Thursday, August 20, 2009

Thank you, Eddie King!

From Rebirth of a band
Back in the good old days, just before Reagan got elected, I did something that should have qualified me for the crazy house.

I was living in Santa Monica, working as a music copyist and orchestrator for a small music production company. I decided to risk what was a tremendous amount of money for me at the time, recording a band that had played exactly one gig--and a greensheet one at that (charity gigs that the union pays for, so called because you signed a green sheet of paper and waited three to six weeks for your money).

I had written, and copied by hand, just a handful of reduced big band charts for ten pieces. For no good reason I decided to call it the New Flamingo Swing Orchestra. Bob Ontiveros, a trumpet player in this enterprise, worked at Valle Music Papers in North Hollywood, came up with some folders someone had ordered and gold stamped with a name, but never picked up. Bob wiped the letters off so you could almost not see them, then applied "New Flamingo Swing Orchestra" in gold leaf over the wiped out lettering of the act who ordered them.

That was our first serious identity thing. Then I had Arthur Mortimer, at the time Lynn Carey’s husband, design us a logo. Somewhere in this process the band got booked at the Playboy Club in Century City. As a matter of fact, this picture was taken by a Playboy photographer on the bluff in Santa Monica.

From Rebirth of a band
We needed a demo, because we were doing things backwards. I knew that the Playboy gig wouldn’t last. Every week felt like our last, although we were getting pretty good crowds.

So I went to see Eddie King at Kingsound Studio in North Hollywood with a proposal. I wanted him to mix a demo on the fly down to 2 tracks. The reasoning was that by doing the recording this way we wouldn’t lose anything when we mixed it transferred it to cassettes (!), and we’d keep the cost of the recording down by having no post-production mixing or mastering. Eddie was more than willing to try, and more importantly, he had the musical chops to pull it off.

If memory serves, in 4 hours we recorded 12 tunes, some short, but 8 full-length big band charts. And the band was sightreading! We’d do a runthrough of a chart and do one or two takes, then move on.

You couldn’t do this with ordinary musicians or with an ordinary engineer.

Kudos, then to Berke McKelvey, Harvey Cohen (R.I.P.), and Charles Oreña (and me) on saxes, Bill Armstrong and Bobby Ontiveros on trumpet, the peerless Steve Johnson on trombone, Dominic Genova on Bass, Milton Nelson on piano, and Paul Yonemura on drums. You guys rose to the occasion.

And Eddie King deserves all the credit for manning his Neve 3 board. (My stepson works for Rupert Neve!) When the date was over, you wiped your brow and went on to a lot of other things, but I don’t know if I ever gave you what was due.

Here’s Eddie today:




And here’s the latest genius to record us, Mike Hersch, tomorrow, at Promiseland Studios:

From Rebirth of a band

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The Big Recording Rolls Near


As I write this we are just 3 days away from the long-anticipated recording of the Original Recipe Big Band. Come Friday morning we’ll convene at 10 in the morning at Promiseland Studios on the other side of the Meuller development, formerly the Meuller Airport, where I used to fly in to visit Jan when I lived in Los Angeles (actually Costa Mesa). That was some 15 years ago, when I was just getting back into playing. Sister Noreen had set me up with ExpoTech, running their in-house printing operation. ExpoTech got eated by GES, and I went over to them. It was an easy job for me, and I managed to convonce the bosses to let me come in at 6 in the morning and quit at 2:30. Jimmy was in Japan, where Carol was serving her country. Cindy was at her house behind El Modena High School in Orange, working for the Post Office and getting interested in union matters.

Now all three (where are you Marcia?) are in Texas, and all of us will, I think, be at Promiseland for the session. Jimmy of course will be participating, and I guess Noreen will participate too as caterer, or crew services or whatever the nearby film industry calls it. Cindy will be in a comfortable chair out of the drafts from Promiseland’s mammoth air conditioner.

This will be a couple culminations for us all. For me it’s laying my dream on the line, of using a smaller big band for an all-purpose band, one that can do the swing, the funk and the Motown and the rock that all the kids seem to like so much. For too long we were held back by our demo, which is great but has no vocals. In 1980, when we recorded . . . OH SHIT, was it really 29 years ago? . . . you could just be a band, with a demo of instrumentals, without vocals. I’ll have several good vocals ready for Friday, and that should put an end to that as an objection.

