skjelbred’s gang of jazzers offers pre-yuletide music...

6
SKJELBRED’S GANG OF JAZZERS OFFERS PRE-YULETIDE MUSIC IN OUR FINAL 2012 SESSION DECEMBER 16 December 2012 Volume 37, Number 10 By Rod Belcher Ray’s piano stylings often echo a trace of world-renowned artists such as Art Hodes, Earl Hines, Jess Stacy, Fats Waller and Joe Sullivan, though he avoids being an out- and-out copier. His bandstand mates always appreciate his ability to back their solos appropriately, a “must” to achieve a real jazz feel. His years of playing in various SF Bay Area trad bands shows through in his high level of musicianship. We’re glad to have him and his good friends back again! WHEN: 1:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Sunday, December 16 WHERE: Ballard Elks Lodge, 6411 Seaview Ave.NW, Seattle ADMISSION: PSTJS members, $12; non-member guests $15 Pay only at door. MORE INFO: 425-776-5072 - or - website: www.pstjs.org Lots of free parking; beautiful view. Snacks, coffee, other beverages available. Pianist Ray Sjkelbred, a favorite PSTJS performer for years on end, brings a truly talented group of like-minded old hands together to entertain at our last concert of 2012. He calls it his “First Thursday Band,” derived from his once-a-month gig at the New Orleans Creole Restaurant in Seattle’s Pioneer Square. Actually, it’s an enlarged unit we’ll hear, making for a bigger orchestral sound, though it’s still only a septet. Imported from Portland is cornetist Chris Tyle. He’s one of those multi-instrument whizzes who fits in on whatever “axe-du-jour” he’s assigned to play. The same could be said about Steve Wright of Bellevue, who will specialize as reed-man on this date, and Jim Armstrong (down from British Columbia) who will limit his output to trombone and vocals. Joining Skjelbred to form a standout rhythm section are Mike Daugherty, drums; Jake Powel, guitar/banjo; and Dave Brown, string bass. Notes From the Prez! Here we are at the end of our 2012 season, and what a year it has been. Next month we begin 2013, wow time does fly when we’re having fun! Remember we agreed in September to plan on having Bob Schulz and his Frisco Jazz Band back in September 2013 for another awesome Jazz weekend. The amount we need to raise is $2800 to cover the travel expenses for the band. So I’m hoping all of you have established your fund jar at home and are feeding it regularly so none of us will have to scrounge for the funds come June. It would be great if you would like to make your pledge now, or any time soon, just remember that we don’t need the money in the bank until the end of June, when I begin searching for good and reasonable airfares for the guys. I’m wishing each and every one of you Happy Holidays and a healthy, prosperous New Year. Cheers, Judy

Upload: leminh

Post on 27-Jun-2018

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

SKJELBRED’S GANG OF JAZZERS OFFERS PRE-YULETIDE MUSIC

IN OUR FINAL 2012 SESSION DECEMBER 16

December 2012 Volume 37, Number 10

By Rod Belcher

Ray’s piano stylings often echo a trace of world-renowned artists such as Art Hodes, Earl Hines, Jess Stacy, Fats Waller and Joe Sullivan, though he avoids being an out-and-out copier. His bandstand mates always appreciate his ability to back their solos appropriately, a “must” to achieve a real jazz feel. His years of playing in various SF Bay Area trad bands shows through in his high level of musicianship. We’re glad to have him and his good friends back again! WHEN: 1:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Sunday, December 16WHERE: Ballard Elks Lodge, 6411 Seaview Ave.NW, SeattleADMISSION: PSTJS members, $12; non-member guests $15 Pay only at door.MOREINFO: 425-776-5072 - or - website: www.pstjs.org Lots of free parking; beautiful view. Snacks, coffee, other beverages available.

