Thursday, December 31, 2020

 December 31st 2020


The last day, and the last blog of the year.

AND what a year. At this time last year I was busy trying to persuade you to come to some of Hedsor Jazz’s gigs in January and February 2020.

If only I could do that today. I’m sure that the list of gigs if produced for the year we are about to enter we would have a queue at the door every Thursday!! When coronavirus 19 lets us have live jazz at Hedsor Club we will just have to see, but wouldn’t it be wonderful to see and listen and talk with all the people we were so used to being with EVERY Thursday. 

Today, just as a further recollection of the superb quality of jazz we previously took for granted, here is a link to a dropbox folder that contains all of the music and artwork from that 23rd of January 2020 Hedsor Jazz concert.

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/5rrohoxg8qsxplb/AADzPiIRKcryJMP6RKKUdyJ8a?dl=0

All I have been able to do via my writings since the beginning of March is to provide a means of looking backwards. Past photos, past music, perhaps past memories but with current links. I think we have all discovered what a great package of entertainment YouTube is. I’m sure at some future point the owners will want more reward from us than they currently get. 

I am old enough (definitely!) to remember conversations about “The National Debt”, and how everything we could do to reduce it had to be done. Mainly of course, this was to pay back the U.S.A. for the armaments and food they had exported to the UK to enable us to carry on with the war. “Export or Die” was one of the slogans at the time. Of course we also had to support that beaten nation Germany. The Marshal Plan was an American Idea, but all of the winning survivors had to make a contribution.

Compensations? Yes, it didn’t beat rationing but jazz became more available. I can still remember walking to Hammersmith Broadway and buying a 78 of Louis Armstrong’s Hot 5. It wasn’t long into the 40/50 decade that LP’s came, and “The Buck Clayton Jam Sessions” was on my (revised) turntable. I say revised, because it now came as an electric turntable with 3 speeds.


I can also remember going it to Dobells at 77 Charing Cross Road and buying a 78 of Chris Barber’s “Chimes Blues”, and as he was at the cash desk at the time, asking him to sign it, which he did, on the tax label!


One of the LP’s that got played to death in the early 50’s was “Humph at the Conway”, which got so played I had to buy another copy. BUT it introduced me to Bruce Turner, and began my growing love of a wider style of jazz than was thought of as being “traditional“!! The Dirty Bopper (as Birmingham named him) had sown his seeds.

So when I saw that Upbeat Jazz had discovered more Humph playing in London’s Conway hall, I added it to my Christmas list, and lo, the Father Christmas of the post duly delivered it for me to unwrap on Christmas morning.


It isn’t as iconic as the first, but this one recorded in 1969 is great fun. It has terrific bounce, and is performed by some of Humph’s old associates, including on trombone Keith Christie and on clarinet, of course, Wally Fawkes, plus some more recent additions such as Mick Pyne on piano (who was in a later Humph Band), and Dave Green on bass.

Humph did a broadcast and I think made a recording of just himself with pianist Mick Pyne and Peter Clayton announced it as the only band that could get to gigs on a tandem!

However, do look out for “Conway Hall Revisited” on Upbeat Jazz URCD305, and I’m sure Liz Biddle will be very pleased (she owns the label!). I think you will be very pleased too with your purchase. Sadly no Bruce Turner.

That’s all for this year folks. Let us hope that 2021 will be a remarkable year for a lot of better reasons than 2020 was. 

Stay safe, take the jab, and as Arabs used to say “May all your children be boys”. 

I think they meant "be prosperous"!!

Thursday, December 17, 2020

Unless something very unusual happens, this will be my last blog before the crossed out Christmas of 2020.

I wonder how often in the past we have  Xmassed rather than Christmassed. I think this year we may have a better idea of what crossing out Christmas may really mean. For many of us, it will be very different with far fewer opportunities for social mixing. And as for the use of the mistletoe, forget it; you cannot possibly use it at a social distance!

Yes I am also sad that we haven’t been able to run our limited edition Hedsor Jazz Christmas Party this year. You may remember that  if it had been at all possible it would have been TONIGHT.

So, I have raided the archives, and I have put all of the music from our Christmas Party held in 2012. Follow my DropBox link, and it will be all yours, with a host of memories of people and times past. I have also put up a PDF file of the CD artwork I have used for my copy. If you get the opportunity do listen back to some sounds form our jazz past via https://www.dropbox.com/sh/uy6sl83i52cgtes/AAAxayIXEWdOH-AAuxL0ef7Pa?dl=0

Pictures from that night are also shown below.





 


 













It has been suggested that it could be possible to have our Christmas party in 2021 on Midsummer’s Night. That would be a Saturday, June 26th.  Now there’s a thought.

 

Do have a very Happy Christmas time. The year 2021 offers the hope that we will all meet up again, and we will be able to let the good times roll.

HAPPY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE

 












One final final comment, The Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead will be cutting arts funding (along with a lot of other cuts including waste bin collection and flowers!). Many of us have appreciated Maidenheads Arts Centre, Norden Farm. It has continued to put on live jazz since it opened, and even this year I have been to 2 concerts there. SO can I say thank you to them, and can I suggest that we all take more interest in places that actually risk putting on live music played on real instruments (when we are allowed to of course). I think that this year has made us all realise that meeting and interacting with people has a greater value than any form of electronic performance at home. And that’s from me, a collector of music on …well all past formats! I started with 78rpm records on a wind up gramophone.

