1. Girl of My Dreams
2. Tin Roof Blues
3. Pennies from Heaven
4. Sheik of Araby
5. Shake It and Break It (Weary Blues)
6. Go Down Sunshine
7. Bye Bye Blackbird
8. Blues
Kid Thomas Valentine – Trumpet (all tracks)
Emanuel Paul – Tenor sax (all tracks)
Louis Nelson – Trombone (all tracks)
Lars Tidholm – Piano (all tracks)
Albert Burbank – Clarinet (tracks 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
Per Oldaeus – Alto sax (track 1)
Harold “Geezil” Minerve – Alto sax (track 8)
Joseph “Twat” Butler – String bass plus vocal* (tracks 2, 3*, 4)
Joseph “Joe” Benjamin – Electric bass (tracks 5, and possibly 6, 7, 8)
Hákan Rosenqvist – Banjo (tracks 1, 2, 3, 5)
Emanuel Sayles – Electric guitar (tracks 4, 6, 7, 8)
Alonzo Stewart – Vocal (track 2, 6, 8)
Ragnhild Sjögren – Vocal (track 6)
“Bobbie” Nell Brookshire Gordon – Vocal (tracks 7, 8)
Recorded live at Studio Pub Profeten, Uppsala, Sweden, Nov. 9, 1971.
For a good many years, now, I have been a fan of Kid Thomas and his various
bands; so when I first heard about this recording, I was eager to hear it
as it had never been previously issued.
As we learn from the booklet, the band had performed in a show in Sweden
along with the Duke Ellington band, and after that they headed to the
Studio Pub Profeten in Uppsala for a jam session. There, according to the
booklet notes, “two guys were equipped with audio tape recorders,” and
therein, perhaps, lies the first problem. The sound quality is not very
good. Perhaps the mike placement was at fault, or even the recorders
themselves were not functioning well. There is little separation or
balance, so the ensembles come through somewhat fuzzy. The solos fare
better, fortunately, and we can hear the distinctive Thomas style of
phrasing, of flares and flourishes, of staccato bursts of notes.
The vocals, however, are not as lucky, being almost totally unintelligible,
and they are both quite frequent and, in most cases, long. The vocal in the
second track, Tin Roof Blues, which is eleven-and-a-half minutes long,
takes up most of the track; in similar fashion the sixth track, Go Down
Sunshine, much if it vocal, is twelve minutes long; and the final track,
Blues, is eight minutes long. Undoubtedly for the audience there was no
problem, judging from the rapturous applause after each number on the disc.
As I said above, the solos provide the interest here. For me the best track
is the fifth, Shake It and Break It (Weary Blues), which Thomas kicks off
at a brisk tempo, providing a nice contrast to that of the previous four
tunes. Thomas is in good form here, displaying all of the trademark
features. None of the groups playing these tracks contains drums, but that
absence is made up by Thomas’ percussive style. Nelson here is given to
fast tonguing, eschewing for the most part legato tones. On clarinet,
Burbank favors the upper register for most of the CD, but here he also
shows command of the lower register. Paul, as he always seems to do, nimbly
fingers the tenor sax with nary a squeak or squawk. Hitting all the right
notes and keeping good time is Rosenqvist on banjo. The other two musicians
on this track, Tidholm on piano and Benjamin on electric bass, are barely
audible, however, especially Benjamin.
Had there been more of the spirit of the fifth track and less of the long,
rather tedious vocals, coupled with better recording, this would have been
a much better CD. As it is, it is no quite what I had anticipated. I should
imagine it will appeal most to Thomas completists. It is available from the
Upbeat Recordings’ web site www.upbeatmailorder.co.uk
and from other web sites such as Amazon.
Bert Thompson