Newly Released Jazz&Jazz YouTube: The 100 Club Pays Tribute to George Buck

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Back on 11th December 2013 George Buck passed away and I payed tribute to him and his achievements on Jazz&Jazz.

It was on the following day, 12th December, at The 100 Club’s very last Thursday Midday Jazz Session, that The Fallen Heroes, plus immediately recognisable guest stars, played this special tribute to George, appropriately introduced by Mike Pointon and Emile Martyn.

I filmed in the midst of the packed exuberant fans, ducking and diving and jostling my lens. It was Jazz at The 100 Club just as it was in its heyday – except for the age of the fans! And yet there were a good many younger fans in the audience.

So in keeping with my New Year promise to revisit selections from the Jazz YouTubes which I have filmed over the past five years, here, among a motley of jazz stars, including Mike Pointon and Emile Martyn, is the 100 Club’s Tribute to George Buck.
First time featured on Jazz&Jazz.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(YouTube © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

See also:
“George Buck Jazzology Founder, Passes Away Aged 84” 

Brian Carrick’s Algiers Stompers: “Slow Drag’s Boogie Woogie”

Special for New Year’s Day!


Next up in keeping with my New Year’s Resolution to revisit selections from my Jazz&Jazz YouTubes taken since 2013. 

the-band

Chas Hudson (tmb), Trefor Williams (bass), Peter Wright (tpt), Andrew Hall (dms), Brian Carrick (clt, sax), Bob Rowbotham (bjo), Gabrielle Gad (pno).

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(Photos & YouTubes © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

“Over In The Glory Land”: New Orleans Heat with Gwyn Lewis

I’ve made a New Year Resolution to revisit various of my
Jazz&Jazz YouTubes taken since 2013.

First up is New Orleans Heat at The Peartree Jazz Club in Welwyn Garden City in October, 2013. Three reasons. First, I was just getting accustomed to a technological innovation, The Sony Lens Camera, filming Hi Definition linked by local wifi to my iPhone. Second, so far it has proved to be my one and only opportunity to film Gwyn Lewis, The Welsh Viking, who is no longer with the band. Third, sadly The Peartree is no more•.

L to R: Mike Taylor, Gwyn Lewis and John Scantelbury

L to R: Mike Taylor, Gwyn Lewis and John Scantelbury

My apologies that it’s not my best filming and is even cut short. Early teething troubles! But until I catch up with Gwyn again, at least I got to film him in his days with New Orleans Heat.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(Photos & YouTubes © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

Gripping Yarns Continued: When The Sea Froze Over!

Roger Pout and have been firm friends since our school years in Herne Bay. We got into jazz together in our late teens. This is one of my very early attempts at "jazz photography".

Roger Pout and I have been firm friends since our school years in Herne Bay. We got into jazz together in our late teens. This is one of my very early attempts at “jazz photography”. Jazz was popular at the Kings Hall back then. Fans flocked to see stars such as George Melly, Chris Barber, Humphrey Littleton, Kenny Ball, Jonny Dankworth and Cleo Lane.

“When The Sea Froze Over” is the third in my Series of Short Stories about my early years in Herne Bay, Kent, to be featured on Jazz&Jazz. Some might seem out of place with jazz! But really they are not as I first got into jazz in my late teens in Herne Bay. Some will include my early jazz adventures in Herne Bay. For instance, visit “Just Reminiscing”! I’m also sharing the stories on Herne Bay & Herne Remembered.

“When hell freezes over” is an expression used to indicate that something anticipated or threatened will never happen. But it did!

I vividly remember the event. It was late night, Saturday, 29th December, 1962. Two friends and I stopped in our tracks as we emerged from The Divers Arms along from the Clock Tower on Herne Bay sea front. A ghostly, persistent rustling filled the freezing air. We crossed the road and peered over the low sea wall. Behold – a swell of heaving ice crystals!

It was the beginning of the “Big Freeze” – the winter of 1962/63 – one of the coldest in the UK since 1659. Within a few short hours the sea froze over way beyond the pier head – and the blizzards swept in!

