Esther O’Connor Presents Ashton Lane’s Latest Album “One Kiss Later”

ashton-lane

Early in February, 2012, I painted Esther O’Connor’s portrait. The daughter of Graeme Duffin, initially a jazz musician and later the bassist with Wet, Wet, Wet, Esther is now a singer/songwriter with the Glasgow based group Ashton Lane.

Esther emailed me about their latest album “One Kiss Later”. Ashton Lane are totally independent with their own cottage industry in Glasgow where they make all their music and handle all their promotions themselves…“no big label etc”

So the support of folks who enjoy their music is absolutely crucial and Esther contacted me to ask whether I could announce on Jazz&Jazz their special promo offer for their latest album
“One Kiss Later” for free.

Please use this link: https://ashtonlane.clickfunnels.com/freealbum

I can assure you, the album is great!

To request information about Ashton Lane’s 2017 Tour please email: [email protected]

And now my portrait of Esther

EstherOConner

Photo © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz

Link to the original Jazz& Jazz post featuring the portrait. 

A Fine Art Print of the portrait was stolen soon after I displayed it along with a number of my other portraits and landscapes. I took that as a good omen, Esther.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Fundraiser Concert Announced for Lancaster’s Royal Grammar School Jazz Orchestra


Another great fundraiser supported by 

Norman Gibson and The Lancaster Boys+Girls Club

Wednesday 22nd March, 2017
7.30 – 10.00pm
Doors Open 6.15pm

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Club-Logo

For tickets and further information please contact:

Norman Gibson: 01524 855770
email: [email protected]

Andrea Motis’ Thrilling London Debut Captured Live on YouTube

 

Andrea Motis

Andrea Motis

The latest in my quest to revisit selections from my Jazz&Jazz YouTubes filmed since 2013, is this star performance by Andrea Motis, just 19 at the time, with the Andrea Motis/Joan Chamorro Quintet. Filmed at Pizza Express Jazz Club, Dean Street, London, back in October, 2014. Andrea’s London Debut! 

Brilliant!

I’m planning a Jazz&Jazz Special Feature on the impact my Jazz&Jazz YouTubes are having on reinforcing the current resurgence in an awareness and love for jazz. At the time of posting this feature about Andrea’s Jazz&Jazz YouTube (Sunday, 15th January, 2017) it had clocked up 38,674 views. Lets see how speedily we can turn the dial. And why not have your say in Comments below.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(Photo & YouTube © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

See also
“Outstanding London Debut For Young Catalonian Jazz Star Andrea Motis”

Jazzfriends at The Pumphouse with Guest Star Amy Roberts

Basin Street to Harlem

8.15pm Thursday 26th January

tad-at-pumphouse

Contact Tad Newton for further details:

email – [email protected]
tel – 01604 858549
Web: www.tadnewtonsjazzfriends.com

Pump House Jazz Club

Tad Newton Presents Jazz at the Bedford: Tina May with The Rachael Johnson Band

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Contact Tad Newton for further details:

email – [email protected]
tel – 01604 858549
Web: www.tadnewtonsjazzfriends.com

Chris Ingham Presents The Life and Music of Hoagy Carmichael

JBGB-F
LIVE AT ZEDEL – NEW SEASON 
The new season of exquisite jazz shows from JBGB Events Live at
Zedel 2017 has just been announced. The season starts with the
delightful 
Hoagy – The life and music of Hoagy Carmichael
with the Chris Ingham trio
.
Hoagy Carmichael

Hoagy Carmichael

Wednesday 1st February 9.00pm 
 
Tickets £20 
Chris Ingham

Chris Ingham

Wry, wise, sentimental, down-home and sophisticated, Hoagy Carmichael’s songs are loved for their warmth, wit and sheer melodic beauty. This evening at The Crazy Coqs highlights Hoagy’s special relationship with the music of legendary jazz cornettist Bix Beiderbecke. The programme features many of the well-known hits (Stardust, How Little We Know, Georgia On My Mind, Skylark, The Nearness Of You, Ole Buttermilk Sky, Lazy Bones, Old Rockin’ Chair, et al) as well as some obscure nuggets and delightful curiosities from Hoagy’s rich and varied songbook. Featuring the musical sensitivities of Chris Ingham (vocal/piano), Paul Higgs (trumpet), Rev Andrew Brown (bass)

