20 June 2015

Post 232: FROM KID ORY'S CREOLE JAZZ BAND TO THE REVIVALISTS OF TODAY

What an important band Kid Ory led in 1944 and 1945. It was known as Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band and had originally been assembled to perform on a 1944 radio series called 'The Orson Welles Almanac'.
Sixteen tracks (eight recordings) by the band were released by the short-lived Crescent Records.

These recordings proved seminal in the international revival of old-style New Orleans jazz. Fortunately we can hear them all on YouTube BY CLICKING HERE.

In the course of the eight recordings, Ory used, in addition to himself on trombone, 'Papa Mutt' Carey on trumpet, Omer Simeon and Darnell Howard on clarinet, Ed Garland on bass, Alton Redd and Minor Hall on drums, Bud Scott on guitar and Buster Wilson on piano. What an all-star cast! Ory's own playing throughout is assured and exemplary.

The tunes they recorded were pretty well all numbers that have been imitated and perpetuated by traditional jazz bands ever since. Examples are South, Maryland, 1919 Rag, Creole Song, Ory's Creole Trombone, PanamaDown Home Rag, Maple Leaf Rag, Careless Love and Weary Blues.

The powerful driving playing, coupled with the solidity of the rhythm sections, showed us all exactly how it should be done. I think many American and European bands soon started trying to imitate them.

I can see a direct line from these recordings to the equally exciting music of such bands as Tuba Skinny, The Shotgun Jazz Band and The Shake 'Em Up Jazz Band who are leading another such revival today.

By the way, I have struggled to define the wonderful tone Shaye Cohn (of Tuba Skinny) achieves on her cornet. I have tried to hear it as a cross between the playing of George Mitchell and Natty Dominique. But after listening to the Ory band, I think Thomas 'Papa Mutt' Carey must have influenced her - especially when playing muted, and also in the energetic way he drives tunes along. Amazing to think that a great player of today can have been so influenced by someone who died 34 years before she was born. But that's the wonder of sound recordings.

And there's a similar parallel between Kid Ory and today's great trombonist Haruka Kikuchi. She has said that it was hearing the recordings by Kid Ory that drew her to traditional jazz and made her want to play the trombone. In performances with The Shotgun Jazz Band and The Shake 'Em Up Jazz Band she sounds very like him.

19 June 2015

Post 231: TOM MORRIS - BAND-LEADER, COMPOSER, CORNET-PLAYER

Tom Morris - band-leader, composer and cornet-player - was born in New York in 1897.
The earlier Tom Morris, born in 1897
He was a fine traditional jazz musician and even ran his own bands, the principal one being The Seven Hot Babies. They are known to have made 18 recordings in the 1920s. Other Tom Morris bands included The New Orleans Blue Five and The Thomas Morris Past Jazz Masters. He worked prolifically with some of the famous names of jazz, such as Clarence Williams, Fats Waller, Sidney Bechet and Mamie Smith. In fact, it is believed that he appeared - often in minor 'backing' rĂ´les - on about 150 recordings.

Tom's performances reveal what traditional jazz cornet playing was like just before Louis Armstrong dominated the scene; and it is possible that his improvisations - a single 12-bar chorus on Charleston Stampede and several 12-bar choruses on Lonesome Journey Blues (both tunes composed by Morris himself) influenced Armstrong.
As with many important musicians of the 1920s, he later faded into obscurity, but is known to have been towards the end of his relatively short life a porter at Grand Central Station and also a member of a strict, abstemious religious movement led by a curious and colourful character known as 'Father Divine'. Tom died at the age of 47.

I have seen Tom Morris's style of playing described as 'basic and primitive', but I think that is misleading. Listen to his recordings and you find he has a good technique and plays in a simple but accurate manner. He could cope with tempos fast and slow and he could 'bend' notes in a most bluesy fashion. The musical arrangements played by his bands are thoughtfully constructed.