But for us it heralded a series of thrills and spills – adventure time!

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Salt water turning to ice!

Against all warnings a bunch of us dared to walk the frozen sea for at least a 100 yards offshore. We negotiated the blizzards and massive snow drifts across Reculver Marshes. We walked the frozen dykes and river beds. Ever upwards and onwards. We tobogganed and skied from the top of The Downs right along past The Ship Inn on the sea front to set new distance records. Not to speak of snowball warfare!

There was the time when a group of us heard Roger ‘A’ yelling “come back you Bs!” We turned back but he was nowhere in sight. He was the last in the line to negotiate the dyke – and the snow drift had consumed him.

Then there was the day when, thinking the roads were clearer, we set off in Roger “B’s” Mini heading in the direction of Reculver. We almost didn’t make it! But there were enough of us crowded in the car somehow to push the Mini clear.

Our winter wonderland adventures lasted into February when more blizzards struck. But of it all one frightening incident I will never forget.

Patch, my ever faithful dog accompanied us on many of these expeditions and especially loved skidding around on the frozen sea. So came the thaw and the ice flows. But Patch was unaware of the danger. He leapt from the beach onto the ice and then to the next flow. But it tipped as he landed and he slid back towards the crevice. He could have been crushed. I jumped onto the ice to save him. It tipped and impelled Patch towards me. Amazingly I caught him and leapt back to the safety of the beach.

Such vivid memories – as if they were yesterday!

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Mellifluous Xmas Time Jazz at The Walnut Tree, Blisworth

tad-trombone

Especially selected, three Jazz&Jazz YouTubes filmed at
Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends’ full of fun Splendiferous Walnut Tree Christmas Special 
on Sunday, 18th December, 2016.

Tad (trombone), Alan Haughton (keyboard), Tomas Pedersen (bass), Gary Wood (trumpet),
Trevor Whiting (saxophone), Ronnie Fenn (drums)

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

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

New to Jazz&Jazz: MORE GRIPPING YARNS!

More Short Stories about Grip the Rook

Part 2: Getting to Grips with Life!

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My hair stylist Grip and Mr Bert, our close family friend.

Back in the 1950s when I was in my mid teens, Mr Bert, a very dear family friend then in his 90s, came to stay with us in Burlington Drive, Beltinge. He and my pet Rook, Grip, got on pretty well until one fine Summer’s day in the garden.

Bored with tending my hair, Grip swooped from my shoulder to share Mr Bert’s deckchair. Suddenly there was a yelp and an exclamation “Get off you old Devil!” Grip had taken a liking to the blue circle printed on the front page of the Daily Mail. He had lunged at it with his beak. Trouble was the blue spot just happened to be covering Mr Bert’s knee!

A Thing About Cheese
Most days Grip knocked loudly on our back door to be let in for his share of cheese. Then he would sidle up to our cat Schuby’s favourite chair, aim a peck at her twitching tail and then sidle away in hasty retreat. Other than that I suppose Grip and Schuby got on quite well.

Grip had a thing about cheese! When we threw a wedge to him, rather than bolt it down, he’d save it for later. He dug a pivot out of the lawn, dropped in his cheese, carefully hidden from sight. But if he realised there were spies about he’d retrieved the cheese, sidle further away and hide it all over again.

When she discovered my “Gripping Yarns” on Facebook, Pat Sargent commented: “We had a crow that my son found after it had fallen from the nest. We called him Joe. As far as he was concerned, our house was his house and he would come to the front door and knock on it and when opened he would walk into the kitchen and jump up on the counter and yell for his food. My most vivid memory was when my mother who had come to visit, got up early in the morning and heard a tapping on the front door. She opened it and I heard “Mother of God a crow has just walked in!”