Pianist Ray Sjkelbred, a favorite PSTJS performer for years on end, brings a truly talented group of like-minded old hands together to entertain at our last concert of 2012. He calls it his “First Thursday Band,” derived from his once-a-month gig at the New Orleans Creole Restaurant in Seattle’s Pioneer Square. Actually, it’s an enlarged unit we’ll hear, making for a bigger orchestral sound, though it’s still only a septet. Imported from Portland is cornetist Chris Tyle. He’s one of those multi-instrument whizzes who fits in on whatever “axe-du-jour” he’s assigned to play. The same could be said about Steve Wright of Bellevue, who will specialize as reed-man on this date, and Jim Armstrong (down from British Columbia) who will limit his output to trombone and vocals. Joining Skjelbred to form a standout rhythm section are Mike Daugherty, drums; Jake Powel, guitar/banjo; and Dave Brown, string bass.

Notes From the Prez!

Here we are at the end of our 2012 season, and what a year it has been. Next month we begin 2013, wow time does fly when we’re having fun!

Remember we agreed in September to plan on having Bob Schulz and his Frisco Jazz Band back in September 2013 for another awesome Jazz weekend. The amount we need to raise is $2800 to cover the travel expenses for the band. So I’m hoping all of you have established your fund jar at home and are feeding

it regularly so none of us will have to scrounge for the funds come June. It would be great if you would like to make your pledge now, or any time soon, just remember that we don’t need the money in the bank until the end of June, when I begin searching for good and reasonable airfares for the guys.

I’m wishing each and every one of you Happy Holidays and a healthy, prosperous New Year. Cheers, Judy

Jazz Soundings December 2012 Page 2

PugetSoundTraditionalJazzSociety

19031 Ocean AvenueEdmonds, WA 98020-2344

425-776-5072 www.pstjs.org

UPCOMING EVENTSElks Lodge, Ballard, 6411 Seaview Ave N.W., Seattle Dec 16 Ray Skjelbred’s First Thursday BandJan 20 Uptown Lowdown JBFeb 17 Glenn Crytzer and His SyncopatorsMar 17 Gerry Green’s Crescent City ShakersApr 21 Sidewalk StruttersMay 19 holotradbandJun 16 New Orleans Quintet with Ron Rustad

PRESIDENT: Judy Levy [email protected] 425-890-6605VICEPRESIDENT: George Swinford [email protected] 425-869-2780SECRETARY: Cilla Trush [email protected] 206-363-9174TREASURER: Gloria Kristovich [email protected] 425-776-7816

BOARD OF DIRECTORS Joanne Hargrave [email protected] 206-550-4664Leroy Johnson: [email protected] 206-772-4378Jan Lemmon [email protected] 425-776-9763Edmund Lewin: 360-297-6633Gary Lydum: [email protected] 206-719-3955 George Oelrich: [email protected] 360-793-0836 Carol Rippey: [email protected] 425-776-5072Jack Temp 425-242-0683

MEMBERSHIP COORDINATOR Carol Rippey: [email protected] 425-776-5072

EDITORAnita LaFranchi: [email protected] 206-522-7691

Gigs for Local BandsBELLINGHAMTRADITIONALJAZZSOCIETY1st Saturday 2 - 5 pm VFW Hall 625 N. State St

FIRSTTHURSDAYBAND1st Thurs of the month, 7 - 10 pm, New Orleans Restaurant, 114 1st Ave S., Seattle, WA 206-622-2563

GLENNCRYTZERANDHISSYNCOPATORS1st Sunday and 3rd Wednesday of the Month 9:30 pm -12:30 am Century Ballroom 915 East Pine Seattle, WA, 206-324-7263

holotradbandTuesdays, 7 - 10 pm, New Orleans Restaurant, 114 1st Ave S., Seattle, WA 206-622-2563

NEWORLEANSQUINTETMondays, 6:30 - 9:30 pm, New Orleans Restaurant, 114 1st Ave S., Seattle, WA 206-622-2563

