's new arrangement has been uploaded at YouTube



What caracterizes Adolfo's interpretations of Nazareth's music is the freedom of improvisation, an element exposed in both choro and jazz, here in a contemporary form that may be considered a hybrid between the two genres. The result is neither traditional jazz nor choro, but a mixture that blows fresh air into Nazareth's musical themes through be bop inspired improvisation - in the liner notes Adolfo mentions Bill Evans as an inspiration working with the arrangements featured on the disc.

Antonio Adolfo
Antonio Adolfo (b 1947) grew up in a musical family in Rio de Janeiro and began his studies at the age of seven. At seventeen he was already a professional musician. His teachers include Eumir Deodato and Nadia Boulanger. During the 60's he led his own trio and toured with singers Elis Regina and Milton Nascimento. Adolfo wrote tunes that gained great success and have been recorded by such artists as Sérgio Mendes, Stevie Wonder, Herb Alpert, Earl Klugh, Dionne Warwick, and others. He won International Song Contests on two occasions. As a musician and arranger he has worked with some of the most representative Brazilian names, besides having released several albums. In 1985 he created his own school of music in Rio de Janeiro. Currently he is conducting a music school in Hollywood and teaches Brazilian music and jazz. More info on Antonio Adolfo's career at his official website, here 

Antonio Adolfo, photo by Paul Constantinides
The new arrangements of Nazareth's music by Antonio Adolfo continue and extend a longtime fascination with the founders of Brazilian Choro music, Adolfo released another CD featuring music by Nazareth and Chiquinha Gonzaga in 1991 and he has participated in other choro and jazz projects in Brazil as well. To end this small review of the new CD, here's another audio take from the CD uploaded at YouTube, Nazareth's "Fon-Fon"



---
Jo
keepswinging@live.nl


The new CD by Antonio Adolfo, renowned Brazilian pianist, composoer, arranger, producer and educator, sets focus on 
the music of initial Brazilian Choro composer Ernesto Nazareth. The ten tracks feature nine pieces composed by Nazareth in new arrangements by Antonio Adolfo leaving space for improvisation that draws inspiration from both choro and modern jazz, the tittle track reflects the mixture of both choro and jazz in a contemporary concept of the hallmarks of both musical genres. The CD is produced by Antonio Adolfo and released at his own label, AAM Music and is available for purchase at Amazon and other online retailers, recommended.

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Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Way Down Yonder in New Orleans

1922 sheet music cover with a photo of singer Blossom Seeley
Way Down Yonder in New Orleans is a popular song with music by John Turner Layton, Jr. and lyrics by Henry Creamer. First published in 1922, it was advertised by Creamer and Layton as "A Southern Song, without A Mammy, A Mule, Or A Moon", a dig at some of the Tin Pan Alley clichés of the era.- It was performed at The Winter Garden Theater in New York in Act 2 of the Broadway musical production Spice of 1922.The original 1922 sheet music featured a drawing of a girl on a spice bottle on the front cover, referring to the musical in which the song eventually made its public debut. [excerpt of Wikipedia article]

The Peerless Quartet, c.1923
L-R: John H. Meyer, Henry Burr, Frank Croxton, Albert Campbell

The song has been recorded numerous times from the early 1920s up till now. One of the first recordings of the song was made by Henry Burr and the Peerless Quartet in 1922


Layton & Johnstone — 1927
The composer Turner Layton recorded the song as part of the duo Layton & Johnstone in 1927


Frankie Trumbauer & His Orch, OKeh, 40843
Way Down Yonder in New Orleans was soon recorded by various jazz groups, one of the most famous recordings from the 1920s was made by Frankie Trumbauer and His Orchestra featuring Bix Beiderbecke (co), in 1927


As said, Way Down Yonder in New Orleans has been recorded by numerous artists and the song may be considered a part of the jazz standard repertoire, but it has also been treated by r&b, rock'n'roll and pop artists. I found a wonderful example of the fact that the song still inspires a new generation of jazz musicians to show off their best. - From a live performance at the Kids in Jazz, Norway 2013 Polina Tarasenko (Ukraine) is featured on trombone accompanied by Risa Takahashi (Japan), bass guitar, Trym Karlsen (Norway), drums, Odd Andre Elveland (Norway), piano - enjoy!


---
Jo 
keepswinging@live.nl

The popular song Way Down Yonder In New Orleans was composed in 1922 by John Turner Layton, Jr. with lyrics by Henry Creamer. The song had its debut in the Broadway musical production Spice of 1922 and was soon recorded by numerous artists. Both popular and jazz artist have made the song a part of the standard American repertoire. Way Down Yonder In New Orleans keeps inspiring - even young people - to show off their talents





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Monday, March 31, 2014

Django à la Créole, Live!

Frémaux & Associés, lejazzetal, CD FA 8501


It's generally known that New Orleans was the cradle of Jazz in the early 1900s and Paris, France, was the European center of Le Jazz Hot in the 1930s and 1940s. What would happen, if these two aspects of jazz - the New Orleans Creole tradition and the Gypsy approach of Django Reinhardt and Le Quintette du Hot Club de France - were mixed and put together in a contemporary jazzensemble taking advantage of the hallmarks of both traditions? The new CD by clarinetist Evan Christopher's quartet Django à la Créole gives a convincing answer to that question showing off a repertoire of essential music with roots in both traditions, here recorded live during the quartet's tour of Great Britain, October 2012.

