A Premonition? “Hesitation Blues” – Baby Jools & The Jazzaholics


Jazzaholics

Jazz is on the verge of a revival!


Baby Jools and Chris Tanner are two young stars championing the cause.

So let’s not hesitate! Lets back them along with the many other 21st Century jazz musicians and bands featured on Jazz&Jazz and their new generation fans. And, heh, you oldies, time to debunk the doom and gloom demise of jazz negativity. Time for all you loyal fans to get young at heart again!

I’ll shortly be posting on Jazz&Jazz: “Jazz and Jazz&Jazz are on a journey but need your support!” Please watch out for it and overwhelm me with your responses.

Meanwhile here’s “Hesitation Blues”.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

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

Baby Jools Jazzaholics Feature Chris Tanner – Latest Addition to the Jazz&Jazz Pantheon of Young Jazz Stars


Cutting Straight to the Chase with Red Hot Jazz


Thanks to Jools and his Jazzaholics
 

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

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

Latest Jazz&Jazz YouTube Release: “The Isle of Capri” …


…… Featuring Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends


and Richard Exall


at Olney Jazz Club

 

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

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

Captured for YouTube: Baby Jools’ Jazzaholics “Black Bottom Stomp”


The Jazzaholics “revitalise” Jelly Roll Morton at
The Walnut Tree Jazz Club


Guesting with the band on clarinet Chris Tanner hailing from Australia via Copenhagen.

Baby Jools (drums, leader): Mike Owen (trombone): Jim Swinnerton (bass): Denny Ilett (trumpet), Brian Mellor (banjo); and special guest Chris Tanner (clarinet).

Note the “subtle” repositioning of the lens to focus on Baby Jools’ drum solo. Max Collie had the right idea featuring Jools “on high” in clear view of the camera!

Julyan Aldridge ("Baby Jools")

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

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

12 Noon Sunday, November 22nd: International Jazz Star Greg Abate at The Walnut Tree, Blisworth

 

GregAbatePic
DURING  HIS  NOVEMBER 2015 EUROPEAN TOUR

GREG ABATE

WILL BE THE GUEST STAR 

WITH TAD NEWTON’S JAZZFRIENDS


At The Walnut Tree Inn, Station Road, Blisworth, Northants, NN73DS

SUNDAY  NOVEMBER 22ND  12-2.30PM

Gary Wood [trumpet], Ronnie Fenn [drums], Tad Newton [trombone], Alan Haughton [piano]
PLUS with Bill Coleman [bass] and Frank Griffith [clarinet/sax] 

Admission £10 on door

For advanced bookings and further information contact
TAD NEWTON 01604 858549
email – [email protected]


GregAbatePic2GREG ABATE jazz saxophonist, flutist, compose continues as an international jazz/recording artist with 150/200 days a year touring the globe. In the mid 1970’s, after finishing a four year programme at  Berklee College of Music, Greg played lead alto and arranger for the RAY CHARLES Orchestra.

In 1978 Greg formed his group Channel One which was a favourite in the New England area and from there he had the opportunity to play tenor sax with the revived Artie Shaw Orchestra from 1986 to 1987. Greg then ventured out as a soloist playing festivals, societies, clubs and theatres throughout the USA, Canada, Europe, Russia. Greg has guested with Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends on a number of occasions, notably at Teignmouth Jazz Festival where he is featured on a live recording with the band and at Birmingham Jazz Festival and Swanage Jazz Festival.

Greg recorded his first CD “Live at Birdland” in New York in 1991 on the Candid Jazz Label with James Williams, Rufus Reid and Kenny Washington.

To this date Greg has recorded over 12 other albums and was nominated for a Grammy award in no less than four categories for his 2004 recording “Evolution”.

Greg is also an adjunct professor of jazz studies at Rhode Island College and is a very active jazz clinician with sponsorship from Conn-Selmer Instrument Co, conducting workshops and master classes all over the world. In 2014 Greg  recorded a superb CD with the legendary Phil Woods, who sadly passed away recently.

