A second EFG livestream from the 606. If you were unable to get there then this is about as good as it gets.
The Generation Band matches the Trades Description Act inasmuch as we have a cross-generational group of musicians providing an enjoyable set. I was familiar with most of the musicians having heard then in a variety of settings but this was the first time for me (and maybe for them also) to hear them as a unit - they gelled.
One thing I've discovered from my not infrequent livestream visits to Lots Rd is that you are almost sure to hear some great tenor playing and tonight was no exception. Add Laura Jurd, the two Wills who, presumably, were on parole from Smitty's, along with Steve Watts on bass then you have the makings...
Lockheart did all of the arrangements without sticking his own compositions down your throat as so many do. In fact he saved his only original until the end of the set - Long Way Gone. It was excellent and, had he stuck a few more like it down my throat I'd have happily asked for more without worrying about regurgitation.
Instead, we heard a boppy, Blue Note influenced number by Ron Carter, Third Plane; an innovative take on In a Mellow Tone; Kenny Wheeler's Foxy Trot; Victor Herbert's Indian Summer; an absolutely gorgeous version of an old pop song from the fifties - Too Young to go Steady - as well as the aforementioned Long Way Gone and, before I knew it, we livestreamers too were a long way gone but we'll be back - Lance
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