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Showing posts with label traditional jazz revival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traditional jazz revival. Show all posts

7 April 2017

Post 494: KEN COLYER

A few years after the Second World War, here in the UK and also in some other countries, the 'Trad Boom' began. Dozens of young men formed themselves into amateur bands and quite a few went on to have professional careers.

However, only ten years later the boom was over and not many fully professional bands were able to survive.

In England, a few of the band-leaders did well by making 'commercial' hit records. Think of Acker Bilk's Stranger on the Shore. The formula was to play a good, memorable, simple melody in a well-arranged manner, without exactly giving it a New Orleans Jazz style performance. Such records made it into the Top 10. In fact Stranger on the Shore, in which Acker Bilk is backed by the Leon Young String Chorale, was a No. 1 hit even in the U.S.A. Another example was Kenny Ball with Midnight in Moscow. Kenny and his trombonist Johnny Bennet in turn pumped out the haunting, minor-key 24-bar melody. It sold over a million copies.

However, of all those British bands, the one many consider the most important in terms of its place in the history of traditional jazz was that of the trumpet and cornet player Ken Colyer.


Much has been written about Ken's character, philosophy and life, so I will not go over all that again.

What matters is that he was admired for his integrity in sticking rigidly to what he considered authentic early-style New Orleans Jazz. He was not much interested in making recordings or in using his music to generate personal wealth.

It is sometimes said that he was quite a difficult musician to work with. I believe players occasionally left him because of a clash of philosophy or because they could not deliver in the way he wanted. He had his ideals and pursued them single-mindedly. Certainly, there were regular changes of personnel in the line-ups of his band over the few years during which they toured the clubs and played to enthusiastic fans who considered that Ken's was the only 'true' jazz.

Ken had a distinctive tone and he used vibrato very skilfully. But his playing was never showy or raucous, like that of so many jazz trumpeters. He stated the melodies in the decisive but delicate, uncomplicated manner much appreciated by clarinet players and trombonists whose job it is to add the decoration. And in ensembles, Ken provided pretty colouring phrases - always harmonically accurate. He believed great jazz needed great teamwork, so the emphasis was on ensemble playing, even though he happily employed some outstanding players who were very capable and creative soloists. Among them were Sammy Rimington, Monty Sunshine, Mac Duncan, Johnny Bastable, Ian Wheeler, Lonnie Donegan and Ray Foxley.

Sadly, Ken Colyer died in 1988 at the age of only 59. He had earlier suffered from stomach cancer.

In his day, it was not yet commonplace for videos to be made of almost every performance. So surviving videos of him playing, as far as I know, are only those filmed when he was growing weak and no longer had a band of his own. One such is this of Postman's Lament, where he sings and plays, but it is still a performance of considerable beauty:

However, Ken and his musicians did leave a number of sound recordings so we can still enjoy his music at its best. Try these three.

(1) Back in 1956, playing The Old Rugged Cross:

(2) From 1960, with Sammy Rimington on clarinet, Maryland, My Maryland:

(3) My favourite. This is a model for us all in how to lead and build up the excitement - Blame it On The Blues from 1956. Ian Wheeler, Mac Duncan and Johnny Bastable are in the band and the playing  is 100% ensemble throughout:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A79yvcDRzIw
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By the way, 'Enjoying Traditional Jazz' is my book for people who like LISTENING to the music. My other book - 'Playing Traditional Jazz' - is for those who PLAY instruments.
For more information, go to the Amazon website and type 'Enjoying Traditional Jazz' or 'Playing Traditional Jazz' into the Search Bar.

7 February 2016

Post 382: BUNK JOHNSON AND THE LIFEBOAT


Willie 'Bunk' Johnson was a legendary jazz trumpet player. He is believed to have been born in or after 1889; and he died in 1949. Bunk was a star in New Orleans during the early years of the Twentieth Century but later fell into obscurity, only to be re-discovered and encouraged to make recordings and give performances on tour during the years shortly before his death. So he was much involved in the revival of traditional New Orleans jazz in the 1940s.

Many of those tunes he recorded in the 1940s are still favourites with traditional jazz bands.