For my sisters and my brother, it’s about my dad’s charts, which we’re playing three of. I’m fine with that too, although it was like turning a ship around in a narrow channel to change the emphasis of the session’s intent for me. Now I see that these goals are not at all contradictory. So I have three of my dad’s charts which I have prepared, or actually two, and one of his songs which I wrote a chart for myself.

I Remember Basie is an instrumental chart that’s been following me around all my life. Wherever I go there seem to be big bands which pull it out when they here I’ll be at a rehearsal. Not that that’s a bad thing, understand. It’s one of those charts that plays itself. A blues that starts with a Basie piano lick, followed by an easy blues line harmonized when it reappears a second time, then opens to a trumpet solo. The sax soli follows, and it’s one f those solis that is just so well written that you can’t shake it from your head, especially if, like me, you’ve played it a couple hundred times. A tenor chorus follows, and I added (we’ll try it and see how it goes) a 12 bar drum chorus because Jimmy plays in 12 bar phrases. The other soloists are Angelo Lembisis on piano, briefly, Pete Clagett on trumpet, and Tony Campise on tenor. It’s nice to have guys who bring as much to the table as these soloists. I know that I won’t have to tell Jimmy, Angelo, Pete or Tony–especially Tony–what to play because they know what to play better than anybody, yours truly included. I did this adaptation of my dad’s big band chart, which I think he wrote back when we were still living in Massachusetts, before he went to work for Westlake College in California. It was one of the four charts he used to start Dick Fenno Publications in our garage at 1261 S. Hickory St., in Santa Ana.


My dad’s other chart is based on another of the Dick Fenno Publications original four, No Spring This Year. It’s a ballad that opens with a brief trombone solo. Then the theme is stated by me on alto saxophone. I’ve had a long history of playing this one too. The trumpets play low register bridge, then a quick and loud key change. The theme is restated in the new key by the first trumpet, then the original key returns and with it the alto and the melody. Trombone duties will fall to Ulrican Williams, a very soulful Houston native, and Kevin Flatt will be playing lead trumpet, who’s from Richardson, up by Dallas. Trombone duties will fall to Ulrican Williams, a very soulful Houston native. Kevin Flatt will be playing lead trumpet, who’s from Richardson, up by Dallas. Both these musicians play in the ORB, the smaller, more generalized party band. I adapted this chart from my dad’s original score. It too seems to have been written in Massachusetts, probably for one of the territory bands my dad wrote for there.

The third of my dad’s charts is really my chart–an arrangement of my dad’s song–Pollyanna. It’s the only one that will have a vocal, by Jimmy. I had to write the chart from my dad’s lead sheet. The song is not without its sentimental aspects, because, as discussed elsewhere in this blog (look under the keyword Pollyanna). The song has a nice verse, and a long-form chorus. Tenor solo by Campise ought to be very special. Tony is a real emotional player, and he’s a guy who knows how to play off a back story.



We’ll be recording four short snippets of material which will prove our versatility.

They are Oh What a Beautiful Mornin’, based on the Ray Charles/Count Basie record–a soulful waltz.

Still Diggin’ on James Brown, a funk tune, I’m thinking Jimmy and Ulrican on vocals.

You’ll Never Find, one of those prehistoric disco records, with Jimmy on vocals.

Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You, a pop tune that I’d like Jimmy to split with Marilyn or Jennifer.

Then the real fun starts:

Marilyn Rucker will do two vocals:

Pick Yourself Up, based on an Ella Fitzgerald/Nelson Riddle collaboration, with brief solos for Campise and Clagett, and I’ve Heard That Song Before, based on the Harry James/Helen Forrest record.

Jimmy will be relieved at the drums by Butch Miles, the legendary long-term drummer with the Count Basie band, for All Right, OK, You Win, based on the record by Joe Williams and Count Basie.

So the charts are all set, and I’ll drag the book along, so we can solve any problems as they arise with other material. I just finished chart #226, so there’s plenty of emergency material to choose from.

Ask me how it went on Saturday.

Thanks to Mike Hersch, fellow California ex-pat, for all his help getting this thing off the ground.

Also to Angelo Lembisis on piano, Kris Afflerbaugh on bass, Ulrich Ellison on guitar, Tony Bray on tenor, Paul Baker on bari, and Michael Severino who's tuning the piano. I couldn't have done this without Jan.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

I Remember Basie: an Appreciation

From Pollyanna jpegs
The other day I was thinking about Count Basie. Nothing unusual there. When other people whistle tunes–real tunes that can be identified–I’ll bet not many of them can do entire arrangements by the Count Basie Orchestra. But here in my head, Basie plays non-stop.

