Recorded: December 1998
Personnel:
Chris Barber - trombone, bass, vocals;
Pat Halcox - trumpet, cornet, vocals;
John Crocker - clarinet, alto & tenor saxophone;
John Defferary - clarinet, tenor saxophone;
John Slaughter - guitar;
Paul Sealey - banjo, guitar;
Vic Pitt - bass;
Colin Miller - drums
Track Listing:
1. BOURBON STREET PARADE - 5:58 ( Paul Barbarin / SBK / UP / Vocals: Chris Barber and Pat Halcox )
2. MAPLE LEAF RAG - 4:17 ( Scott Joplin / arr. Chris Barber / Music Box Publications / Paul Rodriguez Music (PRS) )
3. ALLIGATOR HOP - 2:30( Oliver / arr. Chris Barber / Music Box Publications / Paul Rodriguez Music (PRS) )
4. CORNBREAD, PEAS AND BLACK MOLASSES - 4:14 ( Sonny Terry / Brownie McGhee / Preston Stevens Music Co Ltd. / Vocals: Chris Barber and Pat Halcox )
5. MOOD INDIGO - 6:16 ( Edward Kennedy 'Duke' Ellington / Barney Bigard / Irving Mills / Lawrence Wright )
6. ISLE OF CAPRI - 3:46 ( Will Grosz / arr. Chris Barber / Music Box Publications/Paul Rodriguez Music (PRS)
7. SOUTH RAMPART STREET PARADE - 3:28 Bob Haggart / Ray Bauduc SBK/UP
8. BIG NOISE FROM WINNITKA / PITT'S EXTRACT - 8:41 ( Rob Haggart / Ray Bauduc / Gil Rodin, Bob Crosby / Vic Pitt / LaFleur / Music Box Publications / Paul Rodriguez Music (PRS) )
9. ST. LOUIS BLUES/SAX 'A' BONE - 7:30 ( William Christopher Handy / Chris Barber ) FD-H/Music Box Publications / Paul Rodriguez Music (PRS)
10. IMMIGRATION BLUES - 6:54 ( Edward Kennedy 'Duke' Ellington / Belwin Mills )
11. WILD CAT BLUES - 3:45 ( Thomas 'Fats' Waller / Clarence Williams / B.
Feldrnan / Redwood )
12. TIGHT LIKE THAT - 5:02 ( Thomas A. Dorsey / Hudson Whittaker / H. Darewski ) Vocal: Chris Barber
13. HIGH SOCIETY - 5:04 ( Porter Steele / Walter Melrose / B. Feidman )
Total Time 67:41
Tracks 5 and 12 recorded at Whitley Bay (Playhouse), 2 December 1998 Tracks
1, 4 and 8 recorded at Warrington (Parr Hall), 3 December 1998 All other tracks
recorded at Croydon (Fairfield Hall), 11 December 1998
Recorded by: Paul Adams
Produced by: Paul Adams, Chris Barber and Wim Wigt
Recording, Mixing and Production Master by: Paul Adams
Assistant Engineer: Richard Adams and Graham Bell
Grateful Thanks for technical assistance to Barry Walker
Art Direction/Design: Dolphin Design
Photography: Norbert Schinner, Joost Leijen
Liner Notes by: Gerard Bielderman and Chris Barber
Profile:
"Same procedure as every year"December 1998. Touring in Britain as usual approaching
Christmas. We were now introducing the newest members of the band, who had joined
in August but had played with us on the Continent until mid-November.
Our two new musicians are perhaps no stranger to many listeners as both have
been playing 30-40 years. Drummer Colin Miller travelled the European scene
until the middle sixties and then took up a position with Sony Music - returning
to full time playing in 1995. Recently featured with the excellent "Muggsy Remembered"
band he has a wealth of experience in our sort of jazz.
Clarinet/tenor saxophonist John Defferary spent more of his playing life on
the Continent (first with Trevor Richards and later with Papa Bue) than in England.
He is a great enthusiast and always entertaining.
