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Johnny Nocturne Band with Kim Nalley: |
An
opening blast of brass for "Million Dollar Secret" lets you know instantly that
swing rules with the Johnny Nocturne Band, but it's a specialized niche of the swing
genre. Given the name "jump-swing" by Decca Records in the 1940's, it's the
place where swing meets a blacker, bluesier sound, a hybrid of jazz with rhythm and blues
worked by smaller bands than had been the case before World War II.
Johnny Firmin, who
plays tenor sax, has championed this music for a decade with his Johnny Nocturne Band.
"Million Dollar Secret" is their fourth recording and their first with Kim
Nalley. They are made for one another. Nalley immediately brings Billie Holiday to mind
(and those gardenias in her hair do nothing to dispel the association), but it is a
rounder, warmer tone that emerges on disk, and other influences are acknowledged: Helen
Humes, Dinah Washington. In the end, it's Kim Nalley and no one else - an unforced
instrument with clarity and jazzy musicality, effortlessly delivered, and a sense of humor
to boot.
"If I Could Be
With You" is a standout here, a number associated with Humes. The slow, sexy
arrangement ("If I could be with you one hour tonight...If I was free to do the
things I like...") showcases fine work by Firmin on his tenor sax in a dialogue with
Tommy Kesecker's vibes. "Imagine My Frustration" shows off Nalley's great comic
delivery: "You're just a mess, and in excess about your dress, I must
confess...Imagine my frustration with no invitation to dance." It's sly and
underplayed and a total delight, a classic Ellington-Strayhorn piece rescued from
oblivion.
"Jump
Tonight" is jump-swing essence - the kind of music that won't let you not
start tapping your foot. "Black Velvet," a Jimmy Mundy number, morphed into
"Don't Cha Go Away Mad," with added lyrics: "His kind's a dime a dozen/I
really should have passed him by/Who'd ever think your cousin/would come along and give me
the eye?"
Two cuts on the
album are Firmin originals, "Visegrip" and "Johnny Nocturne," the
latter with knockout syncopation - Latin percussion plus sizzling sax again trading off
with vibes. Hot, hot, hot. Another Ellington-Strayhorn, "I'm Checking Out Go'om
Bye" is a showcase for virtuoso musicianship by all; Nalley gets a chance to shine
once again in this complicated number. The disk wraps with the familiar, still fresh,
"Harlem Nocturne" - very slow, evocative, hauntingly bluesy.
The survival
of "jump-swing" is a testament to the vitality of American jazz; Million
Dollar Band illustrates the coming together of a variety of historical
influences, now with new talents to carry it forward and add their own, constant
reinvention. That's part of a continuing tradition, as is the great dancing beat.
- Arthur Lazere