One of them that I decided to work out and learn is Lord, Let Me in the Lifeboat.
To my ear, it sounded like this. I have transcribed it - as I do with all the tunes I collect - into one of my mini filofaxes:
The tunes Bunk is believed to have recorded (supplied to me by a kind correspondent) are these:

2.19 Blues
827 Blues
Ace in the Hole
After You've Gone
Ain't Misbehavin'
Alabama Bound
Alexander's Ragtime Band 
Amour 
Arkansas Blues 
Baby I'd Love To Steal You 
Baby Please Come Home 
Ballin' The Jack 
Basin Street Blues 
Beautiful Doll 
Big Chief Battle Axe 
Blue As I Can Be 
Blue Bells Goodbye 
Blues In C 
Blues 
Bolden Medley 
Bolden's Style 
Boogie Woogie 
Bottle Up And Go 
Bucket's Got A Hole In It 
Bugle Boy March 
Bunk's Blues 
Bunk's Life Story 1,2,3 
Bye And Bye 
Careless Love (Blues) 
Carry Me Back To Old Virginny 
Chloe 
Clarinet Marmalade 
Coquette 
Darktown Strutters' Ball 
Days Beyond Recall 
Dear Old Southland 
Didn't He Ramble 
Dippermouth Blues 
Do Right Baby 
Do You Ever Think Of Me 
Does Jesus Care 
Don't Fence Me In 
Down By The Riverside 
Down In Jungle Town 
Dusty Rag 
Embraceable You 
Feetwarmers Stomp 
Fidgety Feet 
Franklin Street Blues 
Funeral Parade 
God's Amazing Grace 
Golden Leaf Strut 
Good Morning Blues 
Goodnight Ladies 
Happy Birthday To You 
Heartaches 
High Society 
Hilarity Rag 
Honey Gal 
How Long Blues 
I Ain't Gonna Give Nobody 
I Ain't Got Nobody 
I Can't Escape From You 
I Can't Give You Anything But Love 
I Don't Want To Walk Without You Baby 
I Found A New Baby 
I Know That You Know 
I Love My Baby 
I Never Knew 
I Travel With Jesus 
I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen 
I'm Alabamy Bound 
I'm Confessing 
I'm Making Believe 
I'm So Glad I'm Brownskin 
I've Got Everything 
In The Gloaming 
Indiana 
Ja Da 
Jazz Me Blues 
Just A Closer Walk With Thee 
Just A Little While To Say Here 
Kat's Got Kittens
Kinklets 
Lady Be Good 
Listen To Me 
Little Coquette 
Long Blues 
Lonesome Road 
Lord Let Me In The Lifeboat 
Lord You're Been Good To Me 
Lowdown Blues 
Make Me A Pallet On The Floor 
Mama's Gone Goodbye 
Maple Leaf Rag 
Margie 
Maria Elena 
Marie 
Maryland, My Maryland 
Memphis Blues 
Midnight Blues 
Milneberg Joys 
Moose March 
Muskrat Ramble 
My Life Will Be Sweeter Someday 
My Old Grey Bonnet 
My Old Kentucky Home 
Nearer My God To Thee 
Never No Lament 
New Iberia Blues 
Nobody's Fault But Mine 
Noon's Blues 
Of All The Wrongs 
Ole Miss 
One Sweet Letter From You 
Ory's Creole Trombone 
Out Of Nowhere 
Over In The Gloryland 
Pacific Street Blues 
Pagan Love Song 
Pallet On The Floor 
Panama 
Peg O'My Heart 
Perdido Street Stomp 
Pete Lala and Dago Tony's Tonks 
Pistol Packin' Mama 
Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone 
Plenty To Do 
Poor Butterfly 
Porto Rico 
Precious Love 
Riverside Blues 
Royal Garden Blues 
Runnin' Wild 
San Jacinto Stomp 
See See Rider 
Shake It And Break It 
Shine 
Sidewalk Blues 
Sister Kate 
Swanee River 
Sleepy Time Down South 
Slow Drag's Boogie Woogie 
Snag It 
Sobbin' Blues 
Some Of These Days 
Someday Sweetheart 
Sometimes I'm Happy 
Sometimes My Burden 
South 
Spicy Advice 
St. Louis Blues 
Star Dust 
Storyville Blues 
Streets Of The City 
Sugar Foot Stomp 
Summertime 
Swanee River 
Sweet Georgia Brown 
Sweet Lorraine 
Tell Me Baby 
Tell Me Your Dreams 
Temptation Rag 
That Teasin' Rag 
The Entertainer 
The Girls Go Crazy 
The Lord Will Make A Way Somehow 
The Minstrel Man 
The Sheik Of Araby 
The Waltz You Saved For Me 
The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise 
There's Yes Yes In Your Eyes 
Those Drafting Blues 
Thriller Rag 
Tiger Rag 
Till We Meet Again 
Tishomingo Blues 
Tony Jackson 
Twelfth Street Rag 
Two Jim Blues 
Ugly Child 
Up In Sidney's Flat 
Walking The Dog 
Wang Wang Blues 
Weary Blues 
When I Leave The World Behind 
When I Move To The Sky 
When The Moon Comes Over The Mountains 
When The Saints 
When You And I Were Young, Maggie 
When You Wore A Tulip 
Where Could I Go But To The Lord 
Where The River Shannon Flows 
Whispering 
Willie The Weeper 
Yaaka Hula, Hickey Dula 
Yellow Gal 
Yes Lord, I'm Crippled 
Yes Yes In Your Eyes 
You Always Hurt The One You Love
You Are My Sunshine 
You Got To See Mama Every Night 
You're Driving Me Crazy 