Paul Adams, the enthusiastic drummer and head of Lake Records (UK), was keen
to record the new personnel live just as he did during our tour with Acker Bilk
in 1996.
We hope you enjoy listening to this music as much as we all did recording it.
Chris Barber
Chris Barber Jazz and Blues Band
A strong point of the Chris Barber Jazz & Blues Band has always been the steady
personnel. For instance, between 1956 and 1964 there was only one change when
Monty Sunshine left at the end of 1960 to be replaced by lan Wheeler. The current
line up has been together since the summer of 1998 but before that there were
no changes from mid 1994. Chris Barber (trombone, string bass, baritone horn
and vocals) started the band on 31 May 1954. His trumpeter/ cornettist then
was Pat Halcox who still is with the band in 1999! The rest of the band's current
personnel now consists of:
John Crocker (clarinet, alto and tenor saxophones), joined in June 1968. John
Defferary (clarinet, tenor saxophone) replaced lan Wheeler in August 1998. Before
that time he did a 12 year stint (1986-1998) with the famous Papa Bue's Viking
Jazz Band from Denmark. John Slaughter first was with the band between 1964
and 1978 and rejoined the band in August 1986.
Paul Sealey (banjo, guitar) replaced long-time member Johnny McCallum (1973-1994)
in the summer of 1994. Bass player Vie Pitt was a member of Kenny Ball's Jazzmen
between 1959 and 1977, then joined Chris Barber and never left.
Drummer Colin Miller played for several years with Brian White's Magna Jazz
Band before joining the Chris Barber Band in the summer of 1998. On this CD
one can hear the new line up with their current repertoire. That means something
old and something new. Of course the band opens the concert with their signature
tune Bourbon Street Parade, followed by a very old ragtime number by Scott Joplin,
Maple Leaf Rag, which the band first played during 1962, then forgot until 1998.
Alligator Hop goes back to King Oliver whose band was the first inspiration
for Chris Barber. Here the title is a feature for two clarinets.
Cornbread. Peas Ami Black Molasses brings back memories of the time when
Chris Barber brought the famous blues duo Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee to
England (1958). The vocals here are done by Chris and Pat.
Mood Indigo and further in the programme Immigration Blues remind us once again
of Barber's admiration for the old Duke Ellington Orchestra and the famous compositions
from the twenties and thirties. As always Chris succeeds in bringing new life
to Ellington titles as is especially well demonstrated in Immigration Blues.
Isle Of Capri goes back to the days when Chris Barber was a member of Ken Colyer's
Jazzmen (1953/1954) but which also proved to be a success at the concerts of
the Chris Barber 1954 Reunion Band in 1994/1995.
South Rampart Street Parade, made famous by Bob Crosby's Bob Cats in the late
thirties, is played here completely as a collective improvisation without solos.
A show stopper at the band's concerts some years now is Big Noise From Winnetka.
This number originated 61 years ago in the Bob Crosby band. For Vie Pitt this
title is a piece of cake, he played it already way back in 1960 with
Kenny Ball! The rest of the concert is filled with some titles which are already
in the band's repertoire from nearly the beginning.
St. Louis Blues is played here up-tempo and is a feature number for the three
Johns in the band: a duet between the tenor saxophones of Crocker and Defferary
plus some inspired blues guitar by Slaughter.
Wild Cat Blues has always been in the band's repertoire since 1955 when it first
was recorded by Monty Sunshine (cl), Chris Barber (b) and Lonnie Donegan (bj).
These days it is a feature for two clarinets while Chris Barber plays Vie Pitt's
string bass in the first half of the number.
The band ends the concert here with two of their old hits since the start in
1954: Tight Like That, sung by Chris and High Society, the famous test number
for clarinetists, in this case for John Defferary.
With these nearly 70 minutes of music you have an excellent reminder of a typical
Chris Barber concert.
Gerard Bielderman
Accolades for an English musician don’t come more exotic than a description
of Chris Barber as the “Bix Beiderbecke of British-style jazz” –
this, from the pen of musicologist David Boulton back in 1958.