Tom was clearly a well-taught, thorough musician and composed several of his band's tunes, including Original Charleston Strut, Beaucoup de Jazz, Lazy Drag and Ham Gravy. His compositions sometimes included two or three themes, often in 12-bars and 16 bars and based on the conventional chord sequences of the time. (Tom seems to have been very fond of the 12-bar blues format.) They allowed for two-bar 'breaks' and also sometimes involved a key change. The band's tempos were always nicely maintained and the emphasis was on good ensemble playing. Tom was no selfish exhibitionist but enjoyed giving plenty of opportunities to his pianist, trombonist and reed men. Among the musicians he used were Joe Nanton or Greechie Fields on trombone, Wellman Braud on bass, Happy Caldwell on reeds and Buddy Christian on banjo.

I'm pleased to note that the Tom Morris style of playing has become fashionable again in the last few years, when many of the fine young musicians (most of them developing their art in New Orleans) are trying to play their jazz in a manner very similar to his.

But enough! Why not try some Tom Morris for yourself. An appropriate tune to begin with is When The Jazz Band Starts To Play. Tom himself composed this merry number and it's hard to believe this was as long ago as 1923. In this one, he seems to have been joined by Charlie Irvis on trombone and Bubber Miley on cornet. There are plenty of breaks, and much use of stop chords and off-beats. In addition to a neat Introduction and Coda, the tune comprises a 16-bar theme in Bb on a familiar chord structure, with an Interlude provided by a 12-bar blues theme in Eb - so it's a typical Tom Morris construction. CLICK HERE to enjoy it.

And then CLICK HERE for Charleston Stampede (1926), composed by Tom, again with a clever up-tempo treatment of 12-bar and 16-bar themes. There are some Armstong-like cornet choruses. Don't miss the one that starts at 2 minutes 9 seconds.

CLICK HERE for the unusual combination of Tom's Band with Fats Waller playing a church organ. It was 1927 and the tune was Won't You Take Me Home? (composed by Tom and his pianist Phil Worde).

CLICK HERE  for Blues From the Everglades - a well-structured piece of music from 1926 (note the temporary doubling-up of tempo at 1 minute 57 seconds and again later).

So Tom Morris is primitive and basic? Well, I wish some of the bands playing in our English pubs and clubs today were at least half as good.

I agree with the commentator on YouTube who wrote:
Not sure I would refer to his playing as primitive. His playing was unadorned and just flat out playing from the heart.

18 June 2015

Post 230: WHAT JIMMY MCHUGH AND DOROTHY FIELDS DID FOR US

It started when I noticed what a terrific tune I'm Living In a Great Big Way is. In the streets of New Orleans, the best dancers and bands make quite something of it. See this video for example: CLICK HERE TO VIEW.

I wondered who composed this song. I found it was one of the batch of compositions by Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields that traditional jazz bands have taken to their hearts.
Jimmy and Dorothy

You hardly ever hear a traditional jazz programme that does not include something by the formidable Fields and McHugh team. Jimmy McHugh wrote the music; and Dorothy Fields provided the lyrics.

Think of these, for example:

I Can't Give You Anything But Love
Exactly Like You
Magnolia's Wedding Day
On the Sunny Side of the Street
Don't Blame Me
I'm in the Mood for Love
I'm Living in a Great Big Way
Diga Diga Doo

And then there are some good numbers rarely played these days, even though they were recorded by the likes of Bix Beiderbecke, Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller:

Take It 'Way
Blue Again
Raisin' the Roof

And there were plenty more songs from the partnership, some of which would still make good material for our bands. Examples are:

Cuban Love Song
I Must Have That Man
I Feel a Song Coming On
I Won't Dance
Thank You For a Lovely Evening
The Way You Look Tonight
Lost in a Fog

