1. The Isle of Capri
2. King Kong
3. Room Rent Blues
4. Some of These Days
5. Shine
6. Sweet Lorraine
7. Old Man Mose
8. Creole Love Call
9. Stevedore Stomp
10. (Up a) Lazy River
11. Blueberry Hill
12. Mean Mistreater
13. Can’t Afford to Do It
14. Everybody Loves My Baby
15. A New Orleans Parade: Moose March / Just a Little While to Stay Here
Recorded at the Falconer Centre, Copenhagen, Denmark, Sept. 17, 1961
Personnel:
Chris Barber – Trombone, vocal (track 7), backing vocal
Pat Halcox – Trumpet, backing vocal
Ian Wheeler – Clarinet, alto saxophone, backing vocal
Eddie Smith – Banjo
Malcolm Cecil – Double Bass
Graham Burbidge – Drums
Ottilie Patterson – vocals (tracks 11, 12, & 13)
Aged 90 and now retired from playing, Chris Barber is an institution in the
annals of British traditional jazz, having been on the scene since forming
his first band in 1949. His band of 1953, which backed Ken Colyer on
Colyer’s return from New Orleans, was the one which caught on with
traditional jazz fans, especially when Pat Halcox replaced Colyer on cornet
in 1954. As this new band showed, Barber was not content to play strict New
Orleans style with its tinge of roughness and reliance on ensemble. He
aimed for a smoother sound, one which resulted from the musicians’ being
schooled on their instruments and from their rehearsing sedulously, and
which allowed for more soloing. From that time until his retirement, Barber
was arguably the foremost bearer of the traditional jazz banner in the U.K.
Until his retirement in 2008, Pat Halcox accompanied Barber for 54 years,
initially on cornet, and together with Monty Sunshine on clarinet they made
a formidable front line in that band of the 1950s. By the time of this
recording Halcox had switched to trumpet, and Ian Wheeler joined the band
early in 1961, replacing the departed Sunshine. The back line was that on
this CD except for Malcolm Cecil’s substituting for the regular bassist,
Dick Smith.
As Paul Adams points out in the liner notes, much of the repertoire
featured on this recording is a familiar one for the Barber band, many of
the tunes appearing on other recordings, and some, perhaps “new” at the
time, became “standards” for the band. However, that does not detract from
the enjoyment one can derive from listening to any “repeats” as there is
always the pleasure of detecting different interpretations by the
musicians. They are not playing from written scores. Some of the highlights
for me were the immaculate stop time of King Kong (a tune very few
bands played then or play now); Wheeler’s dazzling technique and ideas on Sweet Lorraine; the crisp breaks of Stevedore Stomp, one
of Barber’s favorite numbers from the Ellington book; the achingly
beautiful rendition of Creole Love Call, another from the
Ellington book; and finally Ottilie Patterson’s interpretation of Blueberry Hill which makes it almost a new tune, quite separate
from the pop tune it is. Ms. Patterson, bending notes, coming in slightly
ahead of or after the beat, was right up there with the best of the blues
singers, period, and it was such a loss when she had to stop singing
because of health reasons.
This is a worthy addition to the Barber discography and should delight all
the Barber aficionados and anyone else, for that matter. It provides one
with a very respectable seventy-five plus minutes of great jazz and is
available from Lake Records, Amazon, and probably other on-line outlets.
Bert Thompson