1. At the Jazz Band Ball
2. Fidgety Feet
3. Beale Street Blues
4. The Sheik of Araby
5. Don’t Fence Me In
6. High Society
7. Mood Indigo
8. Royal Garden Blues
9. Big Butter and Egg Man
10. Ain’t Gonna Give Nobody None o’ This Jelly Roll
11. Marina
12. Savoy Blues
13. Take Your Pick
14. Wolverine Blues
15. Baby Won’t You Please Come Home
16. Bel Ami
17. You Don’t Know How Much You Can Suffer
18. Besame Mucho
19. Just a Closer Walk with Thee
20. Wilhelm Tell
21. Bei Mir Bist du Schon
22. Tiger Rag
23. When the Saints Go Marching In
This is a compilation of previously issued material and no recording
dates/places or personnel are given, unfortunately.
Formed on May 5, 1945, just a few days before the official end of WWII, the
Dutch Swing College Band is still playing all these years later. Given this
longevity, along with extensive touring, there cannot be too many followers
of Dixieland jazz who have not heard of them, especially in the U.K. or
European countries. Of course, the band has undergone many changes of
personnel over the years, but their “sound” has not changed drastically, as
one can hear from the selections on this disc. The tracks come from several
occasions, and there are inevitable changes in ambience, recording
techniques, and personnel. Volume levels vary somewhat from track to track,
so adjusting becomes necessary on occasion. Regrettably, no information is
given as to where the recordings took place or who was on them, but one can
hear a variety of reeds—sometimes the line-up containing more than one
reed.
Ever since its inception the band has always been well rehearsed and
blessed with excellent musicians, not to mention good arrangers. The result
is polished performances like those of some other bands of this genre, such
as the Dukes of Dixieland or the Chris Barber Big Band. One can come to the
album knowing what to expect once one is familiar with the band, and this
recording will not disappoint.
The Dutch Swing College band has always enjoyed immense popularity. It is
by no means a New Orleans style band, not placing the emphasis on
collective improvisation and lacking that certain roughness, that certain
earthiness that is so prevalent in such a band. As a consequence, some
devotees of traditional jazz may find the band too “commercial,” too
“slick.” But it is very entertaining, nevertheless, due to the quality of
the musicianship and arranging.
Many of the cuts will be familiar, containing as they do tried and true
Dixieland “classics”—but often with a twist or an arrangement that freshens
up the tune. On the Sheik of Araby, for instance, the clarinet
opens the track at a blistering tempo. Then it yields to the trumpet, which
maintains the tempo while the clarinet plays counterpoint, followed by a
clarinet solo. The next few choruses consist of trumpet (muted) and drums
(brushes) trading fours, then ensemble to the end, at which time the bass
player’s arm must have just about come off!
Speaking of tempos, the very slow one given to Ain’t Gonna Give Nobody None o’ This Jelly Roll renders it “new,”
as does the fairly brisk—but non-latin—one for Besame Mucho. Just a Closer Walk with Thee is taken at a medium tempo, not a
dirge, and it does not go into double time half way through as so many
versions do.
The old chestnut High Society perks up with a clarinet duet
playing the famous Alphonse Picou solo. The band also has a liking for
Charleston figures, it seems, and they are prominent in the endings of Big Butter and Egg Man and Bel Ami and also form the
opener for the latter.
As well as the familiar tunes, there are some that are less so. I don’t
recall having heard Marina, Take Your Pick, Bel Ami, or Wilhelm Tell done by any other bands; and some other numbers,
although well-enough-known, are not usually found in traditional jazz
bands’ books: Don’t Fence Me In, Besame Mucho, Bei Mir Bist Du Schon, for
example; but then again the band is the Dutch Swing College band, so
if it can be swung, it is fair game. While I’m not sure about Wilhelm Tell (which fit better, perhaps, as theme music for the
Lone Ranger TV series of the 1950s), most of the others lend themselves
quite well to a jazz treatment given them by the band.
So there it is—a generous 79 minutes of entertaining jazz delivered by
accomplished musicians who at one time or another comprised the ranks of
the Dutch Swing College band. The CD gives one a good sense of the band’s oeuvre over the years, and it is available on Amazon.
Bert Thompson