Maybe some explaining is in order. A few intrepid souls who are not members of my family may have seen pictures of my father and mother getting married. My favorite shot is the one where my dad is happily holding a crystal serving plate of donuts, looking pleased beyond belief in his rented white dinner jacket. The picture–my mother is in the frame too–was taken on April 29, 1950, at my mother’s parents’ house in the center of Fitchburg, Mass., before my grandfather bought an old farmhouse on the outskirts of town. My maternal grandmother, who supplied the donuts and was a bit of a wag, observed when I was born on January 29, 1951, that my gestational period was “nine months and twenty minutes.”

But, getting back to Basie, when the last donut was eaten my mother and father somehow were conveyed (my mother didn’t drive until 1960 and my father stopped driving when he had a rear-ender in 1948) to a Boston hotel, where, if one would infer and amplify on my grandmother’s sideways look of the world, my gestational clock started ticking. That night–for the wedding had taken place in the afternoon–my parents rose from their hotel room, impossibly young at 23 and 19, and took a cab to a night club (look it up in Wikipedia if you are unfamiliar with the term) called Storyville, and heard Count Basie’s band featuring Joe Williams.

My mother told me a lot of embarrassing stories about me and my sister, who was born as soon after me as she could be in the rich Irish Catholic tradition into which she–my mother–married, and one of the thing she tossed out once was that most of my feeding took place while she–my mother–was listening to Joe Williams and Count Basie.

It’s 1961. My dad is an arranger, a part time fill-in drummer at Disneyland, a repeated bandleader trying every desperate measure at his disposal to make the big bands come back. We live in Santa Ana, where thousands of acres of orange groves are being uprooted and replaced with tract housing. My dad converts the garage of our new tract home in the south side of Santa Ana into a teaching and writing studio. He borrows money from a family friend and sets up Dick Fenno Publications to tap into the uncertain waters of the stage band movement which is popping up in odd places like Texas and Lexington, Kentucky. Armed with little more than 4 charts he wrote when he was the arranging instructor at the doomed Westlake School of Modern American Music, a book with all the secondary schools in America and a two-sided flyer with the name BAND DIRECTOR printed as the addressee, my dad had the nerve to take the plunge with 5 kids aged between 10 and 2. One of the charts written at Westlake was called “I Remember Basie.” Above his desk at the garage studio and the incredible second story office which he rented when the charts started coming in from the printer were eight-by-ten glossies of Stan Kenton, Glenn Miller, and Count Basie. The orders come in for Dick Fenno Publications.

My dad plops me down in front of the Basie band at Disneyland (the original, in Anaheim) without comment on my birthday. Basie’s band is playing in Tommorowland, across from the GE house of the future or whatever the place was called. The band members are neatly dressed and wander around talking and smoking while Basie ascends to the piano with Sonny Paine, the drummer. Basie plays a gospel-based tremolo, then another, then 2 bars of eight note triplets. Somehow the band has miraculously gotten themselves onstage and picked up their horns, all within the span of this 10-second introduction–no longer than that. That’s when the band came in, Sonny Paine kicking them. Maybe you know the tune. Imagine the notes, based on the words of the song.

<I> <Can’t> <STOP> BREATHE <LOVING> <You>.

At the end of the third note of letter A, where the pause takes place between the words STOP and LOVING was the most exquisite space. I can still feel it, and when I play the chart now in my band it’s no less a thrill. Back then, when I’d been playing saxophone for six months, most of my practicing taking place in the family sedan, it was a revelation to understand that these guys were showing me that space is just as important as notes. The band was an extension of Basie, and the concept of space was central to his pianistic style. A strand of musical DNA got into my ear that night at Disneyland, sitting in front of the toughest lead alto player in the business, Marshal Royal, who put a hurtin’ on me. I remember the ride home, late at night for me, but feeling emotionally wrung out in a really positive way. Can you imagine a twelve-year-old seeing the Los Angeles Dodgers for the first time, with Koufax, Drysdale, Gilliam, Roseboro, Wills? Well, that happened too, but it just didn’t throw the switch like the Basie band did for me.