Chris Ingham’s album collection of 16 numbers,”Hoagy”, catches their spirit exactly”  The Guardian
“An evening packed with the tales, anecdotes and music of Americas master musician”  The Hoste of Jazz
For more info, images and interviews please contact [email protected]

11th February: Simon Spillett Fund Raiser for the National Jazz Archive

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Simon Spillett (© Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

Award winner Simon Spillett plays fund-raiser for the
National Jazz Archive

The Simon Spillett Quartet is playing a fund-raising concert for the National Jazz Archive on the afternoon of 11 February in Loughton, Essex.

Simon Spillett is a highly respected tenor saxophonist who plays in a wide range of groups, and leads his own quartet. He has researched and written extensively about the great British tenor sax player Tubby Hayes, including a widely praised biography ‘The Long Shadow of the Little Giant’. He has recently received the British Jazz Award for ‘Services to British Jazz’.

alec_dankworth

Alec Dankworth

jq-john-critchinson-jq-001-jazzcamera

John Critchinson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clark Tracey

Clark Tracey

Simon’s all-star quartet features three other wonderful musicians – John Critchinson, piano, Alec Dankworth, double bass, and Clark Tracey, drums. Both Alec and Clark were also award winners in the 2016 British Jazz Awards in their respective categories. John Critchinson has had a distinguished career playing with leading jazz groups and now leads the Ronnie Scott Legacy band.

This concert is one of a series during 2017 to raise funds to support the work of the Loughton-based National Jazz Archive.

Simon said: “It’s a pleasure to bring my quartet to play at Loughton to help raise funds for the National Jazz Archive. It’s a wonderful resource for everyone interested in the history and development of jazz in this country.”

The venue for the concert is Loughton Methodist Church, 260 High Road, Loughton, Essex IG10 1RB, close to the Archive’s home in Loughton Library, where there is extensive parking, 1 km from Loughton Station on the Central Line, and served by numerous bus routes.

The concert starts at 2.30pm and tickets cost £15.

For details and to book tickets, visit:
www.nationaljazzarchive.org.uk/events
email: [email protected]
Tel: 020 8502 4701. 

For media enquiries contact: Nick Clarke 020 8502 4701

[email protected]

National Jazz Archive, Loughton Library, Traps Hill, Loughton, Essex IG10 1HD

www.nationaljazzarchive.org.uk
www.facebook.com/nationaljazzarchive

The National Jazz Archive is a registered charity based in Loughton Library in Essex. It was founded by Digby Fairweather, and holds the UK’s finest collection of written, printed and visual material on jazz, blues and related music, from 1919 to the present day. The Archive holds more than 4000 reference books, specialist periodicals and bulletins spanning over 600 titles, archival material, artwork, ephemera and photographs. It is open on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 10am to 1pm.

The Archive received a Heritage Lottery Fund grant in 2011 that supported a
three-year access development project enabling the collection to be fully conserved and catalogued for the first time. Significant items have been digitised and are now accessible online. A second grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund was made in 2015 for an ‘Intergenerational Jazz Reminiscence’ project, and work on this 18-month project started at the beginning of 2016.

www.nationaljazzarchive.org.uk

Simon Spillett
Described by the late Humphrey Lyttelton as “formidable”, Simon Spillett is a British jazz saxophonist who leads his own quartet featuring John Critchinson (piano), Alec Dankworth (bass) and Clark Tracey (drums). He has won several awards for his music, including the tenor saxophone category of the British Jazz Awards (2011), Jazz Journal magazine’s Critic’s Choice CD of the Year (2009), Rising Star in the BBC Jazz Awards (2007) and most recently the Services to British Jazz Award in the 2016 British Jazz Awards.

