(© Jeff Pritchard) |
The audience tonight was larger than normal for a Sunday night. Some people were having to bring chairs out from another room and I noticed one or two unfamiliar faces amongst them. Fans of Munch maybe or is it that the Railway is becoming the IN place to go on a Sunday?
Munch started the show by giving us a high energy version of Without a Song and this set the tone for the rest of the evening with the house piano being put to good use by Paul Kilvington who is the ideal choice for this sort of gig. Those who have heard Munch over the years will know what to expect but I was pleased he decided to play only the tenor sax on this occasion although he brought along flutes and a clarinet which he placed on a stand but did not use. Munch slowed things down a bit in the first set by playing Benny Carter’s Only Trust Your Heart and later he gave a great rendition of In A Sentimental Mood.
The bass player Ben Wiltshire and the drummer Dave Hassell kept things cooking and when I left the venue at 11-15pm Munch was still in the middle of an ultra fast Cherokee.
The next jazz night at the Railway is Tuesday Nov. 29 with the Helen Pillinger and Carole Williams Counterpoint Quintet. Mike Farmer
Without a Song; Jordu; Only Trust Your Heart;Airegin; Up Jumped Spring; The Jamfs Are Coming; This I Dig of You; Have You Met Miss Jones?; Along Came Betty; In a Sentimental Mood; Cherokee.
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