C ar t be Sad when I hear I re d Jazz. that is Ay George W fa-ley I he last Sunday tn February found the Seaside (in ve ntio n center vib ra ting as a hand-dapping, foot stomping crowd roared its appreciation of the lust-concluded fifth annual S easid e and a ll tha t Jazz »estival Festival chairman Diet Pearson was as happy as the a'tendrr-. We finished welt in the black * he told me, adding that this year s success insured another fine festival in 1995 If you haven l been attending, plan now - - it's always the last wert end in Febr uary and, luud and lodging aside, costs around $ 40 for a week end all - events badge So what 15 Trad Jazz. 1 hear someone saving9 Why man that s Dixieland. Ragtime and the or igmal o ld -tim e gospel blues That s the music that came up out of New Orleans around the turn of this century, music lhaf grew out of the black street bands of the 1890 s. music that was played for weddings, funerals, in churches and at brothels Street music, people music - - music that sang and soar ad and lauqhad and cried, that set feet a-dancin andcarr ied its listeners through the ups and downs of their lives it was black music then, energetic, imaginative and inprovtsational. but at some point as the new century got underway it caught the Ihe imaginations of white musicians who, m time, make it largely their own If you realty want its history, ask your lib ra ry to find you a copy of fro m ¿2» «ariZO to f im e r t An Illu s tra te d History o f African American Popular Music from 1 0 9 5 to 1950 by Thomas L Morgan A W illiam Bar low (E lliot S> Clark Publishing, Washington DC) or maybe get /n Saar cP o f fludto So/fcn by Donald M Marquis ( Louisiana State U niversity Press) If ’ hey hook you. you 11 find ample bibliographic material to keep you reading u n til next year's Seaside jazz festival' But getting back to this year s bash I, began the last Friday night, w ith a Or and Open inQ ceremony featuring b rie f sets by a number of festival bands There were 10 hands in a ll, but if you recall the weather, you II understand that some of them got in a tad late a irp o rt problems in Portland, lost/misdirected luggage and a foggy dr ive out to the Coast Oregonians are used to that but Californians aren t Not that they all camo from California - -th e Garden Avenue Seven is based in Largo. Florida, the Buck Creek Jazz Band hails from North Vancouver. B ritis h Columbia, w hile Portland s Stumptown Jazz represented Oregon The festival setup is simple - - you can lite ra lly stay in (Xie spot and have all the bands come to you or you can iro t around town a b it (o r take the shuttle buses provided) and follow a favor ite band or two to its various locations Each band played about 8 times during the weekend The Convention Center has two halls - - th e huge one downstairs ( where the open mg and closing ceremonies were held in addition to sets throughout the weekend) and a smaller upstairs room which, fra n kly, I preferred and largely lived in A th ird venue was provided by the E Iks I odge with the last two at the Ocean View hotel W ith 15 minutes between sets ( bands do need time to get fr om one place to another and set up and tear down), there was ample time to either change your own location or to fuel up at I he Centers snack bar Dinner breaks long enough to go to any of Seaside s enter ies ( or go souvenir shopping) were scheduled as well Souvenirs9 Of course One Convention Center room was given over to sales of period clothinq - - fringBd dresses, parasols (m ore about parasols in a m inute), vests, hats - - plus T -s h irts , sweet sh irts and jew elry ranging from earr mgs and necklaces to tie tacks and pins One novelty pin sold out almost immediately Some bands mix in a bi, of swing or country music and some Trad Jazzers don't welcome tha t. so S T A D buttons ( S h it, That A in't D ixie) were in evidence Jan Scobey, widow of the late greet Dixieland trum peter Bob Scobey, was there w ith scores of tapes and CDs ( Send $5 to Jan Scobey s Hot Jazz. 10 755 Bachelor Valley Road. W itter Springs, Ca 9 5 4 9 3 -9 7 1 5 for a year s subscription to her jam-pocked catalog of hundreds of COs, tapes, videos and old fashioned” v in yl platters ) And the bands have tapes and. in some cases. COs of th e ir music (Stumptown even had a video of a Gospel service they did a year or so ago More about Gospel services later on ) I am livin g proof that it is not a' all d iffic u lt to quickly go broke amongst such a wealth of recordings' Enough of that Whet of the bands9 W ell, if they weren't top notch, they wouldn t be there But festival audiences do pick favorites and I'd say that this year it was the Blue Street Band, a h ig h -sp in te d aggregation of young, highly skilled players who captured the hearts of the audience as well as the s p irit of Trad Jazz As is often the case with Trad Jazz bands, Blue Street boosts musicians closely connected w ith the music scene outside the Dixie scene Several of them teach in various