All these - and many more tunes - were produced by the pair over a period of just seven years. Quite remarkable. At other times in their lives, they both composed with other partners. Jimmy wrote many songs in collaboration with Ted Koehler, Al Dubin and Harold Adamson. Dorothy went on to set lyrics to the music of such luminaries as Jerome Kern and Cole Porter. With Kern, she gave us the unforgettable advice: 'Pick yourself up; dust yourself off; start all over again.' 
Dorothy Fields
Jimmy and Dorothy wrote their songs mostly for revues and shows. For example, I Can't Give You Anything But Love comes from their score for the Broadway Musical Blackbirds of 1928. On the Sunny Side of the Street and Exactly Like You both come from the same show - Lew Leslie's International Revue. They also provided title songs for films.

Who exactly were Jimmy and Dorothy?

James Francis McHugh from Boston was born in 1894. His father - a plumber - at first wanted Jimmy to join him in the business. But the family was quite musical too. In his early years Jimmy worked as rehearsal pianist for Boston Opera House and then as a demonstrator for Irving Berlin's publishing company. In 1921 he settled in New York as professional manager to the Jack Mills music publishing business (where he also found a job later for Dorothy). He went on to compose over 500 songs, including many for stage shows and films, and they were performed by pretty well all the big singing stars from 1930 onwards. McHugh lived until 1969.

Dorothy Fields - eleven years younger than McHugh - was the daughter of a Polish immigrant (Lewis Maurice Schoenfeld) who was in show business - first as a comedian and then as a Broadway producer. Her brothers Joseph and Herbert were also in the entertainment industry, mainly as writers. So show business was in the family's blood. Dorothy grew up in New Jersey and New York. While at school, she started regularly writing poems. She worked for a short time as a teacher and laboratory assistant. According to one source, Dorothy appeared on the stage in London, where she was said to have acted in the Midnight Follies at the Metropole in the 1920s.

At the age of 18, Dorothy married Dr. Jack. J. Wiener of New York. She was soon noticed as a talented lyric-writer; and her seven-year collaboration with McHugh began when she was only 23 years old. She went on to write the lyrics for about 400 songs. In the final years of their collaboration, they worked in Hollywood.

Dorothy's second marriage, in 1938, produced two children. Dorothy died at the age of 68, in 1974.

Why is it that the work of the Fields-McHugh partnership lends itself so well to interpretation by traditional jazz bands? I think these are the three reasons:

(1) McHugh composed good, simple, catchy melodies and structured them in such a way (usually 32 bars, based on the pattern  a - a - b - a) that they could easily be caught and memorised after a couple of hearings.

(2) His harmonic structures are relatively simple. There's not too much of a challenge in most of his (often basic and repetitive) chord progressions, so they are not difficult for jazzers to improvise on.

(3) Dorothy Fields - whether writing lyrics for comic or whimsical settings, or for more heartfelt and emotional songs - manages to find lyrics that strike us as 'just right'. You wouldn't want to change a word. She could skilfully express sophisticated and complex notions in idiomatic and colloquial language and sharp images.

So let's carry on, as the elephant said, Livin' in a Great Big Way!

Post 229: GUS KAHN - HIS LEGACY


Gus Kahn
Having written recently about the great, though brief, song-writing partnership of Dorothy Fields and Jimmy McHugh, it occurred to me that we traditional jazz lovers are also deeply indebted to the lyricist Gus Kahn for many of the songs in our standard repertoire.

In his main partnership with the composer Walter Donaldson, Kahn gave us such songs as:

My Baby Just Cares For Me
That Certain Party
Making Whoopee
Carolina in the Morning
Love Me or Leave Me
I Never Knew That Roses Grew
Yes, Sir, That's My Baby
I Wonder Where My Baby is Tonight

In fact, Kahn wrote over 100 songs with his friend Walter Donaldson.