What they say about Greg Abate

“…Abate’s musical style can be seen as a distillation of swing’s easygoing vibe and jazz’s more animated groove…he has developed a unique voice” Metro, San Jose 

“Greg Abate is an absolute powerhouse…one the most exciting players around today, Greg’s commitment to the music is total.” The Jazz Messenger

“ Greg Abate is one of the most appealing jazz saxophonists on the world scene today. He is mature with an abundance of self confidence. The result is that he plays music with sweetness and daring.” New Jazz Recordings

www.gregabate.com

WalnutF

Full November/December Programme 
At The Walnut Tree Inn
Station Road, Blisworth, Northants, NN7 3DS

Contact Tad Newton for further details:
email – [email protected]
tel – 01604 858549
Web: www.tadnewtonsjazzfriends.com

A Winner! Baby Jools and Denny Ilett at The Walnut 12 Noon Sunday 15th November


Baby Jools’ Jazzaholics with Trumpet Star Denny Ilett


at The Walnut Tree Inn

WalnutF

The photos below are from the Jazz&Jazz Photo Library and recapture Baby Jools and Denny Ilett with Max Collie’s Rhythm Aces at the Granville Theatre, Ramsgate, back in July, 2011.

Julyan Aldridge ("Baby Jools")

Denny-Jools-Max

Don’t miss out on this great Walnut Tree Session!

Nor on the next Walnut Tree event 12 Noon Sunday 22nd November
Tad Newton’s Jazzfriends with the sensational Greg Abate

Contact Tad Newton for further details:
email – [email protected]
tel – 01604 858549
Web: www.tadnewtonsjazzfriends.com

Jazzin’ Around with Tad Newton Full Autumn Programme

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

(Photos © Peter M Butler, Jazz&Jazz)

“Cold Morning Shout”: Tuba Skinny at Fest Jazz, Châteauneuf-du-Faou, 2014

 

TubaSkinnyPleinAir

It was wonderful to video Tuba Skinny for a series of YouTubes during Fest Jazz 2014, several of which I have already featured on Jazz&Jazz. So here is another which initially I vetoed due to a brief  “stumbling fan glitch” towards the end of filming.

Now I am releasing it under my new “Take Two” Category of YouTubes – i.e. videos which I would have loved to have taken again yet still consider well worth viewing. So please, judge for yourselves.

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

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

First Call for Ramsgate Seaside Shuffle Festival July 2016

Seaside Shuffle_CMYK

THREE DAYS OF FABULOUS JAZZ


8th, 9th & 10th July 2016

The Ramsgate Small Boat Owners Club

SSS-online-ad

ENQUIRIES

John H Morgan
20 St Clements Court, Canterbury Road, Herne Bay, Kent. CT6 5RT
Tel: 01227 361238

Or Ron Sheldrake: Tel 01843 596789
Always quote: “Seaside Shuffle”

Visit: www.jazzandjazz.com for regular updates

“Jazz can be a popular music all over again.”

Vanity Fair Logo
As does Jazz&Jazz, 
Trevor Stent aims to promote our emerging young generation jazz bands and musicians, especially at Fest Jazz in Brittany. Sadly, when I visit Jazz Clubs in the UK I find that many ageing fans and even older musicians are totally unaware of these bands and musicians. Their lament is that Modern Jazz has stolen the scene. So when Trevor sent me this Vanity Fair article I simply had to share it on Jazz&Jazz.

So how about a couple of quotes:

“Modern jazz has grown increasingly into concert music, over the last 50 years especially, with musicians more or less looking like a string quartet—just sitting and playing, sometimes reading music from stands.”

“Modern jazz is often mainly about star soloists.”

Both are from the Vanity Fair article by Will Friedwald about the current revival of “New Orleans jazz, Dixieland and most recently, “trad” (short for “traditional”) jazz … ever since the swing era relegated to music’s margins”.