 

Even then there was the debate as to the preference of steel or thorn needles!

Wednesday, December 09, 2020

Tuesday, and a drab day here at level 2. No meeting up, no music, but a hope that 2021 will be better than 2020. They are inoculating against covid 19 as of today. A Vaccine for Christmas is a pretty good gift.

Jazz wise, not a lot to report. Obviously our idea of a Hedsor Jazz meeting before Christmas has had to be abandoned. Like many of you I now tend to look to YouTube for new sounds (from old sources!), and this week found some remarkable vintage Marion Montgomery and Dudley Moore, 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS8Va_z-2bA&list=RDCS8Va_z-2bA&start_radio=1


 









There are a number of extracts of them together on different shows, and they are well worth watching. Its great music from people whom we may not consider to have been jazz front liners, but in retrospect did deserve more appreciation than we probably gave them at the time when we actually could.

A bit more retrospection could also be had through George Melly and his appreciation of early Humph.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDCIKV7afW4


 









Both the above sets of music are looking backwards. Both looking from different perspectives, when Trad jazz fans though that modern jazz fans were the enemy! I remember there was even schism amongst the traditional jazz fraternity as to whether the music was too traditional, too Dixieland or even too tinged with Modernism!!

I am just so glad that I managed to progress from one end of the jazz scale to the other, and for me the bridge was probably Bruce Turner (a dirty bopper) and then Duke Ellington via Humph. I can now enjoy and appreciate many different aspects of jazz from Louis Armstrong’s Hot Five to Weather Report and beyond! Now I can grieve for what I missed live at the time, but am glad that I can enjoy it all now via recordings both sound and visual. Recently I listened to some 1950’s British Mainstream, Kenny Baker, Al Fairweather, Bruce Turner, Tony Coe, Wally Fawkes, Sandy Brown, what a cast. It was a boxset released in 2004 Castle Music CMETD 992, and it made me realise that we have heard some great music in the past. I am convinced that we will hear some great music in the future too.

 






















So, keep safe, if I can find more of interest to share with you I will keep on blogging. Too soon yet to wish you Happy Christmas, but not too soon to wish you happy Christmas Shopping, and stay safe!


 

Thursday, December 03, 2020

It’s a Thursday, a day we used to go out in the evening to listen to live JAZZ! How strange a concept does that seem? 

However, we do have hope for the future, but sadly this year I don’t think Jazz at Hedsor will be possible. From lockout to level 2 means that as the Hedsor Club isn’t a restaurant, we cannot gather inside, even in bubble groups, to listen to live music. But with an Vaccine for the covide virus on the way, there is HOPE for the future. 

We may however be able to meet up (at a distance) as John Dutton, (now back to face the inoculation period with us!) rang Sarah Bason for confirmation of the clubs situation. He sent me the following text by email:-

Hi, Geoff.

Just to confirm yesterday's conversation with Sarah Bason. No possibility of a resumption of music until such time as a return to tier 1. 

Hedsor is hoping to reopen after lockdown next Friday with pub type restrictions (tier2).

They intend to provide food to enable drinking. One of their regulars is the Chef at the Odney Club and he will serve up Pie and chips and Curry and rice type fare on Friday evenings and Sunday lunchtime.

Under tier2 restrictions, no household mixing will be allowed. 2 metres between tables plus all other normal restrictions. Booking a table/s would be required and can be done either on Facebook (Hedsor Bar) or by phoning Sarah 07969626745.

However, for those interested more in the music than the comfort of food (!) there is an evening of live jazz to be had before Christmas at Norden Farm on Friday December 11th:-

Their box office number is 01628 788997


One of our favourite guest at Hedsor jazz has just celebrated his birthday, and sent out a picture of himself at home

 Via  Facebook Vasilis Xenopoulos said this:- 



 












On all our behalves can I wish Vasilis a belated very Happy Birthday. I’m sure it will be great to see him in 2021, and I’m also sure that Hedsor, being such a family orientated place, we would welcome ALL his family along to his next gig with us. AND Vasilis, if you read this, I do have a Dexter Gordon LP (The Dial Sessions) here waiting for you.













Last weeks TV had for those of you who wanted to reminisce a program by Eric Clapton, which I watched. I must admit to watching it via a recording so that I could fast forward the bits I didn’t want to watch, but as a session of rock reminiscence it was great fun.

BUT it reminded me of another great guitarist more closely associated with jazz, but not nearly as well know. Swedish guitarist Ulf Wakenius has been mentioned in my blog before, and I just thought a follow on from the Eric C concert would be a concert by Ulf. So again I turned to YouTube and found more from Jazz Baltica. There are a number of great full length concerts in Hi Def visual on YouTube that are free to watch, and well worth your while doing so. Here is a starter for 3!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMDqqECWNXE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWM0wgzypGs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWM0wgzypGs&list=RDyWM0wgzypGs&index=1

That is about it for now. 

My delay in bloging this week was caused by a delivery from DPD of a quantity of redundant computer equipment for the Ghana project…2 pallet loads!! In October we shipped 5 crates of ex UK computer equipment, all now refurbished and destined for a school in the village of Nyaboo. Now we can do it all again next October!



  




They arrived a bit like THIS