htdocs/new%20orleans,%20jazz,%20special%20guests,chris%20burke,%20clarinet,%20Les%20Muscutt,%20banjo,%202004

MARDI GRAS

JAZZ CLUB

THE SOUNDS OF NEW ORLEANS
Mardi Gras Club c/o Casey's, 
Market Square, Daventry NN11 4BH, UK.

Guests Page

Now also includes some sample audio.

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THE SAMMY RIMINGTON INTERNATIONAL BAND  

A few of his session 'Photos from the "sell out" session on Friday 17th. October 2008 are shown below.

Sammy aged 16 with Dave Reynolds

Slightly Older!

Emile Van Pelt

The Rhythm Section

Emile Van Pelt again.


Andrew Hall's Memories of New Orleans Band

Teddy Fullick as a guest on Trumpet

(Teddy is in a class of his own, has a great understanding of New Orleans music and has played with many of the great masters of the music since it's revival in the fifties.)

Watch this space for further details of his next visit to our Club.

Pictures from John Hale:-

Andrew Hall and Steve Peters

Andrew Hall Leading the Band on Piano

Latest Pic with Karl Herd on Tenor Sax

Roger Bird

Steve Peters

Stu Battle

Teddy and Roger

Teddy Fullick


THE SAMMY RIMINGTON INTERNATIONAL BAND PICS 2006

The Band at the Ex-Servicemen's Club

Sammy with the fans

The Band on Stage

Eric Webster and Annie Hawkins - "giving instructions"


The 6th . Ward Brass Band at the Ex-Serviceman's Club, Daventry appeared on

Monday 12th. June 2006.

Pictures by kind permission of Mr. Emile Martyn.


Bands details from 2006 onward of both

Bands that have appeared or are due to appear

(Please note Guest's details are not shown in Chronological order)

Appeared

MONDAY 12th June 2006

The Very Exciting

6th. Ward Brass Band

Jazz Musicians visiting from

New Orleans

Playing their own style of New Orleans Street Band Music, more usually seen around the time of the Mardi Gras festivals, this band will appear at the Mardi Gras Jazz Club as a very special feature. The range of music covers tunes made famous by Louis Armstrong, Fats Domino and many others as well as Gospel songs.

To-date the New Orleans musicians who are likely to appear are:-

Terrence Andrews - Bass Drum

Bennie Pete - Tuba

David Andrews - Trombone

Sammy Cyret - Snare Drum

Will Smith - Trumpet or

Big Al Huntley - Trumpet

Kelvin Johnson - Sax

with John Richardson (Northampton) on Piano/Organ

 

 

The return of two Special Guests from New Orleans

TBA

 

On Clarinet:- Chris Burke

and

On Banjo:- Frankie Lynn

Palm Court Jazz Cafe Decatur Street - New Orleans

Chris Burke

"I organized my first jazz band in Nottingham, England in 1961. But I was doing more organizing than actual playing because I knew very little about playing the clarinet in those days. Not having had any formal training in music, I began to teach myself, at the age of 30, to play clarinet and sax. Barry Martyn, Dan Pawson, and Ken Colyer's visits to New Orleans encouraged my study of New Orleans music.

My first visit to New Orleans was in 1969 for the funeral of George Lewis. In those days I played with Punch Miller, Sweet Emma, Percy Humphrey, and had some great sessions with Kid Thomas, Albert Burbanks and many more.

After leading my own bands in North America for four years in succession, I left England and joined various bands in Belgium - the Fondy River Band and then the Cotton City Band and assorted brass bands. During this time I was playing a little Clarinet, a little Alto Sax, and sometimes the Tenor Sax. I began traveling more, playing in Romania, Tunisia, Mexico, the Bahamas, the French West Indies, and toured the States and Europe with Barry Martyn's "Legends of Jazz" as the road manager.

I finally moved to New Orleans and now play traditional New Orleans Jazz professionally. I play the Albert system Clarinet, playing both the B flat and the E flat I play regularly with Barry Martyn's "Eagle Brass Band" and Andrew Hall's "Society Brass Band". In 1986 I went to Spain from New Orleans with the "Young Tuxedo Brass Band". Great to be on the same bill with "Count Basie's Orchestra". More recently, my trio played a five week engagement in Venezuela in 1992. In 1993 we did a one week engagement in Sao Paulo, Brazil where we brought Louis Armstrong's Trumpet for exhibition, in cooperation with Don Marquis and the Jazz Museum at the Mint.

I am well known in the Garden District where we do many private parties, weddings, and the like.

My love for the Clarinet comes from Barney Bigard, Louis Cottrell, Albert Burbank, Albert Nicholas, Raymond Burke, Alphonse Picou to name a few. For me there is no one to compare with these great New Orleans Clarinet players. Their tone and feeling is so fine. Clarinetist Alexander Stellio from Martinique is my latest influence.