I went to college a couple years after my dad died, I stuck around after I graduated from a very stuffy university music department, because the local junior college band needed a baritone player. My boyhood buddy Art Baron was actually playing trombone on Duke Ellington’s band, and so I knew that anything could happen. The Cabrillo College Jazz Ensemble became notorious for going to jazz pow-wows and, rather than playing the ballistics most bands were playing at the time, digging into “Who’s Sorry Now?” at breakneck speed while exaggerating the dynamics. We left judge’s panels flat-footed and gasping. Thanks Leader Lile Crews, 1st Trumpet Billy Theurer, Bassist Steve Bennett, and most of all Altoist/Flutist Paul Contos . . .

One fateful night the Cabrillo band was to have opened the show at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium for the Stan Kenton band, which was on its usual endless string of one-nighters. When we got to the hall, we found the doors padlocked. A half hour before the show Stan pulled up on his bus and found our band and maybe 50 people who were milling about, wondering what would happen. (Remember now, any recovery of a contract requires the musicians show up at the gig, on time and ready to play.) Stan–in his big booming voice–asked how many people had paid to see the show. As I remember the scene, most of the milling crowd had. “Well, there’s just one thing we can do then. Let’s find out who has the key and open this place up.” Off he went with Jack, the road manager, to find a personage who had the authority and the key.

We opened for Stan Kenton that night. You don’t want to get in a hammer-clobbering contest with Stan’s band. Between the ten brass players and the 28-inch ride cymbal that Peter Erskine was playing, that strategy, especially in the boomy old Santa Cruz Civic, would have been pointless. So Lile took the opposite approach. We did a 40 minute set of straight ahead stuff, liberally leavened with Basie charts, including “Who’s Sorry Now?“. And we knocked the small but eager crowd and the Kenton band on their ears.

I could go on and on about Basie, about trips down to Disneyland from Santa Cruz because on summer nights you could hear 4 sets of the band for $12.50, about seeing Basie the night that Duke Ellington died, at the Paramount in Oakland, about the speculation when Marshal was relieved of his position in the center of the saxophone section, about how Basie returned to the piano chair in a motorized wheelchair, or how sometimes my dad’s classmate at Schillinger House, Nat Pierce, would fill in for him on piano. I’ve seen the band hundreds of times, and it never ceased to gas me!

Now that I’m trying to get this band reanimated, I’m happy to report that we’ll be recording new demo tunes at Promiseland Church on August 21, 2009. Playing first tenor saxophone will be Tony Campise, who played alto with Stan’s band that fateful night in Santa Cruz. The other saxes are me on alto, Tony Bray on the other tenor, and Paul Baker on baritone. Trumpets look like they’ll be Kevin Flatt and Pete Claggett. Ulrican Williams will be on trombone. Piano is a little up in the air, Ulrich Ellison on guitar, Kris Afflerbach on bass, my brother Jimmy on drums of course. Jimmy will supply male vocals and Marilyn will do the part of the canary, with Jennifer Zaveleta.

Especially for this event, Butch Miles will sit in on a takedown I cooked up on a Joe Williams/Count Basie collaboration called “All Right, OK, You Win.” Here’s a very young Butch Miles with the Basie band and Joe Williams doing the chart I took down, one of the recordings we’ll do in the 21st.


Yeah, I remember Basie. As luck would have it, I played with Kenton, the Glenn Miller band and the Modernaires on various bus rides across this and other continents. When I married my ex-wife, her father set the entertainment budget at whatever it takes, so we hired the Capp-Pierce Juggernaut, a Los Angeles-based big band that plays from the Basie book.

I feel lucky that I played with two of the three photos in my dad’s studio.

But no band’s sound floats my boat, or has influenced me more than Basie. That DNA that got into my system all these years ago keeps spinning.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Rediscovering a Genuine Jazz Genius

Lately I’ve been in a funk--the white meaning of funk, if you have to choose. Things are not going so well for me. The folks who used to call me for gigs aren’t doing it any more. (To be fair, our band is one of the few in town that seems to be working, 3-4 times a month.) I was fragging my sorry ass around the house tonight as Jan packs to go to Milwaukee for a week. I’ll be alone, responsible for the pills that keep me going but deprive me of adrenaline, the real enemy of someone like me with heart disease. By the time she gets back I’ll have played a couple gigs and managed to talk to a few people about a business idea I have. In between, I’ll nap and think increasingly about the friends that have been claimed by the Grim Reaper.