Other celebrated jazz leaders and bands with whom he has worked have included Sir John Dankworth, Stan Tracey, Peter King and The Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Orchestra. He has recorded three albums, ‘Introducing Simon Spillett’ (Woodville Records, 2007), ‘Sienna Red’ (Woodville Records, 2008) and ‘Square One’ (Gearbox Records, 2013), all of which have received highly favourable reviews in both the specialist and national press. His festival, concert and club appearances across the UK have included sold-out gigs at Ronnie Scott’s and the Brecon Jazz Festival and he has broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s Jazz-Line Up with his own band.

He has also worked as a writer, penning the definitive biography of UK jazz legend Tubby Hayes (‘The Long Shadow of the Little Giant’, Equinox) and articles for magazines including Jazz Journal and Record Collector. Acting as a consultant for a number of jazz record labels, he has written booklet essays for over 90 albums.

www.simonspillett.com

Slip Sliding Away! – Cliff Face Adventures

In his recently published book, “Tales of Beltinge In The Second World War”, Malcolm Hobbs told of his gripping adventures in Beltinge and Herne Bay, Kent, as a schoolboy during the war years.

A few years younger than Malcolm, this inspired me to begin writing a series of short stories, not necessarily in sequence, about my life and times in Beltinge in the happier post war 1950s, when it was an adventure playground.

Herne Bay Cliffs in the 1950s

The Cliffs prior to grading in the 1970s

I recently read on online these words written by Steven Matlock in 2015. “I have some great memories of my life in Herne Bay, climbing the cliffs between The Downs and Bishopstone Glen. The cliffs were all graded around 1973 to halt erosion, a sad sight for me.”

I concur, Steven, and also have wonderful memories of those days.

This spectacular chasm was formed overnight by one of the massive cliff collapses. Note the ridge and the pools between it and the new cliff top. With the north side of the ridge sloping away to the sea, the area proved to be a huge attraction to us local lads.

Our Teenage Adventure Playground!

The cliffs between Herne Bay, Beltinge and Bishopstone Glen were an adventure playground for us local teenagers in those days. We became adept at scaling their escarpments and speeding across their narrow ridges and – even skidding down the steep shale slopes. So skilled were we that we could outpace all comers – particularly teenage holiday makers who dared to challenge us – over boggy terrain. Occasionally the fire brigade had to rescue holiday makers sunk up to their waists in the clay mud pools. Winter snowfalls and ice added to our adventures. And always accompanying us was Patch, my faithful cross breed terrier.

The cliffs at the top of Burlington Drive, Beltinge, where I lived as a teenager. The thatched cottage to the right was the home of Councillor Williams.

The cliffs at the top of Burlington Drive, Beltinge, where I lived as a teenager. The thatched cottage to the right was the home of Councillor Williams.

The Magical Mattress

But there was one specific adventure which simply has to be told. One summer’s day we came across an old double bed mattress which some unworthy had tossed down the cliff face. Magical! Instantly we converted it into our shale slope toboggan.

I was into photography back then when scaling the cliffs!

A rare shot of one of my rescue attempts!

Hauling it up onto one of the steep ridges, as many of us packed onto the mattress as possible (along with Patch) and set it speeding down the shale slopes. Brilliant at high speed with all of us clinging on for dear life – until, after several days of wear and tear, the mattress, fully laden with scruffy youths – and I might add, teenage girls as well as boys and one dog – the mattress exploded. It burst asunder! Springs and strappings hurled in all directions. And yes, along with every single one of us tobogganists! I was into amateur photography back in those days, but if I’d had a camera with me it would have done no good!

Needless to say, despite recriminations, we all survived to continue our remarkable East Kent teenage adventures.

To the left, Burlington Drive, backing on to farmland in those days.

