Showing posts with label Alex Garnett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex Garnett. Show all posts

Sunday, October 8, 2023

Simon Spillett Big Band - Dear Tubby H

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2023
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 68:13
Size: 63,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:28) 1. Dear Johnny B
(5:44) 2. As Close As You Are
(5:46) 3. Take Your Partners For The Blues
(6:21) 4. Fish Soup
(4:04) 5. Star Eyes
(4:56) 6. Soft And Supple
(6:44) 7. Rumpus
(5:15) 8. Peace
(5:22) 9. Seven Steps To Heaven
(3:35) 10. Solweig
(6:33) 11. Blues For Pipkins
(7:19) 12. She Insulted Me In Marrakech

Superlatives along the lines of ‘tour de force’ do little justice to this new recording by the Simon Spillett Big Band; an album of rarely heard, newly rediscovered arrangements from the library of the Little Giant himself ~ Tubby Hayes.

Simon Spillett has long been recognised as the keeper of the Tubby Hayes flame. His life, his work and his legacy may well be residing only in the distant memories of those that were there were it not for Spillett’s tireless efforts to remind the jazz public of his immense contribution to British jazz.

The story of how a pile of dog-eared, yellowing manuscript was ultimately rescued and restored after 50 years is fascinating in itself. The mere fact that these wonderful charts weren’t, at some point along the line, thrown in the bin is a minor miracle! Let’s not think about that. Instead let’s concentrate on this heroic feat of musical archeology.

Spillett’s enthusiasm for Tubby’s work led to him being sent, over the years, all manner of Hayes-related artefacts, information, lost recordings and, eventually, lost big band charts. Enough, as it turned out, to record a full albums-worth of material separate to that found on Tubby’s two recorded large ensemble outings Tubbs Tours and 100% Proof.

Enter Mark Nightingale who not only takes his place in the trombone section but also assumed the Dr Frankenstein role of bringing the scores to life. There were missing parts to consider, various copyist errors and the small matter of the poor quality of the original paper after having languished in a dark corner for so many years. One can only imagine the “it’s alive” moment as the band played the opening bars of the first chart at the first rehearsal.

Enter Pete Cater, ace drummer and bandleader in his own right. Also a permanent member of Simon Spillett’s quartet, Cater’s passion for the project has found him wearing several hats at once – producer, executive producer, record company boss as well as percussionist!

Sixteen of Britain’s finest section players, soloists, bandleaders and arrangers make up the Simon Spillett Big Band. It’s as it should be. Tubby’s band was an equally all-star outfit.

This is not an album that features a solitary star soloist (Spillett) endlessly blowing over a series of brass and reed backing figures. Solo’s are distributed equally and skilfully among the band personnel with Spillett featuring himself on just two of the twelve tracks choosing, instead, to fill the role of conductor and catalyst.

From start to finish the whole album crackles with an infectious energy. The reed passages, at times intricate and snakelike, are delivered flawlessly. The brass offer knockout punches with expert precision one minute and beautifully gentle melodic lines the next. The rhythm section swings relentlessly accenting the brass, at times, for even more impact. Each soloist positively shines. This band sounds like a happy band! The feeling of camaraderie and mutual respect is plainly evident on each and every track.

The music itself manages to sound contemporary and yet ‘of its time’, and in equal measure. Post Swing-era the big band was presented with a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge was to stay as a relevant and vibrant art form outside of the dancehalls that had created it in the first place. The opportunity was to see, free of the shackles of commercialism, how the recent developments in small group jazz could be incorporated into the large ensemble. Many established bandleaders that had enjoyed enormous success during the 1940’s fell into obscurity; left behind by a new generation that grabbed the big band from the brink and reinvented it. Twenty years later the original Tubby Hayes big band began performing these arrangements. Over fifty years later, Spillett and his crew resurrect them; breathing new life into them. There’s something in this story that connects all the dots, completes a chapter in British jazz history and, hopefully, opens up a new one.

Dear Tubby H reminds us of how so many great jazz musicians revelled in a big band setting. None less so than Tubby Hayes himself. Simon Spillett and his orchestra have created something way beyond a tribute or homage to Tubby. It serves more as a love letter to the continuing vibrancy of great big band jazz as much as it honours Hayes himself. It’s an album that is beautifully played and beautifully recorded by all involved; one which deserves to sit proudly on the record shelves of any discerning jazz lover.By Denny Ilett
https://londonjazznews.com/2023/10/07/simon-spillett-big-band-dear-tubby-h/

Personnel: Simon Spillett – musical director and tenor saxophone; Sammy Mayne – alto saxophone/flute; Pete Long – alto saxophone/flute; Alex Garnett – tenor saxophone/clarinet; Simon Allen – tenor saxophone/clarinet; Alan Barnes – baritone saxophone/bass clarinet; Nathan Bray – trumpet/flugelhorn; George Hogg – trumpet/flugelhorn; Freddie Gavita – trumpet/flugelhorn; Steve Fishwick – trumpet/flugelhorn; Jon Stokes – trombone; Mark Nightingale – trombone; Ian Bateman – trombone; Pete North – trombone; Rob Barron – piano; Alec Dankworth – bass; Pete Cater – drums

