This album is another legacy of lockdown in that it is
partly a recording of a distanced gig that the trio undertook as part of a
commission for Jazz West Midlands. The original concert of quirky and original
tunes is available for your viewing pleasure here on YouTube.
Of the three members of the trio, Jordan is a new name on me, possibly as she comes into the trio from a folk background, but both Clarvis and Noble are on several albums in my collection and I especially like The Long Game, (not least for its great cover), Noble’s 2019 album on Edition Records.
Freight Train turns
the quirky up to max. I would say that the influence that shines through most
prominently is that of Tom Waits after he left Asylum Records and launched
himself into a jungle of heavier percussion and off-centre piano. That move
didn’t work for me on his records but, thankfully it does here, probably
because Cathy Jordan sings whilst Tom just growled. The opener, Dear Someone, exemplifies this. It opens
with a simple piano figure from a beginner’s class before Jordan comes in. She
has a lovely voice but when she finishes singing the piano becomes more
disjointed and Clarvis throws in some oddly thumping drums. It actually
works.
After the next four tracks it becomes apparent that this is
a game of two halves. The tracks recorded as part of the lockdown session are
more challenging that those recorded in the studio in January this year. The
former includes a reading of Mood Indigo but
not like Duke ever did it. This time
Jordan definitely wins the battle with her lovely soaring voice over a music
hall rhythm. Others from that first session include Truly Scrumptious, from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, which again is deconstructed so that
Jordan’s voice is pitched against a squealing synthesiser and rattling drums. By
contrast, Isle of Innisfree is a
straighter reading. There’s a hum (on synthesiser?) down in the mix but piano
and drums largely serve the song.
There are four Mose Allison songs on the album and all come
from the studio session. If You’re Going
to the City is a rolling blues like Mose would have done himself. Paul
Clarvis was the late Leonard Bernstein’s favourite percussionist in London and
he and Noble convey the perfect combination of tragedy and hope on a stark
rendition of Bernstein’s Somewhere from
West Side Story.
Again, the contrast between Jordan’s full voice and the
barrenness of the backing comes through on Ain’t
Nobody’s Business if I Do. Rolling drums and tumbling piano notes suggest that
there’s a hole where the bass player is supposed to be. This is of course
entirely deliberate and is less of an omission than it might appear on stage
IRL.
The two closers are both Mose Allison tunes. A quick
swinging blast through Top 40 is
followed by, the more melancholic country waltz, Was. These are both from the 2022 studio session as is the title
track, a train blues, which sounds like it should be sung in a saloon in the
mid-west in the 1880s, in front of a posse of dancing girls. A lovely rendition
of Nick Lowe’s The Beast in Me is
also worth a mention for Jordan’s soulful voice.
I’m not sure how to summarise this album. It feels like the
winter blues but its frivolity and irreverence also herald better times ahead.
I suppose that’s a reflection of the recording process for this one. If you
want to find it in the shops, I suspect that it will be, in Gil Scott-Heron’s
explanation of where to find his albums, “at the back of the shop in the box
marked ‘Miscellaneous.’”*
Points too for Bill Henderson’s cover painting which could be a companion piece to Turner’s Rain, Steam and Speed, but from below. Dave Sayer
* Just been informed that it is only available via Bandcamp or at gigs.
1 comment :
You are probably too young to remember, but the title track, "Freight Train" was the song that created the skiffle movement back in the 1950s. Sung on TV and radio by Nancy Whiskey with Chas McDevitt, it was a huge hit and it inspired hordes of young bands (including the quarrymen) leading eventually to the rock boom in the 60s.
Originally written by Libba Cotten - a self-taught young black American who wrote it while still in her teens working as a domestic servant for the Seegers (Pete, Peggy etc)
Also I'd add that Cathy Jordan isn't just "from a folk background". She's the leader, singer and bodhran player who is a dominant force of nature at the front of the phenomenally successful Irish group Dervish.
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