GREATEROLYMPIADIXIELANDJAZZSOCIETY2rd Sunday 1 - 4:30 pm at the Olympia Elks,

PEARLDJANGODec. 8, 7:30 pm, The Conway Muse This really is a fun place - come on out! 18444 Spruce (@ Main), Conway, WA; 360-445-3000Dec. 13, 7 pm - 2 sets Boxley’s 101 W. North Bend Way, North Bend, WA; 425-292-9307Dec. 14, 8:00 pm, North City Bistro We love this place! Reservations recommended 1520 NE 177th St; Shoreline, WA; 206-365-4447Dec. 15, 7:30 pm, The Seasons At Seasons Performance Hall 101 N. Naches Ave. Yakima, WA (509) 453-1888

UPTOWN LOWDOWN JBDec 1, 2-5 pm, Bellingham Traditional Jazz Society - Bellingham VFW Hall 6pc bandDec 2, 3-6 pm, White Rock, B.C. Jazz Society Uptown “Lite” Crescent Branch #240 Royal Canadian Legion Hall Dec 18, 6:45 & 8:45 pm, Lights of Christmas - Warm Beach, WA Uptown “Lite” - Jingle JazzDec 19, 6:45 & 8:45 pm, Lights of Christmas - Warm Beach, WA Uptown “Lite” - Jingle JazzDec 21, 7-9:30 pm, Crossroads, Bellevue Uptown Swing Christmas jazz plus.

On Your Dial........Saturday7 - 12 pm Swing Years and Beyond KUOW 94.9 FMSunday3 -6 pm Art of Jazz, Ken Wiley, KPLU 88.5 FM

JAZZ SOUNDINGSPublished monthly except July and August by the Puget Sound Tradi-tional Jazz Society.Anita LaFranchi, Editor, [email protected] must be submitted in a jpeg or PDF format Payment in advance to: Gloria Kristovich, P.O. Box 373, Edmonds, WA 98020-0373

Advertising Rates:Full page $100. 7 1/2” wide by 9 1/2 “ tallHalf Page $60. 7 1/2” wide by 4 1/4 “ tall Quarter Page $40. 3 5/8 Wide by 4 1/4 “ tall Deadlineisthe10thofthemonthforthenextmonth’sissue

BLACK SWAN BLUE STREET BRIDGETOWN SEXTET GRAND DOMINION HIGH SIERRA IVORY&GOLD ORIGINAL WILDCAT JASS BAND TITAN HOT SEVEN TOM RIGNEY & FLAMBEAU UPTOWN LOWDOWN WALLY’S WAREHOUSE WAIFS WE THREE BOB DRAGA, Guest Artist

Presented by Lighthouse Jazz Society

February 22 thru 24, 2013 SEASIDE, OREGON

More information at www.jazzseaside.com or 1-866-345-6257; M-F; 9 – 5 PM only.

A portion of this project was made possible from a Tourism Grant by the City of Seaside

Jazz Soundings Page 3December 2012

In the late 1950s, Mary Russell presented her husband Pee Wee with an LP reissue of Jelly Roll Morton’s 1926 Red Hot Peppers recordings. Pee Wee was fascinated by Omer Simeon’s clarinet work on the records and played the sides over and over. Soon after, he went to hear Simeon with the Wilbur DeParis band at a New York nightclub. Pee Wee was so overcome that he marched up to the bandstand and hugged Omer Simeon! After listening to Simeon’s haunting and somewhat quirky solo on Morton’s recording of “Smoke House Blues” it is easy to understand why Pee Wee reacted that way. They were definitely kindred spirits of the clarinet. Omer Simeon was born in New Orleans in 1902. His family moved to Chicago in 1914, where he studied clarinet with