From Wedding: Austin Club 7/18/09


But, for better or worse, I am a jazz musician. The first music I heard coming into this world was Count Basie, Joe Williams, Bird, Duke, Lester Young. Like a baseball player, a jazz musician starts young and stretches it as far as she or he can. When it’s done, it’s done. But there are ways of staying in the game--either game, baseball or jazz--like coaching, like playing in increasingly compromised (“square”) bands. Generally lowering the expectations accompanies the onset of middle age, and that’s more of a burden for me than driving a cab in New York City was in 1977. At least then I could park in front of Stryker’s and drive friends downtown after their gigs ended.

I never quite made it to the bigs, what baseball players call the Big Show. I played on road bands at the very end of road bands, when the busses were old and the hops between gigs were long, when the quality of the bands had slipped to the point that the professional touring bands that I played in were dwarfed in power and swing by the college band I was in (Cabrillo College, in Aptos, California) and certainly by the LA Jazz Workshop band that I played in when I moved to Los Angeles in 1979--a crucible of musicians who have since made first-rate careers for themselves. After a series of ignominious bus rides, I moved to New York and drove a cab, then to Los Angeles and, after starting a family, felt the need to withdraw from music altogether. I layed out for nearly ten years and made a career in publications work. In the early nineties, as my marriage started to fall apart, I was drawn back to making music. I had a lot of good friends who helped me get back in circulation, first in rehearsal bands, then working dance bands, then I was drawn like a moth to Jan in Austin. I wanted my kids to know that I was the guy who owned the saxophones in the closet, and I think I was successful to a great degree.

As time passed I explored things as a resident of Austin, not Orange County. I found myself playing a lot of unrelated music, the common denominator being the preponderance of the blues: R&B, Tejano, show bands, pit bands, big bands that swung to a lesser or greater extent. When a certain local bandleader with an overactive thyroid canned me, he left me with a concept that could be rendered into this equation:

R&B + Sinatra + Classic Rock (a few) + Tower of Power + charts for all the parts = wedding band

From Wedding: Austin Club 7/18/09

And so Original Recipe was born. See, this bandleader, who was bald, by the way, had no charts. So everyone who came on board had to memorize the parts, which no one knew. It may sound simple, but it has something of a dialog between Chico Mark and Dr. Hackenbush about it. I READ trivial music and MEMORIZE what I deem to be significant and challenging.

Five years ago I made a cold call to Princess Cruises to see if they needed a guy like me. They did, and I worked for them, playing in the show bands at sea. I left the Original Recipe Band to brother Jimmy when I went to sea. But even when I was in the Baltic for the summer I still wrote charts. The Original Recipe BIG Band is my project now. I’m writing furiously to make a deadline for a demo recording.

From Wedding: Austin Club 7/18/09
The ORB did a wedding last Saturday, which, while not perfect, was pretty damned good, and probably as good an effort as can be expected outside a major metropolitan area like New York or LA. Brendan came down and played some relief drums so Jimmy could line up with the canaries, and I am well and pleased with the kick-ass way he’s drumming.

At every one of these signposts, I think I lost something–the jazz aesthetic. Tonight I reconnected with some of that through the services of the iTunes music store. I had a phrase rolling around in my head from an album by the pre-Rassan Roland Kirk. I “went” to the music store and there was the album containing the tune containing the phrase. It was offered for sale for less than $7. I bought it. As I listened to this Roland Kirk album I hadn’t heard since college, I felt myself relax and bathed in the feelings of sometime in the early seventies. I remembered how it felt be wanted by Selective Service. I felt like I was going to Keystone to hear Kirk, or the Berkeley Civic Auditorium to hear Chick Corea or Gil Scott-Heron.

Really. Music is some powerful ju-ju. Perhaps musicians ought not be trusted with the emotional language that it carries. I feel renewed now, and I am realizing that many of the qualities I like about Roland Kirk are in Tony Campise–specifically their abilities to be able to execute whatever their imaginations dish up from the subconscious. I need to talk to Tony about that. Gotta do some more hanging out with him.

Next time I get in the dumps I’ll know to look at Roland Kirk, who overcame the damnedest obstacles imaginable.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Pollyanna

From Pollyanna jpegs
Of all the motivating things that got me to insist that this band be put back together–and, for that matter, for it to be founded originally back in Los Angeles nearly thirty (THIRTY!) years ago–none is more contradictory than one song that my father wrote back in 1964, Pollyanna. But I wonder how much internal pressure I’ve had and how much is coming from my siblings.

