Welcome, Visitor Number

Translate

Showing posts with label Lionel Ferbos - 101 years old and still leading his band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lionel Ferbos - 101 years old and still leading his band. Show all posts

24 November 2017

Post 571: TRUMPET NOTES HIGH ON STEROIDS

When you are in your eighties and still trying to play the trumpet, you have to keep things simple. You are unable to play very high notes because your lips have lost their strength.

Lionel Ferbos is my inspiration. He went on playing in New Orleans almost right up to his death at the age of 103. In his final years he kept things very simple indeed, using only the lower notes. And yet he was still playing some very pretty traditional jazz. 
Lionel Ferbos, who died in 2014.

All was fine with me until recently, when my legs and arms rapidly became very weak and I was feeling unusually tired most days. I hardly had the strength to lift a trumpet to my lips; and my walk became a slow shuffle.

I put it down to old age. But Mrs. Pops Coffee ordered me to see the doctor; and it is never a good idea to disobey Mrs. Pops Coffee.

Blood tests showed I had polymyalgia rheumatica – something of which I had never heard. My doctor prescribed a course of steroids – 15 mg. a day of Prednisolone, to be exact, with the intention of reducing the dose a little in the weeks ahead.

How lucky I am to have such a doctor (and such a wife)! After a few days of the treatment I was able to walk steadily again, to hold my trumpet and to need less sleep.

Yesterday when I was doing what I pretentiously call practice, I discovered to my amazement that I was able to play some of those high notes above the stave. They sounded rather squeaky but they were there all right. I can only put this down to the steroids which must have strengthened my lips as well as my arms and legs. Another curious side-effect has been that my fingernails and toenails are growing much more quickly than before and need trimming every couple of days.

However, I have no intention of using my new-found steroid-induced ability to attempt high notes when playing with my friends in traditional jazz bands.

In my view, traditional jazz with a soul does not require trumpets producing lots of raucous high notes which seem to be mere exhibitionism and do not contribute much to the beauty of the music, especially in ensemble work.

Think of Shaye Cohn. She is probably the best and most creative traditional jazz cornet player in the world today and yet she opts for subtle, inventive musical phrases that rarely go above the stave. In fact, having listened to her in about 450 videos, I have never heard her play a note higher than Concert A above the stave. Music theorists call it 'A5', equivalent to vibrations at 880 times per second (880 Hz). You can hear Shaye using this note when playing Dallas Rag.

Shaye is an example to us all. There are trumpeters who can frequently be heard squeezing out notes at 1046 Hz (the note called 'C5') and even higher. But what's the point?
============
I must add the footnote that in January 2018 we finally heard Shaye play a high Bb (in Echo in the Dark). This was not mere exhibitionism. She was merely copying precisely the trumpet lead in the original recording of this pretty tune by The Original St. Louis Crackerjacks.

3 June 2013

Post 95: LIONEL FERBOS

I received some very sad news. Lionel Ferbos died on 19 July 2014 - just a few days after his 103rd birthday.

I had written the following only a few hours earlier.
----------------------------------------------------
The first band to perform in April last year at the Jazz Festival in New Orleans was that of Lionel Ferbos.

What was special about that? Let me tell you.

LIONEL WAS 101 YEARS OLD.

Here he is at the festival.

Last time I was in New Orleans (1998), I spent an evening at the Palm Court Café listening to jazz played by Lionel Ferbos and his Band. I do not remember who his band members were, except that they definitely included the late Les Muscott on banjo and the late Pud Brown on reeds. Even though Lionel was 87 years old, he still played well - keeping the music simple but melodic. And he also sang. It was a lovely band, playing traditional jazz in a gentle, acoustic style.

Lionel was one of those who in the mid-1930s was signed up into the Works Progress Administration Band of New Orleans to get people back to work after the Great Depression. Here's what the band looked like.
Lionel is in the row of cornets on the right. That was 79 YEARS AGO!

Isn't it wonderful that he is still active? He is now 103!

Here he is again (photographed at the age of only 99):
Lionel said at his 100th birthday party at the Palm Court Café (when he was as usual leading the band): 'It's the same music. We're still playing the same numbers we played 80 years ago.'

At the end of the party, a well-wisher said to him: 'Hope to make it next year'. Lionel replied: 'Me too!'