The
first blog of September, and believe it or not the Jazz Angels are already
planning our Christmas Party (December 18th).
And yes, I will mention what is coming to Hedsor Jazz this Thursday. BUT this week’s blog is largely taken up with a look back.
First, a look back at last Thursdays Hedsor Jazz concert.
I will comment that initially the music was competing with the bar crowd next door. I really hope that the amount of noise was compensating the Hedsor Bar with a large spend AT the bar, because it was LOUD!
Our concert last week was a really fun session led by “our” trumpeter Lester Brown, with assistance at the front from reedman Martin Dunsdon. Al Pirrie, Ken McCarthy and Mike Jeffries played in support from the rear. All were joined for part of the evening by our American guest singer Nanci Zhang. She will be sadly missed when she goes back to New Orleans, but she did sing about missing it!!
Photos below.
Looking forward to This Coming Thursday (September 4th) we have one of those
pairings that we did have a hand in creating. Stuart Henderson on trumpet and Alam Nathoo on tenor sax have, as individual players, often
inspired us and caused us to wonder at there amazing musical skill and abilities,
but towards the end of last year we paired them for the first time. The result
was such that we decided that we must do that much more often. This week that
pairing is back and we are adding in a guest drummer. Dennis Smith has (in the nicest possibly way) played around us for
years! He was associated with Marlow Jazz 30 plus years ago and has been a
stalwart of the West London jazz scene for even longer. An excellent drummer
with a keen sense of humour, please come and welcome him to Hedsor Jazz.
Our sessions at Hedsor were started by the late
Clive Burton in 2002, initially in “The
Garibaldi”, and then after some months we moved across the road into what was
then “The Hedsor Social Club”. Sadly for all of us, Clive died in October 2017.
He was a warm and friendly character, playing trombone with great dexterity. He
was also a great compere, and many of his catch phrases are fondly remembered (“you
can tell he’s no athlete”, as a raffle prize winner moved to collect his prize).
He was also a bandleader who always encouraged young talent to perform and
often invited them to do so.
My reason for writing about him today is that I was recently given about 3 years worth of old Jazz Journals going from 2016 to 2018 and in looking through them I found a tribute to Clive written by Saxophonist Simon Spillett, one of those young people Clive encouraged.
On further reading, in a Jazz Journal published a month later I came across a letter that I had written in response to Simons tribute, (something I had completely forgotten writing), together with another letter from someone who used to come to Clive’s gigs before they moved to Somerset, (and he still reads this blog, hello Alan Bond). I thought I would risk prosecution in actually reprinting as a jpeg both letters (from the same JJ page!).
The photo in my letter came from the party
at Hedsor we put on to celebrate Alan
Grahams Life in Jazz. AND the photo with Clive blowing a pink trombone that
was in the Simon Spillett letter came from a jazz festival we put on at St
Pirans School in Maidenhead when Clive was asked to play a plastic trombone
being promoted by Dawkes for young people
to play. Clive did so, for a complete tune!
Today (well probably Thursday) we will be
starting the creation of some new memories, things to talk about and write
about in years yet to come. How fortunate these days that we do have both
photographs and recordings of gigs we have been to in our past for us to dig out
and relive both the successful and also less successful, “days of wine and
roses”!
See you at The Hedsor Bar for another memorable jazz Thursday, don’t be late we start at 8!!
No comments:
Post a Comment