But Kahn also wrote (with Isham Jones):

I'll See You in My Dreams

Spain

It Had to be You

And with Egbert Von Alstyne he gave us:
Pretty Baby
Memories
On the Road to Home Sweet Home
It Looks Like a Big Time Tonight

With other collaborators he wrote:
Coquette
Crazy Rhythm
Toot Toot Tootsie
Ukulele Lady
Ain't We Got Fun
Chloe
Side by Side
On the Alamo
Nobody's Sweetheart Now
You Stepped Out of a Dream
Dream a Little Dream of Me

What a man!  You can't attend traditional jazz concerts without frequently hearing songs with lyrics by Kahn.

So who was Gus?

Like so many of the people involved in American popular music in the first half of the Twentieth Century, he came from a family of immigrants. Gustav Kahn was born in Koblenz, Germany, in 1886 but his family had gone to seek their fortune in the USA by the time he was four. They lived in Chicago. After working in a mail order business, Gus became successful in his mid-twenties at writing lyrics and soon had hits with Memories and Pretty Baby.

Taking on the career full-time, Gus wrote for stage revues and Hollywood movies, collaborating at various times with pretty well all the contemporary big names in American popular music. Sadly, he died following a heart attack at the age of only 54.

17 June 2015

Post 228: DEVICES, BREAKS, STOPS, RIFFS, RHYTHMS

Chris Reilley
I have received an article for publication written by my friend Chris Reilley, who has played piano in bands here in the English Midlands for several decades. Thank you, Chris, and I hope many readers will find this technical material very informative. Here is the article.
=======================

Devices: Breaks, Stops, Riffs, Rhythms and More


One of the most interesting aspects to me in playing Jazz (Jass) music is the playing of the above types of additions to the tune arrangements as these additions bring new excitement and anticipation both to listeners and dancers which is not heard in any other form of Dance Music.

In my case and in bands I have played with I have used the “Break” in one of my solos independently of the established “Break point” by calling “Break” to the rest of the Rhythm section at a point of my own choice and this can change from performance to performance. Sometimes other members of the front line do the same with a direct signal during their solo. This can be risky on occasion and we all have to be on our toes, but the unexpected act can create a thrilling spontaneous effect.

Now to explain each term used becomes somewhat more difficult as these “terms” are used mostly in jazz music and so far I have not found a book which deals with this in any way whatsoever. The “AB Guide To Music Theory" by Eric Taylor which I have used on past occasions makes no mention of the terms “Breaks”, “Stops” or “Riffs” and anyway I suspect that these terms are more likely covered by books on Musical Arrangement (which I do not own). So the following are my interpretation of these terms:-



Break:- A rhythmical pause in the music which allows one (or more) instruments to play an improvised passage of arranged length without accompaniment.


For example see:- Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers – Doctor Jazz:
The breaks start in the first 8 Bars of the introduction and continue throughout the rest of the tune, including the vocal. See my Chords – below.
An interesting comparison is the same recording by Joe “King” Oliver – the composer of this tune can be heard on:-
where the arrangement is slightly different and they also play the verse.

Also a fine example of a “Split Break” where two instrumentalists share an 8-beat Break, the first taking 1 Bar followed rapidly by the other. For example see:- Bix Beiderbecke and His Gang, 1927 – At The Jazz Band Ball
For those as long in the tooth as I am, a treat from 1954 with a well-known British band: Humphrey Lyttelton's The Onions. Originally recorded by Sidney Bechet, one of the few tunes to feature an Audience Vocal Break:-

Stops:- A series of one or several beat notes played as short breaks played behind a soloist by the rest of the band in rhythm.

For example see Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five – Once in a While (not the well-known song)
This also features breaks as well. It is interesting to hear even the great Kid Ory drops a “Cod” on this not easy “Stops” passage near the end.

Another example is by Clarence Williams' Washboard Four – Candy Lips
The stops come in on the Washboard Solo again near the end.

Riffs:- A riff is more commonly associated with swing bands, but it is used with many smaller jazz bands as well. You may suggest that there is no difference between Stops and a Riff. My response would be that the Stops usually include the Rhythm section but with a Riff the rhythm is not broken. 