From Pollyanna jpegs
We were living in little more than a shack on the beach in Fairfield, Connecticut while my dad was setting up a partnership called Heritage Square Music Publications with John Bunch (not John Bunch the piano player, John Bunch the adman and part-time drummer).

This much we all agree on. I remember the winter on Lalley Blvd., between Edwards St. and Fairfield Beach Rd. It was a house that should not have been standing, much less occupied in the winter by a family of five children, two adults, and a long-haired dachshund. All around us were the prosperous and well-heeled, some of whom were classmates at Tomlinson Junior High school where my sister Noreen and I were students. We were looked down upon for having a dad in the music business, and for being a big family in a drafty sea cottage. We had our share of conflagrations too. The heater in the house caught fire one cold night and we were saved by the quick response of the Fairfield Fire Department.

The accepted story was that, lacking the means to buy my mother an anniversary gift, my father decided to write a song to the innocence and completeness of his love with a woman, that being my mother.

I remember a few things about this song, because I was working at my father’s office (which spectacularly burned to the ground, along with the entire inventory of Heritage Square Music Publications). I remember my dad telling Lou Fratturo, one of his friends and an amazing alto saxophone player, that he’d written a song with a long form verse and chorus, just like all the songs in the thirties were written. I remember him playing it in manuscript for Lou, who responded favorably.

My dad was trained as an engineer, so his gateway to musical architecture was not emotional. He attended Shillinger House, where Joseph Schillinger’s method of musical composition was taught students to analyze musical works on graph paper.

Dad wrote amazing stuff, and like all arrangers he had a bag of tricks he drew from when he was working.

When I first heard the song that was to become Pollyanna I heard a lot of Duke Ellington influence. Steal from the best, I say. I was 13 at the time, so picking out an Ellington influence may have been calculated wishful thinking on my part or perhaps something my father said that my young precocious ears heard. More than likely, a lucky guess.

I have my doubts about the family legend that this song was a gift of tender affection from my father to my mother, because there was so little affection going around at that time. When I think back to that time I remember a lot of heated arguments, most of them out of the range of the younger children. This could explain why Noreen and I remember this period a good deal differently than our siblings. The song could have been presented as a truce. I don’t know where my mother would have heard it, because we didn’t have a piano at the house and I don’t remember her ever coming to the office. A demo of the song was recorded, just to cloud things up a little bit, by a combo led by John Bunch, the piano player, at the studio in BBDO, the ad firm, where John Bunch, my father’s partner, worked. I don’t know if any of these recordings survived. There were three other tunes on the record with incredible contributions from Toots Thielemans on harmonica and whistling along with his guitar, and Bob Wilbur on soprano saxophone.

My father died in 1967. He was 40 years old.

When my band had a steady gig at the Playboy Club in Los Angeles in 1981 my mother came out to hear us. I had written a very basic chart of Pollyanna, and Laigh Langly sang it for her, but she seemed indifferent to it when we played it. Nevertheless, the myth has grown over the years, amplified in its telling over holiday tables and 4th of July picnics.

A lot of emotional weight has been loaded on me for years about Pollyanna. My sisters always ask about the song, even though I don’t think any of them has a recording of it, or even a lead sheet.

Well, I’ve had enough of this song. I’m going to record it, but then I’m through. I admire it as a work of music, in the abstracted, architectural style that my father favored before his death in 1967. I’m writing a chart right now which ought to, in the words of Slim Galliard, “nail it to the roof.” Jimmy will sing it, I’m thinking, and because this is the way of the world, we will never play this song again. Why? Because we only play what people want to hear, and that’s not on the event horizon for Pollyanna.


From Pollyanna jpegs

But I’ll get the job done. Being the dutiful oldest of his brood, I will do my father’s memory proud. There will be tightly voiced flutes in the verse, the horns will bounce off the melody, never overpowering the singer, then a lugubrious tenor solo (which I hope Tony Campise will play), then back to the bridge and out, with the singer hanging on a sharp eleven just before the final resolution in the coda.

None of the dark times on Lalley Blvd. need to be relived in the retelling of this song. It’s just a song, and if it’s something more for other people, well, I can’t help that. As for me, once I get it out of my “In” box I’ll be better off.

