Hedsor, and All That Jazz
After a bleak bank holiday,
my blog will be shorter than usual. As Sir Michael Weinblatt would say, “lets
get back to the jazz”, or in this case, recorded music of various kinds!
OK, this coming week,
Thursday April 5th, to supplement the raffle we will have some music
provided by American saxophonist (and until recently tutor at Brunel University ) Frank Griffith. I believe the associates who will be with him
are:
Mike Wills on more reeds,
Ken McCarthy on keyboard, John Monney on bass, and Mike Jeffries on drums. Our
regular percussionist and leader Martin Hart is taking a holiday in Venice , which is much better than “The C & A of a
Hospital”.
The following week I will
be busy crating up refurbished PC’s for shipment to Ghana . Some of you may know that I refurbish donated PC’s
and laptops and get them over to a village in the Ashanti province of Ghana called Nyaboo. And on Thursday 12th, whilst you all listen
to our regular band (The Clive Burton Celebration Quintet) I shall be packing
crates! I am told by the chief of that village (a royal of the house of the Kingdom of Ashanti ) that those cast off machines now teach over 450 children a week from
his community, giving them, in his word, “A positive advantage”.
ONE AFRICAN CHIEF |
I am delighted to announce
that on my return to Hedsor on Thursday April 19th we will have with
us saxophonist Robert Goodhew.
So that should keep you all
occupied for a week or so.
You may recall that in last
month’s Jazz Journal Simon Spillett wrote a wonderful tribute to Clive Burton
(wasn’t his spoken tribute on Thursday last wonderful, Jazz Angels treasurer
John Dutton actually became poetic about it, saying . “I was very moved by Simon's warm words
in tribute to Clive. He is so eloquent and the words flow just like the notes
from his Sax.”), so I decided that I
should write a letter to Jazz Journal about that tribute, and about Clive, and
this month it has actually got published, as did another from someone who used
to come to both Fifield and “The Cookham Tavern”. Said person was also kind
enough as to draw the world’s attention to my blog! Yes, fame (or notoriety) at
last!
THE LETTERS IN JAZZ JOURNAL |
One final thought, don’t
forget that Tuesday night, April 3rd, at Marlow Jazz you can hear a
recreation of The MJQ. That’s at The Marlow British Legion Hall from 8.30pm
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