The availability of bottled
Double Maxim (my preferred match-day tipple) made this feel like a visit to the
Stadium of Light – but without the pain! Here there were only winners: Durham
City with a new big band; Paul Edis, the band-leader; the band as a whole who
gave such an excellent debut concert; the many soloists who bravely conquered
first-night nerves and, above all, the audience (150-200, I guess) who lapped
it up from start (Miller’s In the Mood) to finish (Basie’s One o’Clock
Jump)! And there were some brilliant hats and waistcoats too!
Miller was
followed by Edis – a blues self-mockingly (and erroneously) entitled Diminishing
Returns. The blues were then immediately banished by Sammy Nestico’s
foot-stomping arrangement of Sweet Georgia Brown, the musicians
visibly relaxing now and enjoying great ensemble playing. Five brave
“volunteers” then joined Edis at the front of the stage to perform two funky /
bluesy numbers: Hancock’s Watermelon Man and Nat Adderley’s Work
Song. Great stuff!
Next
up was another Edis original, the slow, muted, elegiac Too Sad for Words. And
then, Dur-ham, Dur-ham, Dur-ham Dur-ham, Dur-ham…(why not?) Mancini’s Pink
Panther got us back in the swing before the first set closed with
another Nestico arrangement: All of Me. Time for another bottle
of Houghton-le-Spring’s finest…..
A
train whistle (I kid you not!) from behind the closed red curtains announced
the start of the second set and we were all whisked away on Strayhorn’s A
Train. Those of you who have the recent CD of the same name would have
recognised Mr Hipster which lent itself well to a big band treatment and
provided an interesting comparison with the earlier Henry Mancini piece. This
Edis original more than holds its own!
My
wife’s favourite Basie piece, Li’l Darlin, followed smoothly on
from there. I hadn’t realised (jazznoramus) that this was actually composed by
Neal Hefti, a name new to me and soon to be heard again as the band-leader
introduced their penultimate number, Splanky. This really was a
full-throttle (or “regulator” if we were still on that train!) sound from a very
big band and it left the audience shouting for more. Which they got, in the
shape of the aforementioned One o’Clock Jump.
“When’s
the next one?” was a question I heard from several exiting musicians. This was
their first full concert in public: I too hope, like long awaited buses (or
trains?), another will come along very
soon. They were stars, every one!
Jerry.
Band-leader
– Paul Edis
Trumpets -Dave
Skipsey, Lis Hammond, Tom Rillands, Anthony Darwin, Edd Maughan
Trombones- Darcy Whyatt, Ian
Cargill, Andrew Hedges, Thomas Hunter, Chris Gallon
Saxes- (Altos) Neil Owen, Beth Pollard, Francesca
Sensier, Judith Wood-Archer
(Tenors) Peter Little, John Bowman, Rebecca Devine,
Steve Williams
(Baritones) Katherine Humpleby, Alan Smith, Lindsay
Smith
Flute - Kirstin Unwin Clarinet - Victoria Bainbridge
Guitar - Francis Tulip Piano - George Hetherington Bass - Richard Bower/Owen Jones
Drums - Alex
Kennedy

1 comment :
Thanks for all your comments! We certainly did. Hope you enjoyed our first outing everyone! Ian Cargill ( Trombone)
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