It is found usually when a solo is being taken by a member of the band and the remaining front line (and sometimes part of the rhythm section also) will play a rhythmic passage (i.e. in the form of an “Answer” theme) behind the soloist. Sometimes just repeating a single note of the chord. For example see Duke Ellington playing Cotton Club Stomp:

For a later recording by Sidney Bechet of All Of Me see:-

The Riffs at the beginning and end are long notes only, whereas in the Trumpet's and Bechet's solo they are repeating notes.

Rhythms:- Apart from the most common which is the Waltz, most Traditional Jazz Tunes have been composed in Common time, i.e. 4/4. There are some notable exceptions, for example the verse of Saint Louis Blues by W.C. Handy where the verse is played in a Minor key and with a Latin Rhythm. 

N.B. “Latin Rhythm” is a generic term which covers a wide range of styles, some of which are referenced below.

An example of this is:- St. Louis Blues. Blues legend Bessie Smith's only film appearance. Uncut 1929. See:-

Some Bands play the Latin Rhythm Verse first. Others go into it after playing the Chorus. The above film gives a rare insight into Bessie Smith performing in moving picture form. 

There is also a tune called Mamanita by Jelly Roll Morton. See:-

Jelly Roll Morton used many “Devices” which he describes in the Jelly Roll Morton Library of Congress recordings which are worth a listen, including Latin Rhythms. See:- 

One very sadly missed English trumpet player – Dan Pawson - took great pride in playing unusual tunes in his own inimitable style, some of which were hits from the early days of Music Hall and he played several tunes in a Latin Rhythm. One of these is by Dan Pawson's Artesian Hall Stompers, called Take Her To Jamaica. See:-
Yet another by the same band is Amor. See:- 

Another source of Latin Rhythm is heard in some New Orleans Parade Bands. This example is of The Treme Brass Band at the Red Beans and Rice Parade – 2013 playing Big Chief. See:-

March Time (2/4) – commonly called “two beat”. Again a very general term but below are some examples:-

One of these is a very well-known performance of a pseudo March. It can be heard in the Glen Miller version of Saint Louis Blues. See:- 

In New Orleans there are still “Parade Bands” that play very authentic New Orleans March Styles. An early example of this is the recording of Eureka Brass Band - Lady Be Good. See:- 

As these bands were more often followed by a “second line” (dancers), the March Style had to be played with a grand amount of “swing”.

Introductions and Endings

Introductions

From the earliest Rags originally composed for Piano. See The Entertainer (Piano Ragtime, Joplin):

and The Ragtime Dance - (Scott Joplin, 1906):

......to a modern film score with both tunes. The Entertainer/Rag Time Dance:-

Most early composers incorporated a “Scored Introduction” into their composition. It has been suggested that the reason for the “Introduction” was for the dancers to appreciate being given an idea of what the tune was called, its style (e.g. “One Step”, “Two Step”, “Waltz” or even “Latin”) and its tempo, before deciding to take part in the dance. This followed the arrangements of earlier formal dance types (e.g. barcarolle, mazurka and polonaise).

From the early days of classic jazz bands (e.g. Joe “King” Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, etc.) the bands would play the “scored” arrangement, or play the last 4 or 8 Bars of the Chorus instead.

See the Bunk Johnson version of I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate:
or the Graham Bell Version – same tune with verse:-
or by Wild Bill Davidson – with verse, using a very common (some say “corny”) ending:-
See My Chords:-
Endings

These tend to follow a similar framework to the “Introductions”, with a repeat of the last 8, 4 or even 2 Bars of the Chorus. There are, however some notable exceptions:-

For instance an example from Jimmy Yancey, playing Yancey Stomp, where the ending bars are in a different key:-

Bouncing Around by A.J. Piron:-

My chords with New Orleans Hot Shots arrangement:-
or by Piron again New Orleans Wiggle:-

As A.J. Piron and Peter Bocage composed both of these tunes, the sheet music would have had not only the Ending but also the Introduction as recorded.