16 November 2013

Post 107: HOW THOSE OLD TUNES WERE PASSED DOWN



The names, content and shapes of some of the good old jazz tunes have become confused over the past century. Studying the old classics can be hard work.

Here's the kind of thing that happened over the decades.

First, in 1908, an American composer (classically-trained and influenced by the structures of classical music), composes a tune he calls Moss Point Rag. It is published as piano sheet music, running to 6 sides of paper. Moss Point Rag comprises three sections in G, followed by a change of key to C for the fourth theme - the 'Trio’.

It is an attractive, merry piece of music, full of subtleties, syncopations, elaborate decorations of the melody and complexities:


Between 1910 and the Second World War, music of this kind (of which there is plenty preserved in the university archives of America) gives the pianists in the bar-rooms of New Orleans and Chicago the chance to show off their considerable skills.

At the same time, the early dance-bands and jazz-bands (with anything from three to ten musicians) are attracted by Moss Point Rag and want to play it. But they cannot possibly play it as written: the complexities you see in the music above are fair enough for a pianist’s fingers, but the melody-playing trumpet or cornet at the heart of the band could not be expected to cope with such melodies. Even a virtuoso player would soon be exhausted if he had to produce such a flow of notes (including many high ones) for a whole evening’s gig.


So the bands play Moss Point Rag in their own way. They simplify the melodies, sometimes using a cornet (or violin in the earliest days) with clarinet to do what they can to share the tricky bits. They capture the essence of the melody, rather than its many decorative notes. Some of them leave out the section called the 'Trio', because they find it less interesting or too difficult. They add a new section, either of their own invention or plagiarised from a different composition.

(For an example of this sort of thing happening, consider Hilarity Rag, composed by James Scott in 1910. To see the sheet music and hear how it sounded as a piano piece, CLICK HERE. But to hear how it was re-interpreted when a jazz band got hold of it, CLICK HERE. You see what I mean?)

In 1928, a band based in Chicago uses just the first two themes (much simplified) from Moss Point Rag, puts them into the key of Bb for convenience and records this version under a new name, Uptown Strut.

Towards the end of this period, a clever bandleader-arranger in New York records with his band a new tune called Spring Street Stomp but later researchers will find it is suspiciously similar to Moss Point Rag!

After the War, during the Bebop era, the tune is rarely heard in any form.

But twenty years later, in what has been called the New Orleans (or Dixieland) Revival, young traditional jazz bands again blossom in the USA, in Europe and in the rest of the world. A bandleader in England picks up the old 78rpm Chicago recording of Uptown Strut from 1928, works out his own version of it by ear and gets his band to record it. Many pub bands buy the record, like it and introduce it into their repertoire.
In their turn, these Revivalists inevitably and unwittingly make further slight changes. Maybe they have to guess at some of the notes that are indistinct on the scratchy old records.

