Showing posts with label concert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label concert. Show all posts
Saturday, 22 February 2014
Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin is celebrated
Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin is celebrated
A bit later than planned thanks to the two previous exciting news items, this event had in any case already taken place by the time it came to my attention but I still think it deserves mention here as another splendid example of 1920s jazz performed for a new generation.
Pre-eminent modern bandleader and jazz music revivalist (what a great term!) Vince Giordano - who has previously featured a couple of times on this blog - and his Nighthawks band recently took the opportunity to mark the 90th anniversary of the first performance of George Gershwin's composition Rhapsody in Blue. Originally debuted by Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra, with Gershwin himself at the piano, on the 12th February 1924 the piece was performed once again by Mr Giordano and the Nighthawks (doubled from the band's usual 11 musicians to 22 - just as Paul Whiteman did - plus a special guest conductor) at the Manhattan Town Hall - 90 years later to the day.
Brooklyn 'Jazz Age’ revivalist Giordano to recreate 'Rhapsody in Blue’ concert
As well as this recreated version of Rhapsody in Blue Giordano and his band also played some of their standard set pieces and the whole event sounds like it was an absolute hoot - the perfect way to mark such a musical milestone. It is always splendid to see that this early jazz music is still appreciated and enjoyed - hopefully sparking the enthusiasm of a new generation. With this performance and others in films like The Great Gatsby and Manhattan, plus a possible biopic in the works, the Jazz Age as epitomised by George Gershwin seems to show no signs of being forgotten - and a jolly good thing too!
Labels:
1920s,
2014,
concert,
George Gershwin,
jazz,
Manhattan,
music,
New York,
Paul Whiteman,
recreation,
Rhapsody in Blue,
Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks
Monday, 20 January 2014
Benny Goodman 1938 concert revived
Benny Goodman 1938 concert revived
I stumbled across this item at the weekend and it instantly put me in a Big Band mood, as well as delighting me with the news that one of the seminal live concerts of the 1930s (and in the history of jazz in general) is going to be reproduced at Cadogan Hall in London this year. I was less pleased to note that it's being put on in less than a week's time - the 26th January (although to be fair that does mark as near as dammit the 76th anniversary of the original performance). Thanks for that advanced bit of reporting, Daily Telegraph(!).
However, this looks to be not the only Big Band concert playing at Cadogan Hall in 2014; thanks to this article I've discovered there's also a 100 Years of Big Band Jazz concert on 15 June as well as another Carnegie Hall revival on the 14th November, this time celebrating the 1939 performances of Benny Goodman's and Glenn Miller's Orchestras (plus selections from Louis Armstrong's and Count Basie's appearances).
Well done to Pete Long and his colleagues for helping to keep these wonderful bands' songs alive. It's splendid to see this music of the 1930s & '40s still performed for audiences of today with such enthusiasm - and this is only at one venue! Who knows what other events are on elsewhere in the country? (Seriously, do tell if you know of any!).
![]() |
source - BBC Four |
Could 2014 in fact be a renaissance year for early 20th century jazz, I wonder? Viewers in the U.K. have already been treated to the excellent B.B.C. Four programme Len Goodman's Dance Band Days, broadcast over Christmas (and already expertly covered by Mim over at Crinoline Robot; eagle-eyed readers will also have spotted Matt from Southern Retro in the above clip), and I note that off the back of it Mr Goodman will be appearing with Michael Law's Piccadilly Dance Orchestra at Littlecote House, Buckinghamshire, on the 25th July.
Clare Teal's Sunday night Radio 2 show has also evolved nicely even if she still doesn't play the early British dance bands that her predecessor Malcolm Laycock did and there are more and more DAB and Internet radio stations appearing that are devoted to early dance and big bands (such as Angel Radio and Radio Dismuke - again, if you know of any others do give them a mention).
All these events and broadcasts popping up gives me great hope for a jumping and jiving year ahead. Now I'm off to listen to more Benny Goodman. Let's Dance!
Labels:
1930s,
Benny Goodman,
big band,
Cadogan Hall,
Carnegie Hall,
concert,
dance band,
Glenn Miller,
jazz,
Len Goodman,
London,
music,
Piccadilly Dance Orchestra
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