[Dixielandjazz] Boardwalk Empire
Ron L'Herault
lherault at bu.edu
Sun Sep 5 17:53:33 PDT 2010
Makes me wish I was willing to pay for cable.
Ron L
-----Original Message-----
From: dixielandjazz-bounces at ml.islandnet.com
[mailto:dixielandjazz-bounces at ml.islandnet.com] On Behalf Of Stephen G
Barbone
Sent: Sunday, September 05, 2010 5:32 PM
To: lherault at bu.edu
Cc: Dixieland Jazz Mailing List
Subject: [Dixielandjazz] Boardwalk Empire
On September 19, a new HBO series premiers. This from a NY Times TV
Review:
"Boardwalk Empire" is set in Atlantic City in 1920, during the first
year of Prohibition, and the big outdoor set, the vintage clothing and
the kind of historical research that delights in Houdini's sibling are
all evidence of the unusual, painstaking lengths the show's creators
have gone to recreate an era that barely registers in the American
historical consciousness. Don't miss it. Lots of OKOM
The show's music, bright and ebullient, is also authentic and also a
reaction to the end of the war. People wanted to get up and dance, as
Mr. Okrent pointed out, and Prohibition, or the speakeasy culture,
conveniently (and for the first time) mingled men, women and alcohol
in an atmosphere of congenial illicitness. Some of the show's tunes,
taken from silent movie arrangements or music found in old
nickelodeons, hasn't been heard for close to a century. The soundtrack
also makes use of remastered 78 recordings by people like Al Jolson,
who sings "Avalon" on the pilot. Eddie Cantor and Sophie Tucker are
actual characters on the show and sing hits from the period like "Some
of These Days" and the comic ballad "I Never Knew I Had a Wonderful
Wife Until the Town Went Dry."
"Marty and Terry both wanted the music to be historically accurate,"
said Randall Poster, the music coordinator for the series. "So we just
immersed ourselves in this fascinating transitional period when
ragtime is just beginning to turn into jazz. It was like a musical
scavenger hunt. A lot of the music on the show had never been recorded
before because after talkies came in, there was no reason to record
it. And yet it's the birth of so much of what came later."
The below about Vince Giordano who has a lot to do with the music is
from a second NY Times article. See and her The Nighthawks on the
series.
Cheers,
Steve Barbone
www.myspace.com/barbonestreetjazzband
Playing a Bandleader and Keeping It Real
NY TIMES - by Charles McGrath - September 5 2010.
VINCE GIORDANO didn't just record, with his band, the Nighthawks, much
of the music on "Boardwalk Empire." He also served as an invaluable
historical resource.
Mr. Giordano, 58, who plays a bandleader on the series, lives in a
small house in the Midwood section of Brooklyn that has virtually been
taken over by his collection of early-20th-century American music and
music memorabilia: piano rolls, old 78s, silent-movie scores, big-band
arrangements, all carefully cataloged. The collection has even invaded
his bedroom, where at the foot of the bed he keeps what he calls his
Rosebud: his grandmother's windup Victrola, on which as a 5-year-old
he began listening to music from the '20s.
"So much of the music that I play and seek has been dispersed," he
said. "The 20th century was such a disposable time. Old is out, new is
better." He added that the music of "Boardwalk Empire" is really a
hybrid form: "It was called rag-a-jazz. You're just getting out of
World War I, which was such a horrific event, and I think young people
just said, 'We're going to have a good time,' and the music really
reflects that. You had early syncopation but still a little bit of
ragtime feel. It was the baby steps of jazz."
If the show is renewed for a second season or more and moves on later
into the '20s, Mr. Giordano assumes that the music will advance with
it. He is greatly looking forward to incorporating the music of the
bandleader Paul Whiteman, who became a fixture in Atlantic City
starting in late 1920 with songs like "Wang Wang Blues."
Randall Poster, the music coordinator for the series, is similarly
enthusiastic. "Whiteman was so famous, he was like a combination of
Frank Sinatra with a band of Justin Biebers," he said. But he added
quickly that he felt very protective of Mr. Giordano: "We adore Vince.
He embodies the lost memories of that time." So Mr. Poster has already
figured out that when Whiteman arrives and pushes Mr. Giordano's band
off the bandstand, Mr. Giordano will just have to join the Whiteman
orchestra.
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