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ARTIST: IAN PEARCE BIG BAND

Title Prelude To The Blues

 

Catalogue Number: BIGMUSIK 012

 

Personnel: Dave Plews, Mark Cumberland, Mark Armstrong, Andy Gathercole, Martin Shaw (trumpets); Cliff Hardie, Andy Wood, Ashley Horton, Pete North (trombones); Colin Skinner, Sammy Mayne, Adrian Revell, Lauren Hignall, John Halton, Martin Williams (on tracks 10, 11, 12, 13) (saxes); Steve Pearce (Bass); Chris Dagley, Darren Ashford (on tracks 3, 5, 10, 11) drums; Ian Pearce (Piano)

 

The Prelude to the Blues album was made nearly three years after Retrospection, and, although the first album is excellent, the second shows the rewards of two more years of playing together, with Ian Pearce's outstanding arrangements now focussing entirely upon the band's strongest points, and with an entirely new sound spectrum. Anything I say here does not reflect back in any way on Retrospection — it is good, very good. But it does not achieve greatness. Prelude to the Blues does. While the first is a swinging big band affair, Prelude has many moments of exquisite beauty, and I'm going to tell you why.

The studio used to record Prelude gets a really gorgeous sound out of the saxophone section. It is pure, with the most remarkable presence, and it represents the saxophone sound exactly. In a band bursting with talented players, Colin Skinner, the leader of these saxophones, is the most prominently displayed. He is featured on three solos, but you can hear him all the time, leading that section. It's almost as if he is leading the band, as Marshall Royal used to lead the Basie band. In fact, Colin has a few moments in there where he actually sounds like Marshall. He's not doing anything flashy—nobody in the band is doing anything flashy—he quietly dominates, and because of that, the saxophones are at the centre of one's attention at all times.

This does not mean that the other sections are not also superb, because they indeed are. The trombones, led by Cliff Hardie, an old colleague of mine, with the sensational Pete North on bass trombone, play beautifully, softly and perfectly. The trumpets, likewise, are perfection itself. The brass section and the ensemble as a whole, particularly on the slow numbers, create a quiet, perfectly balanced dense sound that I can only describe as whispering power. And I love it.

It is on the slow numbers that this band really distances itself from other large combinations, for here it is that the whispering power takes over. I was so astounded when I first heard Dream Dance that I had to play it another three or four times before I went on to hear the others. In Dream Dance Colin Skinner is slightly louder than the rest of the band, intentionally so. This turns his alto lead into a kind of solo part over the band. At one point in the number I felt the shock of deja vu; a shiver of recognition passed right through my body—for a second I was back in my teens, listening to Woody Herman playing Lady McGowan's Dream, a 78 recording issued at the same time as his Summer Sequence, and, no doubt, because of that, generally forgotten. Colin gave me a moment of pure Woody Herman in there, and I used to love Woody, whichever instrument he played. I played the passage again, and there it was once more. Absolutely sensational.

The ensemble playing in the slow numbers on this CD should, nay, must be studied by all the young big band musicians of today. This is how to do it, guys.

Ron Simmonds

 

1: Drifting to the Blues
2: Count Down for Basie Windows Media Real Player
3: Dream Dance Windows Media Real Player
4: Blues for the Road
5: Don't Ever Say Goodbye
6: Benny Was Here
7: Straight Ahead
8: Prelude to the Blues Windows Media Real Player
9: Blues of a Kind
10: Have You Met Quincy Jones
11: Manchurian Lady
12: Blue and Mellow
13: Chasing the Blues
All compositions and arrangements by Ian Pearce.

 

ALSO AVAILABLE BY THE IAN PEARCE BIG BAND

 

“Retrospection”Cat Number: TRIP 011

 

Click preferred link above to hear samples. Please note these sound clips have been reduced in quality to enable quicker streaming. The actual CD is of considerably better quality.

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