[Dixielandjazz] profitable insider joke

Marek Boym marekboym at gmail.com
Thu Jul 2 01:38:12 PDT 2015


Many years ago, when a Canadian journalist who was then commanded to Israel
and frequented our jazz evenings heard our praise of James, he protested
that James played "terrible ballroom trumpet."
We immediately played his recordings with the boogie woogie trio, and he
admitted that he had never heard James play like that.
Cheers

On 2 July 2015 at 05:33, Charles Suhor <csuhor at zebra.net> wrote:

> I like your distinction between the "obscene saccharinity [nice word] of
> some non-jazz James:" and "his heat when he's hot." Some young be-boppers I
> knew in the 50s had a habit of dismissing James because of his schmaltzy
> performances. One of them, Jerry St. Amant, though, said, "He mastered his
> horn long ago." Some of James's work with Goodman and later his own band
> was burnin' good jazz. Too bad that the sentimental stuff is often what's
> remembered. Dig his muted 75rpm, so boppish, on Limehouse Blues from the
> early 50s, as I recall.
>
> Charlie
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvFqN7uVP3g
>
>
> On Jul 1, 2015, at 4:33 PM, ROBERT R. CALDER wrote:
>
> > I did like the thought that the trumpeter was delivering a copy of Harry
> James -- amusing footnotes ever welcome!
> > (a guitarist friend of mine used to tell his audience to watch his left
> hand, which didn't move as he delivered several pop-songs of the day on one
> chord)
> > imitation can be the best way of demonstrating lack of uniqueness --
> James's technique was not in doubt, or his heat when he was hot, but
> > I hope Frank Beach was unable to match the obscene saccharinity of some
> non-jazz James,  which lie around some actual musical performances on CDs I
> bought for literally a few cents in Germany some time ago.  Some lovely
> Willie Smith on the musical numbers, but the Schmaltz items horrified me.
> >
> > of  course the MD of the JITTERBUGS film had composed "That's a Plenty"
> long before it appeared in presumably his arrangement in this film.
> > Oh, the blue rinsed virgins of Montana
> > are so lonesome and prone to pine...
> >
> > Robert R. Calder
> > _______________________________________________
> > To unsubscribe or change your e-mail preferences for the Dixieland Jazz
> Mailing list, or to find the online archives, please visit:
> >
> > http://ml.islandnet.com/mailman/listinfo/dixielandjazz
> >
> >
> >
> > Dixielandjazz mailing list
> > Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> To unsubscribe or change your e-mail preferences for the Dixieland Jazz
> Mailing list, or to find the online archives, please visit:
>
> http://ml.islandnet.com/mailman/listinfo/dixielandjazz
>
>
>
> Dixielandjazz mailing list
> Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com
>


More information about the Dixielandjazz mailing list