Not that this kind of plaudit about Barber is confined to the past, nor to
the jazz world: for instance, this year’s UK Blues Guitarist of the Year,
Stan Webb, told the BBC “My first thing I heard about anything to do with
British blues? I loved Chris Barber, and have done to this day. He actually
has graced the stage with me at the Marquee many years ago.” And staying
in the world of blues, the recently published reference work Blues-Rock Explosion
emphasises how “Chris Barber, Alexis Korner, Lonnie Donegan and Cyril
Davies…..these were the real founding fathers of what became the British
1960s blues-rock explosion.”
Both of these quotes expose an obscured truth about Barber and his Jazz and
Blues Band: namely, that without the man who next year celebrates 50 years as
a pro band leader, not only would British trad jazz have taken many more years
to evolve - but also the British blues and rock scene would not have exploded
in the way that it did. Which partly explains why a blues-rocker such as Stan
Webb (founder of Chicken Shack) has such good and vivid memories of jamming
with Chris at the legendary Marquee club. Other bluesmen who have shared a stage
with him include Muddy Waters, Louis Jordan, Big Bill Broonzy, and Sonny Terry
and Brownie McGhee.
The Marquee’s legend – to anyone aged under sixty – is linked
to the rise of bands such as the Who, Rolling Stones and Sex Pistols. But here
lies another overlooked truth: the Marquee started out in 1958 as a jazz club
in which Barber, as a founding director, pooled his music business experience
alongside the Marquee’s then new owner (and seasoned jazz promoter) Harold
Pendleton.
Pendleton (an accountant) and Barber (a trainee actuary) met, quite by chance,
on Harold’s very first day in London in 1948. As well as establishing
the Marquee, in 1961 together they initiated the National Jazz & Blues Festival
which eventually grew into the Reading Rock Festival.
Soon after meeting Pendleton Barber quit his job, instead to study trombone
and double-bass at the Guildhall School of Music. This was an astute choice
of instruments for a trad jazz devotee because in the very earliest New Orleans
jazz outfits such as the Original Dixieland Jazz Band the trombone was known
as a “blown bass” – its main function being to stress rhythmic
accents. Chris’s fate had already been sealed when he bought a second-hand
trombone from Harry Brown (of theHumphrey Lyttleton Band) at London’s
Leicester Square Jazz Club Months later Barber formed his first band.
Returning to the here and now, Barber’s encyclopaedic knowledge of jazz
recently was heard by Monday night listeners to BBC Radio 2’s Jazz Diaries.
Chris’s soon-to-be-continued series each week focused on a notable year
in 20th century jazz with the music of cutting-edge artists of the day. But
what listeners to the weekly show may not have realised is that Barber’s
between-disc commentary was ‘off-the-cuff ’. In other words, the
myriad facts and info came from his head - not a programme researcher and a
word-for-word script.
Right now in March 2002, the Big Chris Barber Jazz & Blues Band is out
on the road in its brand-new eleven-piece form (Bob Hunt joins on trombone;
Mike Henry on trumpet& Tony Carter on clarinet, alto and baritone saxes)
The ‘VIP’s of Jazz’ tour – also featuring the Dutch
Swing College Band and Pasadena Roof Orchestra – has visited 22 British
concert halls before the band moved on to Europe on its own. And as this tour
plays to full houses, Barber already contemplates a theme for next year’s
50th anniversary tour. If all goes according to plan, the year 2003 will in
some ways echo that especially exciting episode back in 1958 when Chris Barber’s
Jazz Band backed Chicago blues legend Muddy Waters and his thunderous boogie
pianist Otis Spann on Muddy’s first visit to the UK in 1958. The link
between then and now is expected to be Big Bill Morganfield – son of the
late Muddy Waters and a consummate blues performer himself. Chris hopes that
Big Bill will join him for the anniversary tour.
Another subtext to that 50th Anniversary tour will be that Barber has been
around and making music for over half of the entire history of recorded jazz.
His kind of jazz, he once explained to Philip Clark, is as follows: “The
technical name for what we play is ‘revived archaic jazz’. We have
been accused of cleaning the music up, but we simply play it with right notes
and chords.”
