Showing posts with label Sammy Rimington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sammy Rimington. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Sammy Rimington - Visits New Orleans

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:36
Size: 138.8 MB
Styles: Clarinet jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[5:40] 1. Smile, Darn You, Smile
[4:41] 2. In The Upper Garden
[3:51] 3. You Always Hurt The One You Love
[5:55] 4. My Bucket's Got A Hole In It
[5:16] 5. Mazie
[4:13] 6. Burgundy Street Blues
[6:26] 7. Bugle Boy March
[4:29] 8. Far Away Blues
[4:30] 9. Red Wing
[4:28] 10. Over The Waves
[3:20] 11. Mobile Stomp
[7:43] 12. Sweet Georgia Brown

Title aside, British clarinetist Sammy Rimington has done much more than just visit New Orleans over the years: He has based his entire career on playing traditional New Orleans jazz, both with fellow Britons like Chris Barber and Ken Colyer, and with actual New Orleans musicians, including his major influences. The person who was visiting New Orleans in connection with this recording was Arhoolie Records founder Chris Strachwitz, who went there in April 2005 with filmmakers Maureen Gosling and Chris Simon for a documentary they were making about Arhoolie. Gosling and Simon wanted to see Strachwitz do what he had spent his career doing, recording his favorite musicians.

Movies can take a long time to edit and find distributors, however, and Strachwitz has opted not to wait for the eventual soundtrack album, instead releasing the results of his trip here and on A New Orleans Visit-Before Katrina. Rimington is heard in three contexts, with a group Strachwitz has dubbed his Hot Six at the Palm Court, a restaurant; with Michael and David Doucet, Lionel Batiste and Lars Edegran, in a private home; and with the Tremè Brass Band during a street parade. The sound has the quality of a field recording, but that only makes the performances more impressive. The Hot Six is especially lively on such selections as the opener, “Smile, Darn You, Smile,” but the Tremè Brass Band also devotes nearly eight raucous minutes to “Sweet Georgia Brown.” The album is a testament to the importance of New Orleans, before and after Katrina. ~William Ruhlmann

Visits New Orleans mc
Visits New Orleans zippy

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Sammy Rimington - Nuages

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 93:08
Size: 213.2 MB
Styles: New Orleans jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[ 7:31] 1. Marie
[ 6:27] 2. Jerusalem Blues
[ 8:55] 3. Down In Honky Tonk Town
[11:21] 4. Same Old Love
[ 4:41] 5. Blueberry Hill
[10:22] 6. Is It True What They Say About Dixie
[ 6:09] 7. Lonesome And Sorry
[ 8:28] 8. June Night
[ 3:13] 9. Nuages
[ 6:54] 10. While We Danced At Mardi Gras
[ 5:06] 11. Sentimental Journey
[ 8:03] 12. Panama
[ 5:51] 13. I've Always Been In Love With You

British reedman Sammy Rimington was one of the top trad musicians to emerge during the 1960s. He played with Barry Martyn in 1959, spent several years with Ken Colyer (1960-1965), and came to the U.S. in the mid-'60s, playing with Big Bill Bissonnette's Easy Rider Jazz Band. Since that time, Rimington has been heard in a countless number of settings and, other than a brief fling with a fusion band he led (Armanda in 1971), he has stuck exclusively to New Orleans revival jazz. Rimington has recorded and performed with a who's who of New Orleans jazz including Chris Barber, Kid Thomas Valentine, and Captain John Handy. Influenced strongly by George Lewis on clarinet and by Handy on alto, Rimington led many record dates of his own for small labels such as Rhythm Records in 1962; Jazz Crusade in 1963; GHB in 1966; 77 in 1969; California Condor in 1973; Storyville in 1974; Munich in 1975; Dawn Club in 1977; Beerendonk in 1977; Herman, Quines, Lulu White's, and Onward in 1979; Jazz Time in 1983; Progressive in 1985; and quite a few other labels. He continued recording as a leader and collaborator through the '90s and into the new millennium, with highlights including Reed My Lips (billed to Sammy Rimington & the Return of the Mouldy Five) on Jazz Crusade in 1999 and Visits New Orleans, recorded by Rimington with a host of Crescent City stalwarts in April 2005 (several months before Hurricane Katrina devastated the city) and released by Arhoolie in 2008. ~bio by Scott Yanow

Nuages