school systems in California and 1 sure envy the ir pupils There was nothing like that available to me when I took up the tuba many decades ago Nor was there anything like the Sacramento summer jazz camp which is fram ing today's teenagers to ca rry Trad Jazz on into the 21st Century B lue Street s vocalist, lovely 2 , -ye a r-o ld Sherr 1 Colby, is not only a jazz camp graduate but has been singing w ith a band since sne was 13 The bands boast an eclectic collection of players ranging from young chaps 1 Blue Street, lor example) wta ve fallen in love w ith the music of their grandparents (o r great -grandparents) to snowy- haired oldsters who have found little music they enjoy more since that from the decades between 1895 1935 And there's audience participation as well Not just o ffe rin g , fw x j clapping and loot stompm but dancing and parading I mentioned parasols W ell, you am t 3«n nuthm less you see a line of hiqh-steppinq ladies (anda few derby-hatted men), tw irh n fane, beaded, fringed phase's w hilst Strutt in t South R a m p a rts Parade or W h en Ih e S a in ts Go M a rc h in g In or any one of a dozen other tunes that demand yuu do more than just sit and bounce up and down in your seat Having mentioned my own tuba playing, you can understand why I s till retain a fondness for that weighty aggregation of shiny tubing vx! the growly sounds it can produce So I admit to having the hairs s tir on the bar» of my neck while listening to such brass virtuosos as Bob Pettmgeli (Stumptown Jazz). Earl McKee (High S ierra Jazz Band), and Dave Lewis ( Natural uas Jazz Band) going far beyond the baste Oompah Qompah I lew ned as a Junior High School tubaplffver This is not to slight the other fine brass bassists, but those three realty got to me McKee. I should note, doubles as vocalist for High S ierra, and bis less-than tender hear ted rendition of *1 had Someone f ise Befor e 1 Hat You and I II Have Someone After You ve Gone * displayed perhaps the ultim ate m male cynicism towards the faire r sex But for all its raucous, hard drivin g , toe tapping beet, (and the sometimes not p o litica lly correct songs of yesteryear -- * 1 Had a Bimbo Down on the Bamboo Isles w ill win no awards from fem inists, though no one at Seaside seemed to mind) Trad Jazz is tru ly the folk music of a quieter. gentler time a time that, for a weekend, is brought back by Dick Pearson and a hard- workmg aggregation of volunteer s. all under the aegis of the Seaside Chamber of Commerce Baer flows — but there are no noisy drunks The par king lot overflows, but d ri vers courteously yield to one another with smiles and fr tendly waves Andon the dance floor , couples wlx»e ener g, belies their year s deft ly maneuver around other equally energetic dancers without anyone try in g to slam dunk anyone else I couldn t help thinking that the world would be a better place if everyone could only partake of the feelings that Trad Jazz m o ts to imbue in its listeners And that feeling was reinforced on Sundey. when the traditional Oospel 5 ervicr is held Open free to the general public as well as to I estival attendee-,. this year s ser vice was a double one Stumptown Jazz held forth at the mam Convention center hall while Blue Street was at a local church The pr ogr am called for a mix of gospel songs and tunes plus some testimony about the two organizations to whom the fre e w ill offer mgs went Stumptown attendees contr ibuted over $1100 to the Columbia Pacific Heed Start program while Blue Street listener s donated nearly $ I 700 to the Victory Over Child Abuse proqr am Hopefully some of you out there may now have an itch to participate in a Trad Jazz festival there area host of them up and tkiwn the Pacific Coast almost year round But how to find them9 Simple Join the L ighthouse Jazz ixcie ty ( 1545 N Roosevelt. Seaside 9 7 1 3 8 ) and t h e , 11 introduce you to the whole Trad Jazz scene For example The Rose City Classic Festival of Jazz ( wr ite them at 13155 SW Foothill Drive. Portland 9 7 2 2 5 ) w ill be at the Oregon Convention Center m Port land over I abor Dev Weekend while Lighthouse is sponsor mg the I 2th Annual Oregon Dixieland Jubilee in Seaside beginning Sept 30th And that barely scratches the surface of what's available You can t be sad when you re hear mg trad go thou and listen' ire tla n c e w r t lt r George W fa rle y lives in s secluded hideaway in the upper Hood River Valley w ith his wife Margo. his big Halamule Thunder and ‘more jazz CDs than Margo cares to count * <1 C°ffEe H°l/se O pen M ike Live M usic Folk A storia I'll V RSDAYS FRIDAYS SAFI RDAYS 1161 M ar in e D r iv e A S T O R IA April Saturdays April Fridays 1st Pundit with Std & Jake 2nd Kid & Spud 9th Beach Dogs lb th Cindy Pearson Band 2 3rd Baby Gramps 30th E touiiee” 6th Bond St Blues Band 15th Moonshine Famine Family 22nd New Bad Things 2 9 th Crackpots & Pundit Cindy Pearson Baby Gramps CK.ecK?ohî U P P L K C tF T LD6E. 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