Maybe there is some modesty at work here because already back in 1958 David
Boulton, for one, regarded Barber as more than just a revivalist or imitator
of music from “the Crescent City”. One reason why Boulton drew a
comparison with Bix Beiderbecke was because he felt that in less than ten years
as a band leader Barber’s “imitation developed until it could exist
in its own right. Whether or not this British style will eventually be considered
of any permanent value is for a later generation to decide.”
Over forty years on, it looks like they have decided – at least judging
by ticket sales on the ‘VIP’s of Jazz’ tour.
Positively dripping with 1950s’ jingoism, Boulton then concludes: “The
Englishness which permeates the music of Purcell, Boyd, Sullivan, Elgar, Delius
and Vaughan Williams will find its way into jazz, do what we can to prevent
it. And Britons never shall be squares.”
During the 1940s, the British jazz movement split into three: New Orleans revivalists
such as pianist George Webb and trumpeter Humphrey Lyttleton (with Barber and
Ken Colyer close behind); modern jazz players like Johnny Dankworth and Ronnie
Scott, who took their lead from American bebop greats such as Charlie Parker
and Dizzy Gillespie; and, thirdly, more of a cult following started off by trumpeter
Freddie Randall who was influenced by white Chicago-school jazzman Muggsy Spanier.
Jazz caught on very fast in Britain during the late-1940s and early-1950s.
Why ? Well, for a start its presentation live on stage was energetic and entertaining
compared to 1940s dance bands whose players were catatonic by comparison, being
mostly sat down and hidden behind music stands.
And one of many trad bands that emerged alongside Barber’s then amateur
outfits (called the New Orleans Jazz Band or Chris Barber’s ‘Washboard
Wonders’ when he was playing string bass) was the Crane River Jazz Band
featuring clarinettist Monty Sunshine and trumpeter Ken Colyer. Along with banjo
player Lonnie Donegan, these were the musicians who teamed up with Chris Barber
in 1953.
Chris now remembers taking the big step to go pro: “At the time Monty
was leading the last remnants of the Crane River Jazz Band.His band,like my
band was playing once a week and the trouble with that is you never learn from
the mistakes you make on stage because a week later you’ve forgotten you
made them. So we thought, this is stupid – the only way to progress was
to pool our resources and play the music professionally.”
With Monty Sunshine, Lonnie Donegan, and Jim Bray and Ron Bowden respectively
on bass and drums, the first Barber band was born, and its instrumentation did
not feature either piano or trumpet –largely because they didn`t know
one of either who really shared their aim of becoming professional but,as Chris
explains: “Without piano and trumpet, the rhythm section is more exposed
and obviously this influences not only the band’s sound but also the arrangements.”
So as band leader, Barber was drawn to material such as George Lewis’s
“Ice Cream” and records by the Mezz Mezzrow-Tommy Ladnier Quintet,
as well as adapting standard material by King Oliver, Louis Armstrong and Jelly
Roll Morton.
Nonetheless, early on a trumpeter was brought in. Twentythree-year old Pat
Halcox – still with Barber’s band to this day – joined for
a short spell before having to resume his studies. His departure came right
around the time that Ken Colyer returned from his infamous seaman’s holiday
to New Orleans. Barber wrote to Colyer inviting him to join. (Ken’s trip
had earned him crowd-pulling kudos – he jumped ship from the merchant
navy in New Orleans and there shared the stage with American legends such as
George Lewis before visa problems got him banged up in jail and then deported.)
Regular appearances at hot venues such as the Bryanston Street Jazz Club near
Marble Arch soon gave this outfit a big following – they were known as
Ken Colyer’s Jazzmen.
But not for long. Within a year Colyer’s drinking and volatile temperament
brought tensions within the band to busting point; a bid by Ken to sack the
rhythm section backfired – because the band was run as a co-operative
– and instead it was the hapless trumpeter who found himself left out
in the cold and without a gig. ( Colyer soon formed a band that included future
trad jazz pop star Acker Bilk).