Fun on the Putting Green!
We set up a putting green in the garden at “Heatherdene”. But with Grip’s help it became a bit of an obstacle course. Whenever we sunk a putt he was on hand to retrieve the ball and charge off across the lawn with it. Come to that, whenever we mowed the putting green lawn Grip would leap into the wheelbarrow and with his powerful beak toss the grass cuttings back over the lawn. He became a main attraction for holiday makers who stayed at my parents’ guest house and for passersby watching from the road.

crow-grip-story

Much later in life Grip’s putting green antics inspired this painting when I spotted a crow threatening a golf ball on the course close to our home in Hertfordshire.
So I wrote this poem to go with the painting:

Bogie or Birdie
What’s it to be?
Strut to the hole
And putt for the match?
Or go for the snatch
And bunker the ball?
Raucously crowing,
“Let’s handicap all!

My mother with the children.

My mother (top right) with the children.

A Sinister Incident?
Each summer my parents took in children from a London care home. Grip was a huge attraction for them and he took to them quite well. But one young lad tormented Grip. Once we heard yelling and raucous cawing. We dashed out to see Grip chasing the lad and pecking at his heels. We feared Grip would be in trouble but no such thing. The matron in charge of the children simply said Grip had taught the bully a well deserved lesson.

Come Xmas
I’m writing these “Getting to Grip with Life” mini sagas just a few days before Christmas so why not end with Grip’s Xmas antics.

Our house was every bit as much his as ours and at Christmas he wouldn’t be left out. My mother set up our Christmas tree in the dining room, which Grip very quickly discovered. So we left him to his own devises with very own parcel of nuts under the tree while we opened our presents. Next thing we knew, not only had he opened his own package but he had also cracked open most of the the nuts in sight and truly enjoyed his Xmas breakfast. PLUS he had set about helping himself to the tinsel on the tree.

These are tales I have passed on to my children and grandchildren and perhaps, having told them here, my adventures with Grip will be shared far and wide.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Note to Jazz Fans: I’m preparing a series of short stories about my early years to be featured on Jazz&Jazz. If some of them seem out of place it’s because they precede my jazz years! I first got into jazz in my late teens in Herne Bay so some will include my early jazz adventures. I’m sharing the stories on Herne Bay & Herne Remembered.

An Interview with Acker

 

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David’s photo of Acker taken during the interview.

In 2004 David Ellis interviewed Acker Bilk at the Chester Gateway Theatre. David asked me if I would like to feature the interview on Jazz&Jazz. You bet I would, David! I’m honoured.

At the time David was writing freelance theatre previews and reviews. Acker was down to earth, warm and friendly and David didn’t feel at all anxious interviewing him before his concert.

David Ellis

David Ellis

David asked Acker if he played any other instruments. Acker replied he was only interested in the clarinet. As a youngster he started to learn the piano but was put off when he had to stay in on Saturday mornings to practice scales instead of getting out with his mates.

Acker told David it came as a complete surprise when he was awarded the MBE. He jokingly referred to it as being a Member of the Bristol Empire. He also spoke about his interest in painting landscapes in oils – “a good way to relax”. An artiste and an artist!

David’s Interview with Acker edited by Peter Davies

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Acker Bilk Presented with Special APPJAG Award at the Houses of Parliament

Meeting Acker at Wyllotts Theatre, Potters Bar, May, 2012

L/R: Bob Thomas of Bob Thomas and The Thomcats, Peter Butler, Acker Bilk, Brian Smith of Welwyn Garden City's Peartree Jazz Club

L/R: Bob Thomas of Bob Thomas and The Tomcats (sadly now also departed), Peter Butler, Acker Bilk, Brian Smith of Lemsford Jazz Club

New to Jazz&Jazz: “Gripping Yarns”

 

This may seem a diversion from Jazz but it is related. On my Facebook Page “Peter Mark Butler (Jazz and Jazz)” I launched a new series called “Gripping Yarns” which quickly proved popular amongst my Facebook followers, most of whom are jazz fans. I had planned to launch a new site to feature my “Gripping Yarns”. But why do that when some are related to jazz and I have so many jazz followers who love a good story?

