27.11.11

THE DIAMOND FIVE - BACK TOGETHER



The Diamond Five for BASF Netherlands from 1973.

Piano, Electric Piano – Cees Slinger ; Bass – Jacques Schols  Drums – John Engels ; Tenor Saxophone – Harry Verbeke ; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Cees Smal ; Vocals – Greetje Kauffeld (tracks: A2, B2, B4)

Mellow waxing from Cees Slinger and the gang featuring Greetje Kauffeld on three vocal cuts.
Perfect for a sunny sunday morning...

20.11.11

NEW RELEASES FROM FRIENDS OF OIR

MARK WEINSTEIN - EL CUMBANCHERO

















 Latest offering from the mighty Mark Weinstein whose groundbreaking "Cuban Roots" album remains an OIR essential spin to this day.
Listen to three tracks from the album at Mark's myspace and don't forget to check out his excellent blog Jazzfluteweinstein where his latest post is about the making of "El Cumbanchero".

 THE KRAMFORD LOOK - 1970
















The Kramford Look - 1970 was sent over to me a while ago by an old friend who formed Wonderfulsound which recently released this modern day library/soundtrack influenced analogue gem.
Jonny Trunk wrote the sleevenotes which do a great job of summing it all up:

"It seems like I was asked to write some notes for this album based on the fact I might spot the references and therefore have something interesting to say about it all. Well the most interesting thing to start with is that I thought the opening track had some singing in it, and then I realized it was just the voices in my own head kind of singing along. Well that’s what I’m hoping it was.
I was also wondering what the Kramford Look is. Or where it is, how it is or when I can spot it happening. Or maybe it doesn’t. Good name though. "Justine" is quite spaghetti western, mixed with a bit of Pink Panther and the Prisoner which conjures up some fairly pleasing imagery. And by "Shoebox at Sea", it goes all sleazy and a bit sexy with some tickly keyboards, a touch of sax and some funny synthesis right at the end bit which could signify something fairly unnatural going on.
Paying careful attention to "Magic Plastic Home" I realised it has a most suitable title, because it’s all a bit sad and futuristic in that peculiar optimistic fashion they had a few decades ago and some still do in parts. It was during this track that I decided to call the label and ask a bit more about the Kramford Look and find out if that was the artist or the title or both. They weren’t that forthcoming but then again maybe my questions were a little vague. Anyway, it turns out that The Kramford Look is the name of the artist. I reckon he’s called something like Keith or Kevin Kramford in real life. Well whatever his real name may be, he knows how to write a melody. Especially for "Magic Plastic Home" (which I listened to twice in a row), where he sets up a sort of early 1970s telly thing with an unexpected wibbly wobbly noise which I very much appreciated. I was still humming the melody as the next number started. "Death Is Alive" is still in the made for TV vein, but earlier sounding with a bit of James Clarke sophistication and possibly a real electronic harpsichord, which anyone truly into esoteric listening goes a bit soft and funny when they hear it.
Then all of a sudden, by the track called Man On Bridge it’s like The Kramford Look got all fed up with referencing the late 60s and mid 70s music for TV and film and flips out with a Bolognese of frenetic techno pieces which sprout a retro head and have a go on a machine I’ve never seen before. Good work. The three words “quite well produced” sprung into my mind here, I was going to say really well produced and then thought that maybe if I got tested about that I might not know the right answers, so better to err on the side of musical caution I reckon. I still like the track though. Would sound great out very loud somewhere a bit fashion where it looks like people have cut their own hair and borrowed their spectacles from the pensioner next door.
Then he goes all funky soul and that, playing the fender Rhodes like a man with a jazz hobby and some mates with interesting trousers. This track could easily be lifted from the Blue Note period when the sleeves went all shit.
And then, before we realize it, he’s sneaked in another musical knod to dramatic library sounds before finishing off with a wade into more psychedelic, smokey waters ("Coast Ghost"). I think The Kramford Look was trying to make himself sound a bit like a woman here and I think it might have worked, but that may well be the voices in my head again. Interesting album I reckon. They may well pass on the sleevenotes though." Jonny Trunk - April 18, 2011.