(Evan Christopher, Photo by McGuire)
Evan Christopher is an excellent clarinetist from California, who moved to New Orleans in 1994 to take part in the city's rich jazz scene concentrating on his instrument's strong Creole heritage from Sidney Bechet, Omer Simeon, Barney Bigard and beyond. After the hurricane Katrina devastated the city in 2005,
Christopher had an invitation of the City of Paris, France, for an artist residency, funded by a French-American Cultural Exchange program. During this artist residency he worked diligently to raise awareness about the musical culture of New Orleans through concerts and masterclasses. He also formed his own groups, the JazzTraditions PROJECT and Django à la Créole. The ideá and vision of Django à la Créole was to "(...) Spice up the Hot Club texture pioneered by Django Reinhardt by emphasizing hallmarks of New Orleans Jazz including blues, rhythms of the monde Créole, and collective improvisation." (- according to info here ). Django à la Créole had its debut in 2007 with a tour of Great Britain, the quartet featuring Christopher as leader and clarinet further consists of two guitars and string bass. The quartet has recorded two studio albums (released 2008 and 2010), the third album shown above is recorded live during Django à la Créole's performance at four different venues in Wales and England, October 2012. According to Christopher's liner notes , "(...) For us, this kept the music fresh and left room for the unexpected better than if we had used the same room over four evenings." 

The CD is released earlier this month by Frémaux & Associés, lejazzetal (CD FA 8501) and is available for purchase here 

Django à la Créole, photo by Lia Wright
l-r: David Blenkhorn (g), Dave Kelbie (g), Sebastian Giradot (sb), Evan Christopher (cl)
Django à la Créole's formation on the live-CD tracks has Evan Christopher on clarinet, David Blenkhorn on electric guitar, Dave Kelbie on rhythm guitar and Sebastian Giradot on string bass, and these four great musicians guide us through a repertoire of jazz compositions associatiated with both New Orleans and Django Reinhardt. New Orleans and Dixieland standards like H.Carmichael's "Riverboat Shuffle" and Craemer & Layton's "Dear Old Southland" are presented in new arrangements for the quartet, the last mentioned incorporating the two spirituals “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child” and “Deep River”, while the first mentioned gets a 'Django-ized' treatment with great solo statements by lead guitarist Blenkhorn. Further there are two compositions by Jelly Roll Morton, "Mamanita" and "The Crave", both key exsamples of Morton's demonstration of the importance of 'The Spanish Tinge' in jazz, here in a quartet arrangement that has captured the subtleties of Morton's original solo piano rendition of the music. Duke Ellington's "The Mooche", a 1929 composition demonstrating Ellington's 'Jungle style', is also featured, here in an arrangement that is based on Ellington's orchestra version anno 1940. Further we have two compositions by Ellington musicians, Johnny Hodges' "One For The Duke" (- based on a strain from 'Ko-Ko' by Ellington) and Rex Stewart's "Solid Old Man", recorded 1939 in Paris featuring Django Reinhardt on guitar and Barney Bigard, clarinet, a.o.. The CD opens with a rendition of Reinhardt's "Douce Ambiance" and has two more compositions by the Gypsy, "Féerie" and "Manoir De Mes Rêves", and the last track has a reading of Archibald Joyce's "Songe d'Automne" made popular by Reinhardt's Quintette du Hot Club de France in the 1940s and here revisited in an arrangement that replaces the original waltz rhythm with a hot Brazialian samba. - Altogether the varied repertoire of the CD gives the listener a great musical experience that mixes influence from both New Orleans Creole tradition, Ellington and  Django Reinhardt's heritage to jazz. The CD has captured the live atmosphere of the recorded tracks in an excellent audio format that encourages the listener to repeated listening, highly recommended! 

To give you an impression of the presented music, I'll insert a couple of uploaded videos at YouTube from Django à la Créole's live-performance, here's first a performance from the tour of GB 2012, Duke Ellington's "The Mooche"



Next is a performance of Django Reinhardt's "Manoir De Mes Rêves", recorded in Montargis, France, in 2010



Finally, from the same session, here's a reading of Archibald Joyce's "Songe d'Automne"



To end this small review of Django à la Créole's new CD, I like to quote Evan Christopher from the liner notes of the disc, which emphazises the aim of this excellent quartet: "This project has turned us all into musicologists to some extent. Attention to details, is another way that Django à la Créole distinguishes itself from most groups in this genre. (-) But this study isn’t just pedantry at my behest; it’s how we connect to our music and attempt to share this meaning with our audiences. I have always contended that New Orleans music is best approached as a “world music” and the “créolité” of our project intentionally goes beyond New Orleans by embracing many wonderful musics united by the ancestral West-African “clavé”. Django à la Créole emphasizes this solid foundation in the roots of the music, not just for the sake of authenticity and responsible use of stylistic vocabulary, but because these roots offer the most universally compelling aspect of music-making. Anywhere in the world we perform, regardless of how people identify themselves culturally, we believe that meaningful musical experiences bring people together by celebrating creativity and community."
---
Jo
keepswinging@live.nl

What happens when the New Orleans Creole tradition of jazz and the Gypsy approach of Django Reinhardt and Le Quintette du Hot Club de France are mixed and put together in a contemporary jazzensemble taking advantage of the trademarks of both traditions? The new CD by clarinetist Evan Christopher's quartet Django à la Créole gives the listener a convincing answer to that question showing off a repertoire of essential music with roots in both traditions. The CD was recorded live in October 2012 during the quartet's tour of Great Britain at four diverse venues and has captured the atmosphere of the performance by the ensemble in a highly recommended issue of the presented music.




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