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Deacon John's Jump Blues
ByA big plus of life in the Big Easy, especially if you are a musician or a fan of music, is the presence of music everywhere.
Cyril Vetter
Jeff Hannusch writes of Deacon John Moore, “In a career that spans more than 40 years, Deacon John has endured as one of New Orleans’ most talented – and most musically adaptive – performers.” Indeed his guitar playing made him a fixture on all the top records produced at Cosimo Matassa’s legendary studio in the late 50s and early 60s, including Aaron Neville’s Tell It Like It Is and Chris Kenner’s Land of 1,000 Dances. But this recording session puts Deacon John center stage with assists from legendary New Orleans performers Dr. John, Allen Toussaint and Wardell Quezergue. Add to this the talents of more than a dozen of New Orleans best session players and rising stars and you have tomorrow’s music history lesson being played today.
The disc opens with "Jumpin’ in the Morning," a classic jump blues first recorded by Ray Charles. Here, Deacon John’s unique vocal styling is showcased, along with the incomparable drumming of Herlin Riley. Riley, at home in any musical genre, never ceases to amaze and only his live playing can rival his recorded music. The unique nature of this project (a companion live concert DVD is also available) serves to underscore his ability. Other highlights include collaborations with Henry Butler (Big Chief) and a sophisticated jump blues cover of Joseph Liggins’ Going Back to New Orleans.
If Deacon John and the other front-liners give the project its soul, then the big band section provides its heart. Jump blues is a musical genre steeped in the tradition of making people dance and it’s the role of the big band section to get the audience swinging. Make no mistake, this section swings with the best and is based in a jazz tradition. With Carl Blouin, Sr, on baritone; Amadee Castenell and Joseph Saulsbury on tenor; Julius Handy on alto; Jeffery Albert and Jerome Verges, Jr. on trombone; and Bernard Floyd and Brian Murray on trumpets, it’s hard to believe that this group does not perform together regularly. Check out "Going Back to New Orleans" for a complex, syncopated sound reminiscent of big band arrangements from the 40s.
“A big plus of life in the Big Easy, especially if you are a musician or a fan of music, is the presence of music everywhere,” says producer Cyril Vetter. One only needs to hear this music to understand and appreciate that statement. Music permeates New Orleans society and musicians too, can be found everywhere. For example, baritone saxophonist Carl Blouin, Sr. is finance director for a local high school by day and has spent years as a math instructor, high school principal and music teacher. Among those he numbers as former students are director of jazz studies at the Julliard, Victor Goins and jazz trumpeter/composer/educator Terence Blanchard.
Deacon John’s Jump Blues is an ambitious “attempt to craft a preservation document of music as a ubiquitous fact of life in New Orleans,” says Vetter. With the studio CD, concert DVD, DVD-A and a forthcoming documentary feature film, it appears that this much-needed preservation has begun in earnest.
Until next time, see you 'Round About New Orleans.
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Jazz Fest 2003