I have recorded with Percy Humphrey, Chester Zardis, Louis Nelson and Danny Barker. This may have been Danny Barker's last recording with the "New Orleans Rhythm Kings". I made a record in 1993, a CD with "Barry Martin's Down Home Boys" and also with the Les Muscutt Band.

F. Lynne and I have been working together many years at the Delta Steamboat Company in New Orleans."

 

LES MUSCUTT

Born Barrow-in-Furness, England in 1941 started playing Banjo with pro and semipro bands in England in the late fifties. Also played with many visiting American musicians including Henry Red Allen, Sonny Boy Williamson and Memphis Slim.

Moving to New York in late 1966 led his own band on Bourbon St. Moved permanently to New Orleans in 1968. Since then he he has worked with many New Orleans musicians and bands including Frank Assunto's Dukes of Dixieland, Preservation Hall Band, Kid Sheik's Band and the Palm Court Bands of Louis Nelson and Pud Brown.

Has toured Asia, Central America and Europe with many New Orleans Bands. The most memorable trip was to Thailand where he played for and with the King of that nation who plays great jazz Trumpet and Reeds!

Les has recorded over 40 albums and CD's with such great names as Raymond Burke, Louis Cottrell, Herb Hall, Pud Brown, Willie Humphrey, Sammy Rimington and Chris Burke, and that's just some or the Clarinet players!

In 1977 Les played on the Grammy Award winning Album; Doc (Cheatham and Nicholas (Payton). Recently he plays at the Preservation Hall and leads his own band at the Palm Court Cafe in New Orleans.

 

The Stackyard Stompers

Christine, the leader of the band on trombone and vocals has put together a programme of authentic arrangements from the Jazz grates: King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Johnny Dodds, Clarence Williams, Fletcher Henderson, with a little of Louis Armstrong, Jabbo Smith and a just touch of Duke Ellington.

Contacts: 01582 422 845

 

The 'Stompers' also enjoy bringing back to life some of the more obscure bands and numbers of the period. Under the maxim "Classic Jazz needn't be boring", the band appears at numerous Jazz venues and festivals throughout the UK and also makes parties, weddings and conferences go with a swing. Whatever suits your tastes, the enthusiastic style of the Stackyard Stompers will captivate. The Band's Lineup:

Christine Woodcock - trombone, vocals (leader)

John Pickett - trumpet, cornet, vocals and swannee whistle

Norman Field - Reeds

John Bayne - Bass Sax

Roy Hart - banjo

Richard Howell - percussion.

 

 

The New Orleans Hot Shots

Jazz Band

THE NEW ORLEANS HOTSHOTS JAZZ BAND play their own unique brand of traditional jazz. Although inspired by a wide variety of bands from the Classic 1920's period up to the 40's and 50's revival; they base many arrangements on the original sounds of Armstrong, Morton, Oliver and Piron. The Hotshots descended from Leicester's own Russ Merryfield Jazz Band, resident at the Town Arms for more than 20 years. Russ is no longer with the Hotshots, but their leader, trombonist Dave Harmer and pianist Chris Riley go right back to Russ's original 1972 band. Cornet player, Terry Fyffe, developed many of his jazz skills with the Zenith Hot Stompers. His musical arrangements, both rehearsed and impromptu give the band its unique and varied style, enhanced greatly by Terry's superb vocals. Clarinetist, Ron Goffer, the most recent addition to the band, has been a well respected and much appreciated musician on the Leicester scene for many years. Our bassist, Al Harris replaces our long standing friend, Alan Offiler who died in 2005. Drummer and vocalist Clive Bott, as the senior member of the band, keeps the whole jazz machine 'ticking over' apparently effortlessly; while his superbly lyrical vocals bring tears to the eyes (as do the vocals of trombonist Dave Harmer, but not for the same reason).

Contact:- Dave Harmer 01509 503745

Link to New Orleans Hot Shots Web Site:

http://sites.google.com/site/neworleanshotshots/

The New Orleans Hotshots Jazz Band line up to 2008

The New Orleans Hotshots Jazz Band current line up

 

 

 

Sammy Rimington and his International Jazz Band

htdocs/tenor%20sax SAMMY RIMINGTON is widely regarded as one of the world's leading exponents of classic style clarinet and saxophone. Over the past 35 years Sammy has made important contributions through his lively and inventive approach to jazz. The New York Times states, Sammy Rimington's playing demonstrates the clarinet's matchless range of funky virtuosity, which makes jazz's past as real as its future.  He is one of the most prolific recording artists in all of jazz, and can be heard on over 170 recordings. Sammy is legendary for creating fascinating and highly rhythmic solos full of great emotional depth. His broad repertoire is generally drawn from material popularized prior to the 1950's and consists of a hot mix of pop tunes, swing music, spirituals, blues, stomps and rags. Performances have been described as sounding reminiscent of everything from a turn of the century Crescent City dance hall to a 50's Greenwich Village jazz club & much of what came in between!