Here are the lyrics:

(Verse)

I’ve heard it said
That a man should love a woman.
Here’s what I heard
From a man who loved his woman:
He obviously adored her,
Why then should he be sad?
She smiled through the bad times,
Few were the good times
That she ever had.

(Chorus)

Smile all the while Pollyanna,
You know what tomorrow will bring.
Our dream of a trip to Vienna
Is real, keeps you young, funny thing.

You walk to the end of a rainbow,
And laugh when you find nothing there.
In spring, when the cold winter winds blow,
Your voice is the sound of a prayer.

I wish old dame misfortune
Would for once turn her head and you’d be
A queen high in a throne dear,
And your most loyal knight would be me.

Oh, don’t ever change pretty pug nose.
You’re warm and you’re real, you’re alive.
As sure as the moon in the sky glows
Things have to look up, we’ll arrive.

And then, your special magic,
Showered on me every day,
Will shine like a light from our window at night.
“They’re in love,” all the world will say.

Words and music by Dick Fenno (ASCAP), copyright 1964 by Heritage Square Music Publishers.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Plugging Along Through a Very Hot Summer


It’s been a whirlwind month.

Five weeks ago, Jan and I have sailed on the beautiful Sapphire Princess, a very happy ship, from Vancouver to Whittier, Alaska and returned to Vancouver. We brought our folding bikes to throw off the shackles of ShoreEx and generally go our own way. That made a real difference in our enjoyment of Alaska. I did a small website here on the mechanics of bringing our bikes on board.

We are getting closer to having a recording made at Promise Land Church with the locals, especially the two Tonys.

We got back from Alaska just in time to do the first big band gig of the modern era, June 6, at the Becker Vineyards in Stonewall. The band played great! Saxes were RF, Tony Campise, Tony Bray, Chris Kapral; trumpets were Kevin Flatt and, in one of his last gigs in Texas, Pat Murray; Matt Walker played trombone; rhythm section was Angelo Lembisis, Ulrich Ellison, Kris Afflerbach, JF. Canary was Jennifer Zavaleta.

This gig is the reason I’ve abandoned plans to go to LA--that and the remoteness of it all. Schlepping all the stuff required 1600 miles is daunting. And now that I know we can get a fine local result, I’m going for it.



Here are ten--TEN--charts I’ve taken down since we got back here in June:

Skyliner (Charlie Barnet), All Right, OK, You Win Joe Williams/Basie), Chattanooga Choo Choo (GMO), Walkin’ My Baby Back Home (Billy May/Nat Cole), Still Diggin’ on James Brown (Tower), The Very Thought of You (Nelson Riddle/Ella), Stella By Starlight (Nelson Riddle), Cut the Cake (AWB), Corner Pocket (Basie), Save the Last Dance for Me (Michael Bublé).

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Tune List for 6/6/09 Wedding Gig in Stonewall, TX

89        Just the Way You Are
50        Li'l Darlin        
100        The Way We Were
112        Little Brown Jug
113        Sophisticated Lady
        Jen 1        
        Jen 2        
139        Witchcraft        
27        April in Paris        
34        What's New        
4        Serenade In Blue
103        Moonlight Serenade
177        I Just Called to Say I Love You
199        "Godfather" Theme
108        String of Pearls
28        Take the "A" Train
32        Candy        
33        I Got It Bad        
80        Three Little Words
58        In The Mood        
83        Do the Hustle        
91        Can't Take My Eyes Off of You
205        Zoot Suit Riot        
187        Into the Mystic        
152        Shiny Stockings
123        Fly Me To The Moon
210        Car Wash        
111        Stompin' at the Savoy
176        Bye Bye Blackbird
204        Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody
185        Beauty & the Beast
92        Signed, Sealed & Delivered
        Jen 3        
42        Blue & Sentimental
29        Jumpin' at the Woodside
209        Let Me Stand Next to Your Fire
39        The Magic Trumpet
117        Mack the Knife        
208        Rock Lobster        
188        Domino        
105        Begin the Beguine
128        Jump Jive & Wail
        Jen 4        
90        Soul Bossa Nova
11        No Spring This Year
19        Cherokee        
40        Come Back to Sorrento
57        When Lights Are Low
106        Perdido        
107        Cheek to Cheek
142        Perfidia        
178        Brazil        
180        Day by Day        
201        In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
203        Harlem Nocturne