So here goes with the first “Gripping Yarn”. The connection with Jazz? The location is my happy teenage home in Beltinge, Kent, a village just outside Herne Bay where I discovered jazz just a couple of years later. The photo is the profile picture I am using on Facebook. It has elicited considerable interest: Peter Mark Butler (Jazz and Jazz).

GRIPPING YARNS!

A Series of Short Stories about Grip the Rook

Part 1: Grip and Schuby

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This photo was taken way back in the 1950s when I was just 14/15 years old and my loyalist companion was my pet rook, Grip, named after the manner in which he gripped tight to my shoulder and the Raven in Charles Dickens’ novel, “Barnaby Rudge”.’

barnabygrip

I received quite a response when I posted the photo of Grip on my shoulder as my Facebook profile picture. So much so that I promised to reveal all about Grip’s gripping adventures. We couldn’t have been closer buddies!

I lived with my parents in Beltinge, on the clifftops east of Herne Bay, Kent, in those days. There were numerous rookeries around the village. Cycling home from school one day I found Grip by the roadside at the junction of Beltinge Road and Reculver Road. He was not yet fully fledged and there was no way I could return him to his lofty rookery. So I picked him up and balanced him on my shoulder where he gripped tight as I cycled the rest of the way home.

Grip and Schuby
Soon the adventures began. Grip quickly took to his new surroundings, even sidling up to our cat Schuby and tweaking his tail hung over the edge of his favourite chair. Yet it didn’t take long for them to develop a mutual respect for each other. By the way, Schuby got his name for walking my father’s piano keyboard – a touch of jazz!

Then came the main event! Another cat adventure Grip had later on. He roosted at night in a row of fir trees just outside my bedroom window. In fact we used to caw to each other to lull ourselves to sleep. One night there was a terrible kerfuffle – harsh cawing and fierce hissing. Grip was under attack!

I hurried into the garden in my pyjamas but there was no sign of the combatants. Then the spitting and cawing started again from the top of the garden. I hurtled to Grip’s defence – but there was no need! A big mangy cat raced past me with a bloodied face – never to return. And there was Grip nonchalantly preening himself perched on the bank that separated the lawn from the veggie garden.

Our cat Schuby was a grateful beneficiary of this formidable spat as the stray cat had been a troublesome interloper for some time!

To be continued ……… 

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Presenting FiddleBop Fun With A Touch of Gypsy Swing

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Dave Favis-Mortlock (violin, flute & vocals); Jo Davies (rhythm guitar & vocals); Roger Davis (double Bass); Martin Crowder (guitar, banjo and vocals).

A presentation of Jazz&Jazz YouTubes filmed at The Walnut Tree Jazz Club
in October 2016. Enjoy!

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(YouTubes © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

See Also:
FiddleBop’s “Hot Jazz Swing with Gypsy Zing”

Featuring Washington Whirligig At The Walnut Tree, Blisworth – Plus Coming Soon To The Walnut!

 

Washington-Whirlygig

David Hepworth (Leader, clarinet & saxophone); Wil Robinson (trumpet & flugelhorn); Andy Bramall (guitar & banjo); Liz Hepworth (bass); Rob Cotterell (drums)

Washington Whirligig hail from UK regions north and fans were delighted to welcome them back for their second visit to The Walnut Tree Jazz Club, Blisworth, Northants, on Sunday, 20th November.

Thanks go to Tad Newton for featuring such a wide variety of great bands for Sunday Lunchtime Jazz throughout the year at The Walnut.

Coming soon:

This coming Sunday, 18th December!
Get Xmas off to a Swing with Splendiferous Mellifluous Jazz
With Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends & Special Guests

The Current Walnut Sunday Programme. Still time to catch the December and January Gigs:
Jazz at The Walnut, Blisworth: Nine Great Gigs November, December, January

Soon to be announced:
Watch out for 2017 Sunday Tad Jazz at The Walnut Tree.
Plus NEW: mid week Walnut Tad Specials in May, June & July!
 Also 2017 Tad Jazz at The Bedford Golf Club.

All to be announced here on Jazz&Jazz.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(Photos & YouTubes © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

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