So the band (I’m now talking 1950 – 1965) plays its own version: each player has it in his head but the chances are that it is never written down.

The late Ray Foxley (he died in 2002) was the pianist in Ken Colyer’s band. Ray once told me he would learn tunes from those old 78 rpm records a few bars at a time – first listening and then working out the notes and chords on his piano.

Move on another 30 years and you find traditional jazz in decline again, though still with enough bands and enthusiasts throughout the world to keep it going as a minority art form. Uptown Strut is in their repertoire, with the composer usually credited as 'Anon' or 'Trad'.
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Footnote

Here are some of the old tunes still passed on from band to band in one form or another:

Blame it on the Blues (also known as Quincy Street Stomp), At a Georgia Camp Meeting, Big Chief Battleaxe, Bluebells Goodbye (also known as Bright Eyes Goodbye), Bugle Boy March (also known as The American Soldier), Ce Mossieu Qui Parle (maybe originally C’est Moi Seul Qui Parle), Chrysanthemum Rag, Climax Rag (also known as Astoria Strut), Creole Belles, Dill Pickles, Don’t Go ‘way, Nobody (almost identical to several other tunes, such as Everybody’s Talking About Sammy), Dusty Rag and Thriller Rag (both composed by a lady from Indianapolis), Golden Leaf Strut (also known as Milenberg Joys - main theme), Grace and Beauty, Gettysburg March, Hiawatha Rag, Jenny’s Ball, Kinklets, Maple Leaf Rag, Moose March, Shim-Me-Sha-Wobble, 1919 March (also known as The Rifle Rangers), Ostrich Walk, Panama Rag, Salutation March (probably a Victorian quadrille originally), Silver Bell (also known as Sometimes My Burden - second theme), Smoky Mokes, Snake Rag, That Teasing Rag, and Uptown Bumps. And how on earth did Ta-Wa-Bac-A-Wa become The Bucket's Got a Hole In It?

I doubt whether you could walk into a music shop today and buy the authentic printed original music for any of these. Please let me know if I'm wrong.

2 April 2013

Post 33: 'TRAD' OR 'TRADITIONAL JAZZ'?

I had an email from a reader in which he complimented me for referring to our music as 'Traditional Jazz' rather than 'Trad'.

This set me wondering. Why do I never use the term 'Trad'? At first I put it down to my education. I was at school during the strict and austere years during and just after The Second World War. Many of my teachers had recently been officers in the Armed Forces (some of them with tell-tale wounds). After being de-mobbed, they did a one-year emergency training course to qualify for the profession. They were punctilious about rules and 'correctness', even in matters of language use.
And yet, thinking further, I remembered that in London in the 1950s the British Revival of Traditional Jazz became a craze with some teenagers. The music was called 'Trad' by my friends and by the media (I think the idea was to distinguish it at the time from the 'Modern Jazz' admired by others) - and I guess I must have used that term myself. To capitalize on the craze, there was even a 1962 film called 'It's Trad, Dad'.

By the way, it seems this use of 'Trad' may have been a peculiarly British phenomenon. I doubt whether the music was ever called 'Trad' in other countries. But perhaps someone will let me know if I am wrong.

Maybe the word has almost gone out of fashion today simply because there are now so many different genres of music that enthusiasts find it necessary to use the full expression 'Traditional Jazz' to make clear that they are showing respect for the history of our music - a history now extending for well over 100 years.

Maybe there is also a sense that the term 'Trad' identifies the particular (mainly British) flourishing of the music in the 1950s.

I checked in my dictionary for the derivation of the word 'traditional'. As so often, we have to thank the Ancient Romans. 'Trans' in Latin meant 'across' and gives us the beginning of 'traditional'. The '-ditional' part comes from the Latin verb meaning 'to give'.

So anything that is traditional is 'given across', which I take to mean 'passed from one person to another, from one generation to another'. And surely that applies to our music. It is passed on both in the form of sheet music and also aurally. Each new performer makes it his own by playing in his own way.

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The book Enjoying Traditional Jazz by Pops Coffee is available from Amazon.