Until now!
In his article “How a Swath of 20-Somethings Have Tuned In to 1920s Pop” Will Friedwald reveals how “Gradually, over the past few years, more and more young jazz musicians – mainly in their 20s and even younger – have begun to play this music and, in the process, started again to refer to it by the name it was known by when it was new: “Hot Jazz” –  with “hot” bands, like King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band or Jelly Roll Morton’s Red Hot Peppers.”

Extracts from Will Friedman’s Article
“Hot Jazz is so prevalent now that New York has almost become like New Orleans in the fin de siècle period: in covering the city’s jazz scene for The Wall Street Journal, I find that I can go hear a 20s-style band, almost inevitably made up of musicians born well after 1980, playing somewhere in the city virtually every night of the week.”

Peter and Will Anderson

Peter and Will Anderson

“I enjoy playing all styles of jazz, because it is all rooted in the music of the 1920s – harmonically, rhythmically, and melodically… Twenties jazz has a clarity and beauty that anyone can identify with; it expresses the most bitter sadness and complete joy, simultaneously.” (Will Anderson, 26 year old reed player).”

“Within a few months of being formed in the Crescent City at the start of 2013, The New Orleans Swamp Donkeys Traditional “Jass” Band was already drawing crowds in New Orleans as well as in the New York area.”

“None of these bands has been on a top label, although some sell their own self-produced CDs. … To these groups, it’s much more important to be well represented on the social networks, to have a compelling Facebook presence, and to get noticed on YouTube.”

“Hot Jazz bands do everything they can to keep the audience engaged, making the music visually appealing.”

The New Orleans Swamp Donkeys

The New Orleans Swamp Donkeys

“Jon Ramm, the 27-year-old trombonist with the Swamp Donkeys says, “A lot of people write off this kind of jazz as antiquated, but the truth of the matter is it’s still pop music. Twenties music has those qualities … a connection with basic human emotion. All the music we play is basic, structure-wise, chord-change-wise. And it gives us an ability to reach all people.”

“As the names of these groups imply, this music is about the bands, many of whom have colourful and unforgettable appellations like the Hot Sardines (who featured on Later With Jools Holland earlier this year), the Swamp Donkeys, Baby Soda, the Grand Street Stompers, Emily Asher’s Garden Party, Dan Levinson’s Roof Garden Jass Band, Jesse Carolina and the Hot Mess …whereas modern jazz is often mainly about star soloists.”

“These musicians … are working conspicuously to prove that jazz can be a popular music all over again.”

Featuring Our New Generation Jazz Bands
In an earlier Jazz&Jazz post entitled “Let’s Avoid the Generation Gap!” I feature a list of UK and overseas “new generation” jazz bands. It needs updating with bands I have covered since – and as and when I can seize upon opportunities to feature more of our young stars.

Meanwhile, Jazz Fans, however old you are, don’t miss out on opportunities to get to see these young stars. I know for sure that a good many “ageing” musicians relish opportunities to play gigs with them. 

Peter M Butler
Editor & Proprietor Jazz&Jazz

Steamboat Jazz Band Stars 12 Noon, Saturday, 28th November, at Ramsgate Seaside Shuffle

RichardElmes

Richard Elmes

The focus will be on Radio 2 featured banjoist Richard Elmes and his Steamboat Jazz Band turning up the heat with hot jazz including numbers from the trailblazing The Roaring Twenties “Jazz Age”.

Steamboat Jazz Band are:
Banjo: Richard Elmes; Trumpet: Dave Ware; Reeds: Dave Corsby; Trombone: Martyn Rawbone; Sousaphone: Harry Cook; Drums: Jimmy Tagford.

Venue
The Ramsgate Small Boat Owners Club
Guildford Lawns, Ramsgate, CT11 9AY

Ramsgate Seaside Shuffle Bookings:
John Morgan – 01227 361238

Dave Corsby

Dave Corsby

 

Dave Ware

Dave Ware

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Martyn Rawbone

Martyn Rawbone

Jimmy Tagford

Jimmy Tagford

 

Harry Cook

Harry Cook

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