Also see Sister Kate by Wild Bill Davidson – above.

For standard 32 Bar tunes with no arranged ending, the lead (normally the Horn) will signal to the rest of the Band when he/she would like the tune to end and will wind up with a well-established phrase, usually copied from a well-known instrumentalist in a previous time.

There are numerous examples, of which I relate only a few:-

You Tell Me Your Dream by the Mardi Gras Jazz Band :-

Any Time by Kid Thomas:-

Percy Humphrey's Crescent City Joy Makers - Over In The Gloryland:-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QV8F2JpThYY 

Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five - Knee Drops 1928:-

Dinah - Muggsy Spanier and his Ragtime Band:-

See My Chords:-
Poor Butterfly - Bunk Johnson & Don Ewell:-

Ken Colyer: Postman´s Lament:-

Wynton Marsalis plays Buddy Bolden Blues:-

Tempo Change

The effect of Tempo Change can be a bit disconcerting for those who wish to dance to a tune being played by a jazz band (or for that matter any dance band ) as the dancers have to be prepared for it.

Two examples:- Bix Beiderbecke - Since My Best Girl Turned Me Down:
and
Dinah - Muggsy Spanier and his Ragtime Band:-

Again the reader might know of many other recordings which have this feature.

Please note the chords included are from my own personal collection (still building from existing 800+ tunes). Any enquires for availability can be made through this Blog.

I have chosen all the “Devices” which are of the most interest to me as a piano player. I have not included references to “Key Changes” as this might be covered at a later date and it tends to be more complicated, but if the reader has any additional ideas that he/she would like to be added, please let me know.
                Chris Reilley. (February, 2015)

16 June 2015

Post 227: AN 18-BAR TUNE - 'TANGLED BLUES' BY SHAYE COHN

There are dozens of tunes in the traditional jazz repertoire that consist of 16 bars (measures).
Shaye Cohn
What a Player!
What a Composer!
But can you think of any that comprise 18 bars?

If we exclude tunes that are really 16-bars plus a two-bar tag (tunes such as I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate and She Drives an Oldsmobile and Baby Won't You Please Come Home and Don't Go Away, Nobody) how many genuine 18-bar tunes are there?

I am unable to think of a single one, apart from Miss Otis Regrets by the wonderful Cole Porter - but that is rarely played by traditional jazz bands.

At least that was the case until the ever-amazing Shaye Cohn came along with her 2015 composition Tangled Blues. You can watch a performance of this remarkable song by clicking here.

The 18-bar melody is part of a very clever 'tangle' indeed, because Shaye alternates the 18-bars (which Erika Lewis sings on the recording) with a related 32-bar theme.

But we should not be surprised to find Tuba Skinny coming up with something as unusual as this. After all, they also astonished us a couple of years earlier by adding an 11-bar tune -  Jackson Stomp - to their repertoire. I have not come across any other tune in the traditional jazz repertoire with that unusual number of bars, either.

14 June 2015

Post 226: TRADITIONAL JAZZ - A HORRIBLE DIN!

I must be honest: on very rare occasions I find the sound of a traditional jazz band to be a horrible din.
There are very good traditional jazz performances and very bad ones. I wonder whether you would agree with the following. (For the purpose of these examples, I am talking about the musical sounds produced by a six-piece or seven-piece band.)

LEVEL ONE - THE LOWEST - HORRIBLE DIN LEVEL: Most of the instruments are unnecessarily and excessively amplified. The drummer plays too loud and doesn't take much note of what the front line players are doing. The rhythm section sounds like one collective bass drum. The front line players - especially in full ensemble - take an 'every man for himself' approach and blast away, regardless of what notes the others are playing. It is sometimes impossible for a listener to pick out instruments individually (especially bad if there are four in the front line). The result is a horrible noise! A din!