TONY CROMBIE - WHOLE LOTTA TONY 
















Those nice chaps at Fantastic Voyage have been busy dusting off and reissuing some great British jazz dates from the Ember label.
"Whole Lotta Tony" and Ronnie Ross' "Stompin' With The Ronnie Ross Quintet" hit the racks on December 5th - I've got the Crombie date playing now and it's excellent.
3 cuts from each album are up exclusively on Soundcloud for OIR followers lugholes  :
Tony Crombie soundcloud samples
Ronnie Ross soundcloud samples
They've already reissued The London Jazz Quartet set featuring Tubby Hayes which is well worth shelling out for...nice prices too which won't break the bank.

14.11.11

MICHAEL GARRICK R.I.P. 1933 - 2011



I'm sad to say that Michael Garrick passed away last Friday leaving a legacy hard to rival on both the British and the worldwide jazz scene.
Tony Higgins,who compiled both the "Impressed" cds of British jazz and contributed the third unreleased volume to this blog last year was a friend of Michael Garricks so who better to pay tribute to him.

Michael Garrick 1933 - 2011

The death of Michael Garrick on 11 Nov 2011 brings to a close a most fascinating and extraordinary life dedicated to one thing - music. In the time I knew Mike, his humour, erudition and commitment was infectious and inspiring and it seemed entirely appropriate that I was playing his beautiful and haunting composition 'Black Marigolds', a track about loss and memory, the moment I heard the sad news. I'm not a believer in fate but this made me pause for a moment, think deeply and feel the moment. Thinking and feeling. Two qualities that Mike valued highly.

I first became aware of Mike Garrick in the early 90s through his contributions to the work of the Don Rendell-Ian Carr Quintet. I knew nothing about him other than his credit on the sleeve of 'Dusk Fire', as both pianist and composer of the title track. The music was entrancing, mysterious and evocative; it curled, danced and soared, at one time epic and majestic, at others intimate and personal. In essence, this was Mike's music - bold, inventive and fun. 'Dusk Fire' set me on an obsessive journey to explore this man's work, culminating in the two volumes of British modern jazz, 'Impressed', that I pulled together with DJ /radio presenter Gilles Peterson.

Contacting Michael to tell him that we were including his material on a compilation, he was initially a little guarded, yet curious. I suppose getting a call out of the blue about tracks that were 40 years old seemed novel, if not a little strange. It soon became clear that Mike's main interest was the here and now, not the past, and his main passion was performing. He loved to get out there and play. However, he was generous and patient with me and my endless stream of questions about his work with Joe Harriott, Ian Carr and others who held prime slots on my record shelves. He provided the introduction my sleevenotes to 'Impressed Vol. 1', and steered the reissue of his final Argo album 'Troppo' on CD for the first time. To get this music accessible again was a great thrill for me. Fortunately, all of his sublime Argo recordings are available once again.

I was also fortunate to work on the 2004 BBC TV series 'Jazz Britannia' that traced the post-war jazz scene in the UK. Mike featured in two episodes and appeared on the bill in the accompanying live concert at the Barbican alongside his old bandmates Don Rendell, Trevor Tomkins and Dave Green. Mike also led a big band through his own arrangements of Tubby Hayes' 'Down in the Village', Neil Ardley's 'Will You Walk a Little Faster' and presented a magnificent rendition of his own 'Black Marigolds' featuring his vocal muse Norma Winstone. Watching it from the stalls made me shiver in awe.

It soon became apparent that Mike was always looking for the joke in things. His quips and sparky conversation lifted the spirits and to see him bounce around his piano, beaming a smile, unable to contain himself as his band played away, really was life affirming. I looked forward to our conversations and meetings, him calling me 'The Professor' and telling me tales of gigging and recording in the 50s and 60s. Anecdotes included the time he gave Bill Evans a lift in his car, a Hillman Imp, driving up Hampstead Hill behind a lorry carrying tons of bricks. The lorry hit a bump in the road and some large bricks fell out, bounced off the road and spun toward the car , heading directly towards the windscreen and the face of Bill Evans. Mike, at the last second, managed to skid out of the way narrowly avoiding a nasty crash and a headline that would have forever have linked his name to the death of the world's leading jazz pianist. Of course, to hear Mike tell the tale in his own way was most of the story.

I felt very fortunate to have met and known Mike. Getting the chance to tell someone how much you enjoy their work, and see them genuinely moved by it, is very touching. Mike was a very genuine and emotionally open man. The depth and range of his music was extraordinary. From covering his beloved Duke Ellington to sacred music via poetry and folk, Mike's insatiable curiosity for life will always be with us - in his wonderful music. Thank you Mike. Play on
Tony Higgins

Mix courtesy of Blackclassical.