In north west Lancashire we were truly fortunate to
have talented jazz singers and musicians playing on our doorsteps at the
Empress and Imperial Ballrooms in Burnley and Nelson, every week.
Saxophonist Johnny Dankworth, Musician of the Year in 1949 (later Sir John Dankworth) frequented Nelson regularly, as did Ronnie Scott and Tubby Hayes. Scott, of course, opened his own jazz club in Soho in the 1950s. It still hosts the cream of musicians and singers to this day.
I always preferred trios and quartets with their more
understated and cool presentations, but sadly the highly-acclaimed American
Dave Brubeck Quartet, with Paul Desmond on alto sax, never made it to Nelson, and nor did
the studious MJQ foursome who created a haunting piece as the theme tune for Odds
Against Tomorrow starring Scary Spice’s former father-in-law Harry
Belafonte, the sex symbol Shelley Winters and every man’s crumpet Gloria
Grahame (played by Warren Beatty’s wife Annette Bening in the film Film Stars Don’t Die
in Liverpool).
But these days I can almost dine out on the most
overwhelming event ever. My future first
husband and I saw Ella Fitzgerald at Manchester Free Trade Hall for the first
time in 1958. I got rid of my husband
eventually but I kept the souvenir programme of the concert.
We were beside ourselves with excitement, because not
only were we anticipating the most famous jazz singer on earth, but also the
cream of jazz musicians too.
Finally the band struck up and Ella landed on the
stage carrying that trademark silk hanky she always used to mop the sweat from her brow. She lit up the room as she took hold of the
microphone and vigorously belted out The Lady is a Tramp. We were instantly besotted and
overwhelmed, and later on her scat singing had us worshipping her unique
skills.
During the evening we were entertained by the then revolutionary tenor sax players Stan Getz and Coleman Hawkins, alto saxophonist
Sonny Stitt, the Dill Jones Trio, Coleman Hawkins, playing his classic Body
and Soul, Roy Eldridge, Lou Levy, Gus Johnson and the adored jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gilllespie.
One surprise for me was when bassist Ray Brown left
the stage when Ella came on to sing with Oscar Peterson’s backing. I had no idea she and Brown had been married
not many years before.
Apart from Ella and Stan Getz, my favourite performance that night was the inimitable Oscar Peterson, already popular on both sides of the Atlantic and the backbone of Jazz at the Phil. Apparently he and Nat King Cole had identical voices, and while Nat often accompanied himself on piano, he didn’t perform solely as a pianist because Nat had agreed to stick to being a vocalist and Oscar to playing the ivories. Maggie B. Dickinson
1 comment :
I too attended a concert on JATP's 1958 tour albeit not at Manchester but at Newcastle's City Hall. This was om May 7, ten days before the Manchester concert.
Like yourself I still have the programme and the list of the tunes that I recognised, there were others:
Dill Jones Trio with Dave Shepherd - Lady be Good.
Coleman Hawkins - Indian Summer
Roy Eldridge - It's the Talk of the Town
Dizzy Gillespie - Laura
Stan Getz - Lover Come Back to me
Oscar Peterson - C Jam Blues; The Golden Striker
Ella Fitzgerald - Too Close For Comfort; Midnight Sun; Lady is a Tramp; Just One of Those Things; St Louis Blues; Caravan.
Yes it was quite a night although, as I remember it Getz had a lot of reed problems and for me Sonny Stitt was the sax star.
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