LEVEL TEN - THE HIGHEST - TOP QUALITY LEVEL:  All instruments individually can be clearly heard. There is little or no amplification. The percussionist plays discreetly, never drowning out other instruments but always decorating and complementing what is going on. The rhythm section plays like one man, maintaining a steady, pulsing beat, never dragging and never speeding up (unless as part of an agreed special effect). The front line players listen carefully to each other, producing wonderful polyphony and syncopation by complementing and responding to what the others are doing and not trespassing on the same notes. The overall effect is like the best chamber music of the classical music world.

In practice, most traditional jazz performances fall somewhere around LEVEL EIGHT. Yes, most are closer to the top quality level than the horrible din level.

Post 225: GET THE RIGHT HAT!

If you are a serious fan of New Orleans jazz, or aspire to play it - you really must obtain the appropriate headgear.

So I returned from my 2015 trip to New Orleans with four caps.


Of course, there are many more available in that city. I particularly liked those commemorating places where jazz is played. But I bought just four; a chap can use only so many.

First (on the left) we have the simple 'New Orleans' cap, made by Bol (in China!). It is comfortable, robust and available in various colour combinations. Next comes the jazz-specific blue cap (also available in other colours, such as grey - very appealing). It mentions the French Quarter and manages to get a discreet 'Jazz', with a saxophone representing the 'J', on the peak. I am very fond of this one, which is 100% cotton and made in China by Sun Products. I am currently wearing it daily here in Nottingham.

Finally come two very special caps. The Dew Drop cap commemorates the amazing historic Dew Drop Hall, about which I wrote in a blog post. You can read the post if you  CLICK HERE.
The Dew Drop Hall

I chose the light-coloured cap but there were other options. This 100% cotton cap was manufactured in Bangladesh by the company Port Authority.

Finally, having spent so much time at the great jazz bar The Spotted Cat in Frenchmen Street, I could not resist their special distinctive black souvenir cap.
The Spotted Cat

This is also 100% cotton and was made in China by Port and Company. You can watch a video of a great performance I witnessed of The Shotgun Jazz Band playing 'Royal Garden Blues' at The Spotted Cat by clicking on here.


All four caps are comfortable and have adjuster straps at the back. Their peaks - especially that on the blue 'French Quarter' cap - are effective in giving the eyes some protection from the sun.

And here's a collection of caps brought back from the French Quarter Festival in 2017 by my friend Peter, who lives in London.

It goes without saying that, if you wear a New Orleans cap, your appreciation of the music will be enhanced; and musicians wearing the caps will find their playing rapidly improves.

13 June 2015

Post 224: 'DODO BLUES' ('NOTHING! NOTHING CAN BE RIGHT....)

An unusual song in the Tuba Skinny repertoire is Dodo Blues. For a performance,
CLICK HERE.

However, for the existence of this song we must thank not some obscure hill-billy of the 1920s but rather the Australian blues singer and composer C. W. Stoneking. Born in Katherine, Australia, in 1974, this gentleman, of American parentage, became addicted to the raw blues as played in the 1920s and 1930s by such performers as Leroy Carr. Now, in the 21st Century, he writes, performs and sings in just that 1920s manner, together with his unusual backing group, The Primitive Horn Orchestra (who have more than a passing resemblance to Tuba Skinny).

C. W. Stoneking wrote Dodo Blues in about 2005 and you can hear him performing it on YouTube:

CLICK HERE.

You will note that he performs it in the key of Ab. Tuba Skinny go for Eb, to suit Erika's voice.

If you want to add the tune to your repertoire or play along with it, you will find it easy to pick up. The main eight bars use the Four-Leaf Clover Chord Progression; and the Middle Eight chords are the same as those of dozens of other tunes (Yes, Sir, That's My Baby, We'll Meet Again, On the Sunny Side of the Street, for example).
-----------------------------------------
Correspondent Tom Corcoran has sent me this comment:

I've been listening to and watching a lot of jazz tenor banjo recently and your post today reminded me about CW Stoneking. I saw him perform  in Dublin and he puts on a fantastic show. His performance is a series of crazy stories interspersed with songs. and his banjo playing is an absolute delight.