Jazz Soundings December 2012 Page 4

Lorenzo Tio, Jr. -- who also counted Johnny Dodds, Jimmie Noone, Sidney Bechet, Barney Bigard and Albert Nicholas among his pupils! Simeon became an in-demand reedman who also played alto, soprano and baritone saxophones. He was working with Elgar’s Creole Orchestra when bandleader Jelly Roll Morton summoned him to participate in the Red Hot Peppers recording sessions for RCA Victor. Simeon was clearly inspired by the playing of Morton, cornetist George Mitchell, trombonist Kid Ory, banjoist/guitarist Johnny St. Cyr, bassist John Lindsay and drummer Andrew Hillaire. If Omer Simeon never made another record, the sides with Morton are eloquent testimonies to his genius as a clarinetist. Simeon’s ensemble work is flawless and every one of his solos is a masterpiece. The Tio influence is evident in Simeon’s Dodds-like chorus on “Original Jelly Roll Blues” and “The Chant” which resembles Jimmie Noone’s agile style. The solo on “Black Bottom Stomp” has elements of Tio and his students, but is unmistakably Simeon. The aforementioned “Smoke House Blues” ventures into the type of sounds that would be heard a few months later in 1926, when a 17-year-old Chicagoan played an “outside” solo on Ben Pollack’s recording of “Deed I Do.” Throughout the mid-to-late ‘20s, Omer Simeon continued to work with the Elgar Orchestra and also with Erskine Tate’s Orchestra. He recorded with King Oliver’s Dixie Syncopators, Jabbo Smith, the Dixie Rhythm Kings and Reuben Reeves. Jelly Roll Morton once called Omer Simeon his “favorite clarinetist,” so it is no surprise that Simeon was included on the 1928 Red Hot Peppers date that produced another set of classics: “Shreveport Stomp,” “Mournful Serenade,” “Boogaboo,” “Kansas City Stomp,” “Shoe Shiner’s Drag” and “Georgia Swing.” As on the previous Morton recordings, each clarinet solo is a work of art.

A year after the second Red Hot Peppers recording, Simeon made a rare appearance as bandleader on two sensational records in a trio which features pianist Earl Hines (though some discographies list the obscure Chicago pianist William Barbee in place of Hines). In 1931, Simeon joined the Earl Hines Orchestra and settled in for a 10-year stay. Fortunately, Hines’ Orchestra recorded many sides between 1932 and 1941 that show Simeon to good advantage. His wailing above the final ensemble was a beautiful New Orleans/Chicago touch and the clarinet solos are all memorable. While he was with Hines, Simeon also recorded as a freelancer -- with Lionel Hampton and on a memorable session by the Friars Society Orchestra. The latter was recorded in Chicago in 1935. Alhough New Orleanians Paul Mares and Santo Pecora were in the front line, the clarinet playing on the date is a lot closer to the Windy City than the Crescent City. Simeon’s choruses on “Maple Leaf Rag” and “Nagasaki” are much closer to Teschemacher than Tio. And the clarinet solo on the first take of “Reincarnation” could easily be mistaken for a typical chorus by Simeon’s erstwhile fan, Mr. Russell. After leaving Earl Hines’ Orchestra, Simeon played with Coleman Hawkins’ Orchestra and, in 1942, joined the popular orchestra led by Jimmie Lunceford. Simeon is present on many Lunceford sides including “Back Door Stuff” and “For Dancers Only.” While touring with Lunceford in California, he also played on two recording dates with Kid Ory’s Creole Jazz Band in 1944 and 1945. Back in New York, he recorded four wonderful sides with James P. Johnson and Pops Foster, billed as “The Carnival Trio.” Coincidentally, one of the sides recorded with Johnson and Foster is titled “Lorenzo’s Blues” – surely a reference to Simeon’s teacher.

They Called it Jazz OMER SIMEON - A HOT CLARINET IS GOOD TO FIND

Above:OmerSimeon

By Hal Smith - AFCDJSArtisticDirector

(Thisisonemoreinaseriesofbiographiesof great traditional jazz musicians.The series started with the March/April 1991 issue and was developedby Rambler founding publisher andBoard Member, the late Len Levine).ReprintedfromtheFall2012JazzRambler.