Dear Tubby H

Friday, August 13, 2021

The Ronnie Scott's Club Quintet - The Sound of Soho

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:17
Size: 138,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:07) 1. Stop the World, I Want to Get Off / Through the Night Roared the Overland Express
( 6:30) 2. A Pint of Bitter
( 6:32) 3. Yeah!
( 4:53) 4. Chelsea Bridge
( 6:32) 5. Alfie's Theme
( 4:55) 6. Half a Sawbuck
( 5:33) 7. Someday My Prince Will Come
( 3:06) 8. Exodus
(15:05) 9. Sister Sadie

'The Sound of Soho' was recorded live at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club by The Ronnie Scott's Club Quintet. On this album the band pay tribute to some of the greats in the hard bop and soul jazz era. These legends of the music all performed at Ronnie Scott's and include Horace Silver, Sonny Rollins, Billy Strayhorn and Tubby Hayes. The Ronnie Scott's Club Quintet features James Pearson on piano, Alex Garnett on saxophone, Sam Burgess on bass, Freddie Gavita on trumpet and Chris Higginbottom on drums. The final track of the album also includes Brandon Allen on saxophone. This performances was recorded, mixed and mastered by Miles Ashton. https://www.propermusic.com/rsr002-the-sound-of-soho.html

Personel: Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Alex Garnett; Bass – Sam Burgess; Drums – Chris Higginbottom; Piano, Producer – James Pearson; Trumpet – Freddie Gavita

The Sound of Soho

Monday, August 9, 2021

The Ronnie Scott's All-Stars - Jazz Classics

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:47
Size: 142,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:45) 1. Great Day
(6:31) 2. On the Street Where You Live
(4:06) 3. More
(5:25) 4. Lazy Afternoon
(6:36) 5. Bye Bye Blackbird
(5:27) 6. Wonderful World
(5:32) 7. Dat Dere
(2:30) 8. People Are Strange
(5:36) 9. For All We Know
(6:21) 10. Love for Sale
(8:54) 11. One Day I'll Fly Away

The CD Jazz Classics has catalogue number RSR001. I know what’s coming. Some are going to argue that it isn’t REALLY No 1…. that Ronnie Scotts has a whole history of previous recordings. While we’re at it, the pedant might also question whether all the songs are in fact “Jazz Classics.” Whatevs. The CD, recorded partly in front of an audience, and partly in the same acoustic of the club without one, works well as a showcase for the house trio of Ronnie Scotts music director, James Pearson - piano/arranger, Sam Burgess – bass, and Pedro Segundo – drums, who regularly play the early evening slot at Ronnie’s. They often have to work their socks off to distract the Ronnie’s punters from their workaday conversations and to concentrate on the music. Which they do brilliantly. Night after night. Segundo’s charm and theatricality have, in a very short time, become a fixture. The sleeve notes have a touching reminder of the tragic death of Ronnie’s house drummer Chris Dagley, which is still sorely felt at the club.

But the thought of this being the 1 stayed in the mind. The reason that the front line of this quintet, vocalist Natalie Williams and saxophonist Alex Garnett work so well as sparring partners is what they do with the 1, the first beat. Williams asserts it, lands hard on it, possesses it, reinforces it, often decorates it with an inverted mordent. Her work here is an affirmation. That originally Italian song “More than the Greatest Love” has probably never been performed with quite this level of conviction, of complete persuasiveness. She has a German heritage, and brings something personal and different to this music. There is a German word “betonen” untranslatable which just seems to me to describe well how Natalie Williams has a way of living on, at, with every first beat.

As a result Williams produces her best singing on record yet. RSR001 is Natalie on peak form. The words get the treatment. Rickie Lee Jones’ Dat Dere is characterful, teasing, hilarious, with some magic on the side-drum rim from Segundo, and Johnny Griffin-ish tenor swagger from Garnett. But there’s more: check out inimitable, ecstatic Natalie lion-house noises at 2' 16” and 5' 16” of Bye Bye Blackbird. We’ll offer a prize for the best transcription.As for Garnett, in the legacy of Hank Mobley, the saxophonist responds to the first beat, uses it as a springboard, hides behind it teasingly (as in “I can see you but you can’t see me” ), suggests it, tricks it, avoids it, finds surreptitious ways to lose it. What the hell, it’s something you can always pick up from lost property in the morning, because with a rhythm section of this class, it’s going to be there anyway.