Band Personnel:

Sammy Rimington - Reeds & Flute

Freddie John - Trombone

Emile Van Pelt - Piano

Eric Webster - Banjo

Keith Minter - Drums

Annie Hawkins - String Bass

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The Tierra Buena

Jazz Band

Tierra Buena Jazz Band on their recent World Tour of Gibraltar

"When we were young and jazz was new (or so it seemed) everyone either possessed, or was saving for, a musical instrument. Professional tuition was rare - trial and error, listening hard to the few records available at the time, and hoping for a major breakthrough was the only route to sounding remotely like Louis, the Dodds brothers or Kid Ory. This was long before any music college offered a jazz course, and certainly before it became normal for modest-income families to send their children to college at all.

Not everyone overcame the obstacles but those infected seriously by the jazz bug formed bands of which "Tierra Buena" is an excellent example. Today they remain, what they have always been, a group of friends dedicated to conveying the true spirit of jazz to the many people who love to hear it despite, or perhaps because of, the fifty years which have elapsed in the meantime. There are several British bands which have clocked up half a century, so why is Tierra Buena unique? I think it is their sheer enthusiasm, undimmed and unrestrained, which transmits to audiences the undeniable message that something wonderful is going on each time they play.

You might expect the entire personnel to have changed during the band's lifetime and it is nothing short of staggering to realize that Brian Bates, Brian 'Watty' Wathen, and Dave Wagstaff were there at the first rehearsal.

On the technical level Dave 'Spud' Taylor is the only musician to have been formally trained and his technique is formidable, but the achievements of Tierra Buena can only partially be explained in technical terms. Although rarely discussed there is a quasi-spiritual element to the music. Listen to the band live and hear how all the individual efforts combine to produce music which expresses the entire range of human emotions - wonderful music which owes as much to Coventry as it does to New Orleans or Chicago. Like any art form it is strengthened by the support and interest which you, the audience, give it.

Bob Caldwell September 2004"

(taken from the 'Linger Awhile with Tierra Buena Jazz Band' CD Insert)

 

For a return session we are pleased to welcome

Below the home page from the web site.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Frog Island Jazz Band:-

Keith Durston (Piano)

Owen Diplock (Banjo)

Chris Marchant (Drums)

John Whitehead (Cornet)

Bob Fullalove (Sousaphone, Vocals)

Ray Joughin (Trombone)

Jim Hurd (Reeds)

 

The Frog Island Jazz Band formed in 1962 features Classic New Orleans Jazz of the twenties and early thirties. The band's repertoire covering the music of a wide range of bands of the period which include such names as: Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers, The New Orleans Wanderers, Johnny Dodd's Blackbottom Stompers, Papa Celestin's Tuxedo Jazz Orchestra and King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band. Despite the limitations of the line up only including one comet the band has built an international reputation for its feeling and enthusiasm when recreating the classic King Oliver recordings.

During its 30 years existence the band have appeared regularly at Jazz Clubs throughout the United Kingdom and have also played on numerous occasions in Holland, Belgium and Germany. In April of 1980 traveling to New Orleans as the only British Band to appear at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, returning in 1982 when the Mayor of New Orleans conferred the title of 'International Honorary Citizens' upon the band for its services to the music of the City. The band returned for the festival again in 1986 and 1988 receiving a warm and enthusiastic reception.

Quote: Nottingham Rhythm Club "Jazz notes" - September 1980

"They are Britain's leading exponents of the vintage styles of King Oliver & Jelly Roll Morton, considered by many die-hards to be the true definitive jazz style. Earlier this year they were well received at the annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. The popularity of the Frogs has reawakened a great deal of interest in the original music of Oliver & Morton from the 1920's. Certain critics, who appear to be missing the point, have leveled accusations of 'note-for-note' copying, but we feel this to be unfounded. The truth is that the Frog Island band have achieved a very accurate similarity to the original tones and tempos (both of which are far from easy to copy), but careful listening will reveal that on many of the well known numbers they tastefully introduce additional breaks and choruses, not being confined by the limitations of 10" 78 rpm records! In any case, it is doubtful whether any band in the world would attempt a slavish copy of King Oliver and Louis Armstrong whilst using only one cornet player! So we would prefer to say that the FIJB are recreating, rather than copying, and if, as a result, some of us are induced to dust off our old records of the Creole Jazz Band and Red Hot Peppers and listen to them again - or even go out and buy them for the first time, this can only advance the cause of jazz music and add to the pleasure which it gives us.!"