To the left, Burlington Drive, backing on to farmland in those days. Upper right, the chasm caused by the cliff slide – see image above.

tales-of-beltinge

Postscript 

Why post this on Jazz&Jazz? 

Because Beltinge and Herne Bay is where jazz for me began.
Here are extracts from one of my earlier posts.

Jazz Too!
Jazz too played large in the picture. I remember especially one late night party thrown by Bertie in his grand old Georgian Terrace house on Herne Bay sea front. Two jazz hits, played over and over again that night, still haunt me – Miles Davis’s “Lift To The Scaffold” and Lonnie Donegan’s “Seven Golden Daffodils”.

That too was the era of Acker’s “Stranger on the Shore” and Kenny’s “Midnight in Moscow” – bringing back memories of my first “real” girlfriend. Sammy Rimington did the East Kent Jazz Circuit in those days and still does so this day, touring with his International Jazz Band’s Autumn tours. But his was and still is pure New Orleans Revivalist Jazz dating back to the era of his mentor, the legendary George Lewis.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Alan Gresty and Tony Pitt with a Mesmerising Performance of Davenport Blues

Barry, Alan and Tony

Barry, Alan and Tony

Continuing my quest to to revisit selections from my Jazz&Jazz YouTubes filmed since 2013, this is one of my early favourites – Alan Gresty and Tony Pitt when they starred with Barry Palser’s Savoy Jazz Band at the then Peartree Jazz Club back in late 2013.

They most certainly did Bix justice despite the convivial and approving murmurings from the fans.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(Photo & YouTube © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

Presenting a 14 Gig Feast of Jazz at The Walnut Tree, Blisworth

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SUNDAY  LUNCHTIME  JAZZ

THE WALNUT TREE INN

STATION ROAD, BLISWORTH, NORTHANTS NN7 3DS
12 noon – 2.30pm

Top national and international jazz bands

Great venue, three miles from J15 on M1. Free parking.
Real ales, great hot food, bar snacks,

Telephone 01604 858549 for all enquiries

ADMISSION £10 on the door

Great Programme of Varied and Swinging Jazz

Ben Cummings

Jan 15th  Ben Cummings/Gerry Mulligan Band with Amy Roberts (baritone sax)

Jan 22nd  Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends  – “Jazz Roots & Routes”

Jan 29th  The Ginger Pig Band  – “Pig” debut at The Walnut!

Feb 5th  Dave Harmer’s New Orleans Hotshots

Feb 12th  No jazz

Barry Palser's Super Six Jazz Band celebrating “Dixieland to The Duke” at Bedford Jazz Club

Barry Palser’s Super Six Jazz Band.

Feb 19th  Barry Palser’s Super Six with John Crocker

Feb 26th  No jazz

Mar 5th   The Bateman Brothers Jazzband

Simon Spillett

Simon Spillett

Mar 12th  Simon Spillett Band. Great sax star – don’t miss out!

Mar 19th  Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends

Mar 26th   New Orleans Heat

Apr 2nd  Chris Pearce/Andy Leggett Sopranos Jazz Band.

Old Chaps at Fest Jazz July 2016

Old Chaps at Fest Jazz July 2016

Apr 9th  Old Chaps Jazz Band  – great young French band!

Apr 16th  Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends

ChristineWoodcockHome
Apr 23rd  Christine Woodcock and The  Stackyard Stompers

Apr 30th  Jurbena Jazz Band (Holland)

Watch out for our midweek specials
May 10/June 14/July 19/September 13: 8-10.30pm. Full details to follow.

Wednesday July 19th  8pm: Greg Abate (USA sax/flute star) with
Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends!

 LIVE JAZZ … USE IT OR LOSE IT!

TAD NEWTON 01604 858549
[email protected]
www.tadnewtonsjazzfriends.com

Listen to “The Late Paul Barnes” BBC Radio Northampton every Saturday 11pm
for the best in jazz sounds and jazz news!

And check out:
 www.jazzandjazz.com
www.northantsjazz.co.uk

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