Continuedonpage5

Dues for 12 months: Single $25 Couple $40 Lifetime single $200 Lifetime Couple $350Patron $500 (One or two lifetime membership)Please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope.

The Puget Sound Traditional Jazz Society is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization dedicated to the performance and preservation of traditional jazz. Your membership and contributions are tax-deductible. Thank you.

PugetSoundTraditionalJazzSociety19031OceanAve.,Edmonds,WA98020-2344

Please (enroll) (renew) (me) (us) as a member or members

NameAddress City, StateZip Code E-Mail Phone Check when renewing if your address label is correct

Jazz Soundings December 2012 Page 5

OmerSimonContinuedfrompage4

He stayed with Lunceford until 1950, then freelanced around New York City with a variety of bands. He was featured on soprano sax on Louis Armstrong’s 1954 recording of “Skokiaan” and spent the last years of his life performing and recording with the Wilbur DeParis band. He died of throat cancer on Sept. 17, 1959.

Notable clarinetists who were inspired by Omer Simeon include the late Frank Chace, and contemporary reedmen “Gentleman Jim” Buchmann and Evan Christopher. Simeon’s clarinet was recently featured on a segment of “America’s Lost Treasures” on the National Geographic television channel.

The horn, now owned by Dr. Michael White (also a New Orleans clarinetist) will be displayed in the National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C.

AIN’TNOHEAVENSEVEN Leader: Terry [email protected] 206-465-6601COALCREEKJAZZBAND Leader: Judy Logen, 425-641-1692 Bookings: [email protected] Bookings: Candace Brownwww.combodeluxe.net [email protected] 253-752-6525CORNUCOPIACONCERTBAND Leader: Allan Rustadwww.comband.org 425-744-4575DUKESOFDABOB Bookings: Mark Holman, 360-779-6357, [email protected]. DUWAMISHJAZZBAND Bookings: Carol [email protected] 206-932-7632FIRSTTHURSDAYBANDLeader: Ray Skjelbred,[email protected] 206-420-8535FOGGYBOTTOMJAZZBAND Leader: Bruce Cosacchi360-638-2074GRANDDOMINIONJAZZBAND Bookings: Bob [email protected] 360-387-2500 holotradband Leader: Dave Holo email: [email protected] HOTCLUBSANDWICHContact: James Schneiderwww.hotclubsandwich.com 206-561-1137 HUMESTREETPRESERVATIONJAZZBANDBookings: Karla West 406-862-3814

JAZZUNLIMITEDBAND Leader: Duane [email protected] 866-337-2111JAZZSTRINGSBookings: Candace [email protected] 253-752-6525LOUISIANAJOYMAKERS!Leader: Leigh [email protected] 604-294-9464THEMARKETSTREETDIXIELANDJASSBANDAnsgar Duemchen: 425-286-5703 Tim Sherman 206-547-1772www.marketstreetdixielandjass.com MIGHTYAPHRODITE Co-leaders: Bria Skonberg, Claire McKenna [email protected] 405-613-0568NEWORLEANSQUINTET Leader: Dave Holowww.neworleansquintet.com email: [email protected] Manager: Randy [email protected] [email protected] [email protected], 206-467-9365UPTOWNLOWDOWNJAZZBAND Leader: Bert [email protected] 425-898-4288WILDCARDSJAZZ Leader: Randy [email protected] 206-437-1568

BANDS, CONTACTS

PugetSoundTraditionalJazzSociety19031 Ocean Ave.Edmonds, WA 98020-2344

Address service requested

Non-profit OrgU..S. Postage

PaidSeattle, WAPermit 1375

You and your friends are cordially invited to hear sizzling-hot jazz

as a guest of Elks Club Jazz Society member Colin Dearing.

Admission is payable at the door.