As on his debut CD Serpent (Whirlwind Records, 2011), Garnett stakes his claim to be among the most inventive and subtle saxophonists we have. The CD is cheery, life-affirming, and will work superbly as what the Japanese call “Omiyage”, a present from a specific place check the references to Frith Street in Lionel Bart’s “On the Street Where you Live.” RSR001 contains good music, well played and recorded, and is an ideal means to remember, and keep in the memory, our No 1 Jazz club, Ronnie Scott’s. https://londonjazznews.com/2012/02/11/cd-review-the-ronnie-scotts-all-stars-jazz-classics/

Personnel: Bass – Sam Burgess; Drums – Pedro Segundo; Piano – James Pearson; Saxophone – Alex Garnett; Vocals – Natalie Williams

Jazz Classics

Monday, January 23, 2017

Alex Garnett - Serpent

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 52:05
Size: 83,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. Lydia
(7:20)  2. Three For A Moor
(6:16)  3. Blueprint
(6:34)  4. Dracula's Lullaby
(7:49)  5. Saluda Hakim
(6:10)  6. The Pimp
(5:40)  7. Serpent
(6:29)  8. Atonement

The Alex Garnett who peers out of the cover of Serpent looks a little aggressive and wil0- eyed, with odd vertical slits where his pupils should be a serpent indeed. The Garnett on the inside is more benign, but with a contemporary hipness. In the excellent black and white back cover photo, the besuited saxophonist is cool and focused, the stylish bopper who could easily have been photographed on a 52nd street club stage in the '50s. When he plays, Garnett reveals himself to be all three men: wild, hip and cool in turn. The British alto and tenor saxophonist has been a professional player for 20 years, a first-call sideman for artists as diverse as Scott Hamilton, Wynton Marsalis and Van Morrison and a regular member of the Ronnie Scott's All Stars. Serpent is his recording debut as leader: a straight-ahead session strongly infused with the blues. Recorded in one day in 2009 at Systems Two in Brooklyn, this all-originals session impresses on numerous levels, including the quality of Garnett's writing, the playing skills of the individual musciians and the way in which they lock in together as a unit despite relatively little rehearsal (a deliberate strategy on Garnett's part).

Garnett is accompanied by a trio of top American players. UK-based bassist Michael Janisch, pianist Anthony Wonsey and drummer Willie Jones III form a strong partnership, supporting Garnett's lead playing sympathetically and seizing their chances to solo. Serpent features two slow but contrasting tunes: "Three For A Moor" is a warm and inviting ballad; and "Dracula's Lullaby," as befits its title, has more of a noir-ish feel thanks, especially, to Wonsey's sparse chordal work and Janisch's bass solo. More upbeat tunes, like the catchy "Blueprint," which features a surprisingly funky arco solo from Janisch, and the slinky, Latin sound of "The Pimp," swing from the first note. "Saluda Hakim" is a tribute to Charlie Parker, a swinging bop composition with an irresistible hook and fine solos from every musician, while "Atonement" is Garnett's smoothly flowing take on "When The Saints Go Marching In."  Serpent's title is a reference to a precursor of the saxophone, and recognition of the inventiveness of Adolphe Sax. It's the musicians' inventiveness that stands out on the album, however, a belated but emphatic debut for Garnett as bandleader. ~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/serpent-alex-garnett-whirlwind-recordings-ltd-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php
Personnel: Alex Garnett: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone; Anthony Wonsey: piano; Michael Janisch: bass; Willie Jones III: drums.

Serpent

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Alex Garnett's Bunch of Five - Andromeda

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:59
Size: 138,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:06)  1. So Long
(10:28)  2. Charlie's World
( 7:18)  3. Andromeda
( 5:48)  4. Delusions of Grandma
( 6:48)  5. Early Autumn
(10:00)  6. Her Tears
( 5:37)  7. Holmes
( 7:50)  8. I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm

Taking on a two tenor line-up can be a bit of challenge. The weight of jazz history can hang heavily on the shoulders of the ‘challengers’ having to follow such potent combinations as Sonny Stitt and Gene Ammons and Dexter Gordon and Wardell Grey to pick just a couple. In this, his second album for Whirlwind Recordings, Alex Garnett and fellow tenorist, Tim Armacost achieve this with some strong compositions, some cast iron playing and healthy dose of good humour thrown in, and indeed the Bunch of 5 band comes together from a mixture of determination and good fortune and coincidences over an extended period of time in getting the US based Armacost this side of the pond. The repertoire contains a couple of standards in ‘Early Autumn’ with the saxophonist acknowledging his admiration for Stan Getz, and Irving Berlin’s ‘I’ve Got My Love To Keep Me Warm’; but it the originals that keep the flame burning throughout this fine set. Garnett maintains that writing for two tenors is actually easier than writing for other more usual combinations, and proceeds to put his money where his mouth is in presenting some tough blowing vehicles the humorously titled ‘Delusions of Grandma’ and the clever title track that exhibits great subtly and warmth in the opening phrases, with the two horns weaving intricately around each other. Liam Noble also gets in a delightful solo, perfectly mirroring the feeling that has gone before. Careful listening soon establishes the differences between the two tenors, with Armacost exhibiting the more abrasive tone, and Garnett complimenting this by following a more conventional route through the chords. Throughout, the rhythm section if somewhat subservient to the needs of the saxophonists driving things along nicely, yet manage to find their place in the music that draws the ear. This a fine album from Garnett and his Bunch of 5 that unusually for a two tenor front line resists the temptation for combative duelling, and the net result is a set that reveals more with each listening. ~ Nick Lea http://www.jazzviews.net/alex-garnettrsquos-bunch-of-5-ndash-andromeda.html

Personnel:  Alex Garnett & Tim Armacost (tenor saxophone); Liam Noble (piano); Michael Janisch (double bass); James Maddren (drums)

Andromeda