Eddy Davis has a great series of posts on BanjoHangout that highlight his banjo style and skill and there are lead sheets and videos available for some of the tunes. His version of the Louis Armstong tune, "Wild Man Blues" is worth a listen (with "Memories of You" tagged on for good measure).

Post 223: 'SMOKY MOKES'


In my ongoing quest to keep alive some of the good old jazz numbers that are so rarely heard and so hard to obtain, I have worked on Smoky Mokes - a raggy tune with three 16-bar themes and including a key change. It dates from 1898 and was written by Abe Holzmann, though I don't know of any shop where I could buy the sheet music (below) today.
Australian correspondent Brian Hutchinson, who is also interested in the wonderful old tunes, has informed me that - with some internet research - you  can find such help as a YouTube video of a piano player version with a 'bouncing ball' play-along visual cue. And on Classic Banjo UK he found a downloadable arrangement for two banjos and piano. Perhaps best of all in the Duke University Digital Collection he discovered 'for educational purposes' the full original piano sheet music.

So, especially if you are a pianist and you want to learn the tune accurately, I would recommend you check out those sources.

I believe traditional jazz bands 'edited' the original composition - as so often happened with such piano originals. The essence and spirit of the piece were captured; but some of the trickier runs - easy enough on the piano - were simplified for the cornet player.

So it ended up with a lead-sheet something like this, which I have tried on both my keyboard and my cornet. It sounds fine.

Post 222: MUCH 'MESSING AROUND'

Composers and bands in the 1920s and 1930s were obviously keen on tunes with titles about 'messing around'.
There was 'Come on Boys Let's Do That Messin' Around'. This was recorded (in 1926) by Blind Blake, who presumably also wrote it..

You can hear his performance BY CLICKING HERE.

It's no surprise that Tuba Skinny took up this tune, with Greg Sherman taking the vocal. You can enjoy one of their performances of the song BY CLICKING HERE.

Also in 1926, we find 'Messin' Around', composed by Charles 'Doc' Cooke, with lyrics by Johnny St. Cyr. It was recorded that year by Cooke's band Cookie's Gingersnaps. Freddie Keppard and Jimmie Noone were among the players. To hear the recording, CLICK HERE. Several other bands were quick to record it over the following couple of years.

Again, Tuba Skinny gave it a new life almost a century later. They replaced the piano-with-voices Introduction with an eight-bar instrumental Introduction, but they faithfully copied the order of events and the melody from Cooke's original, including playing the Chorus before using the Verse as an interlude. Listen BY CLICKING HERE.

Then there was 'Fourth Street Mess Around', composed by Will Shade for the Memphis Jug Band in 1930. You can enjoy the original recording BY CLICKING HERE.

Once again, eight decades later, we find Tuba Skinny reviving the number and producing their version. Very entertaining it is, even keeping the amusing sung Coda ('Here we come, all drunk again. Ooooo-oooooo.'). Listen BY CLICKING HERE.

We are all deeply indebted to the six generous folk who have made these videos available to us on YouTube:
RagtimeDorianHenry;
RaoulDuke504;
Resurgam1901;
James Sterling;
Orchard Enterprises;
jazzbo43.

There was also in 1926 'That Dance Called Messin' Around' recorded by Sara Martin; and 'Everybody Mess Around' by the Georgia Strutters (and others, including Ethel Waters) in 1926; and in 1927, there was also a 'Messin' Around With The Blues' recorded by Fats Waller and 'Beale Street Mess Around' from The Memphis Jug Band (four years before their 'Fourth Street Mess Around').

And of course Louis Armstrong in 1926 famously recorded 'Don't Forget to Mess Around'.