Quote: Mr Phil Bennet - Honorary Archivist to the FIJB Oliver Frogge Recordings. LP Record HM VR 001/77

"Frog Island - the name does not hint at the connotation that it has for the lovers of vintage jazz, however, the Frog Island Jazz Band have become the undeniable leaders in their field. A seven piece combination, they hail from the South East of England but their name excites hot jazz connoisseurs from Basildon to Birmingham. This success can only be regarded as phenomenal as their reputation has been spread almost entirely by word of mouth. Not for them the regular exposure of the mass media but only exposure to the exhaustion of late night drives home from far flung engagements. Perhaps this is what the music is all about? Certainly for the jazz luminaries of yesteryear life was all too often a struggle to gain acceptance for what we now know to be a rich musical heritage. The Frog Island Jazz Band have delved deep into this heritage and on this, their second LP they have brought about a superb, and in many ways, a definitive performance of jazz from the classic era."

Quote: The Times - Picayune, New Orleans, Sunday 4th May 1986 by Ronnie Virgets, staff writer.

"They talked about their musical style. It's not like later jazz, where everyone plays together for a few bars and then people take off on long solos. It's tight ensemble playing and that means the band really has to know each other's playing. We try to look for the fine line between being serious about the music and having fun. After all it's fun music."

"At 11.30 Saturday morning, the Frog Islanders were on-stage at the Jazz and Heritage Festival's Economy Hall tent. They were getting ready to do some recreating of their own."

"It sounded like Alistair Cooke talking when the cornetist announced the upcoming tune as the 'Alli-gay-tor Hop' but when the music started it could have been coming from the original Economy Hall jazz club, back in the Treme neighborhood 60 years ago."

"In their red-and-white striped shirts, the band swung through 'Gatemouth', 'Mabel's Dream' and the 'Canal Street Blues'."

"Their tightness was buoyed by Owen Diplock's banjo, the woodpad drumming of Chris Marchant, and snips of sousaphone from Rob Fullalove. Scattered throughout were those classic stops and pauses, broken by some soul-scrubbing wails from Alex Revell's clarinet and some jaunty scale-crawlings from cornetist John Whitehead and trombonist Ray Joughin."

"In the middle of it all was Ray Smith, smiling to himself, banging at the big black Kimball grand, left hand pounding, right hand shimmering."

"When the band members disposed of the last chord of 'Froggie Moore Rag' and took their final bows, half the thousand listeners in Economy Hall stood and whistled their appreciation to seven strangers who have kept some New Orleans music history safe and alive 3,000 miles from Basin Street."

 

THE ALGIERS STOMPERS

Back from New Orleans and in his native North-East, Brian formed the Heritage Hall Stompers, part of the British jazz scene ever since, while Thomas, to his fans' delight, was still visiting Europe into the 80s.

In 1996 Brian realized a long-held dream when the Algiers Stompers, named in honor of Thomas's band, was formed from invited players who knew and wanted to work in that tradition. Fronting the Stompers also gave Brian an opening for his forceful Emanuel Paul- and Andrew Morgan-based tenor sax.

Debuting at the Glossop Festival of 1997, the band was an instant hit. Then Brian, returning from a gig, was seriously injured in a car crash.

For 18 months his playing future was doubtful, and not until August 1998 at the Bude Jazz Festival could the band celebrate his return with the first of several recordings. Since then there have been some personnel changes, but the Stompers, well-established, go from strength to strength with regular return bookings at leading clubs and festivals across the UK, and tours including Belgium, Holland, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Majorca, Malta, Switzerland and The USA.

Claiming to replicate Kid Thomas's music would be an impertinence -- as if anyone could - we celebrate it by adopting its driving, melodic, stepping-out-for-pleasure style and its wide-ranging dance hall repertoire, hoping to warm the hearts and feet of those who caught his band in the old days, and those who wish they had.

 

Brian Carrick - reeds
Peter Wright - tpt
Chas Huson - tbn. Influenced and taught by the late Louis Nelson,plays his last trombone, has played on Mississippi Steam boats, John Royen, Andrew Hall, Wendall Brunious, Barry Martyn,etc Founder member of this band.
Miss Babriele(Gabby) Gadd ex Munich/New Orleans/U.K. - piano
style of Sweet Emma Barrat.
Bill Cole - bass Ex Barry Martyn, Ken Collier Band
Johnny Baker - drums
Malc Hurrell - banjo

Below three tunes taken from his CD 'Everywhere we Go'

This text will be replaced by the flash music player.
 

 

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