Pat Halcox re-joined – this time for good – and the distinctive
sound and musicianship of this, the original Chris Barber Jazz Band, is best
heard on the 1955 album Echoes of Harlem (reissued on Lake LACD87). It opens
with a rare Ellington composition and goes on to be a fascinating retrospective
of the musical life of Harlem in the late 1920s and early 1930s.
It was this early version of the band that catapulted banjo and guitar player
Lonnie Donegan to stardom as a solo artist: Donegan recorded his first version
of ‘Rock Island Line’ with Chris’s band a couple of years
before it was released as a single in 1956 and then became the hit that augured
the skiffle craze. Skiffle was mostly mocked by trad jazz purists, but this
never deterred Barber from giving it a slot in his show.
Donegan was replaced by Dickie Bishop on banjo. Vocalist Ottilie Patterson
also proved to be a big asset to Barber’s show, especially so her engaging
duets performed with visiting American gospel blues diva, Sister Rosetta Tharpe,
in the late 1950s.
In the early-1960s skiffle and trad jazz were eclipsed by the beat group boom
– which skiffle had helped to bring about in the first place. Barber remained
unshaken: his own BBC programme ‘Trad Tavern’ kept up his profile
and meant he played along with a wide range of guests such as Joe Harriot, Archie
Semple, and Tony Coe. Ian Wheeler – who replaced Monty Sunshine –
and electric guitarist John Slaughter updated Barber’s sound. The band
continued to tour America and impress their counterparts in the home of jazz.
By the 1970s – as jazz musicians such as Miles Davis enjoyed popularity
amongst rock audiences – Chris too incorporated rock influences into his
band’s sound. Proof of this can be found on the three-CD set The Outstanding
Album (Bell Records BLR 89 300).
One track could have come from Miles Davis’s canon and nevertheless sat
comfortably alongside re-working of Barber Band favourites such as ‘Ice
Cream’ and ‘Jeep’s Blues’.
It was also during the 1970s that Chris explored Balkan folk music with its
lilting and asymmetrical rhythms, and in his composition ‘Ubava Zabava’
fused it with the blues. Other 1970s shows included tours with John Lewis and
Trumy Young in Swing is Here (CD BL5 17), as well as Russell Procope and Will
Bill Davis. The magic of the resultant Echoes of Ellington tour is captured
on two CDs (CD TTD 555 & 556).
Most notable during the 1980s was Barber’s ‘Take Me To New Orleans’
tour with Dr John, as well as a collaboration with the East German State Radio
Concert Orchestra in Berlin that featured orchestrations of New Orleans’
classics (New Orleans Overture andConcerto for Jazz Trombone and Orchestra –
TTD 610). In 1995 Barber staged a skiffle reunion UK tour with Lonnie Donegan
and Dickie Bishop as special guests.
Back in the 21st century, the three recent additions to the lineup make up
a big Chris Barber Band that still features Pat Halcox on trumpet, John Slaughter
on guitar, Vic Pitt on bass and John Crocker on clarinet, sax and flute. Clarinettist
John Defferary replaced Ian Wheeler in 1998; Paul Sealey plays banjo and guitar;
and Colin Miller is on drums.
Of course, band leader Chris Barber’s trombone slides on, and Dixieland
jazz remains central to his work. The reason, Barber explains, is the unselfishness
of the music: “I think that there is simply more to Dixieland jazz than
modern. The ensembles are very complex and you have to be listening completely
unselfishly all the time.”
Misty Morning – a CD featuring Chris Barber and Bob Hunt (TTD 641) was
recorded by the augmented band as they performed their touring presentation
of Duke Ellington`s music,of which Bob Hunt is an acknowledged expert….When
Chris began incorporating the extra three musicians into parts of the bands
normal varied repertoire, the results were so exciting that the band all felt
there was no alternative to permanently becoming an 11-piece band……the
most recent recording of Chris`s new organisation..the “Big Chris Barber
Band” is a product of their understanding of the unselfish nature of ensemble
playing and contains most of the best pieces in their new repertoire..It is,
of course, on Timeless and is called “the First Eleven”
PHILIP CLARK & MARTIN CELMINS.
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