| Steve
Smith & Buddy's Buddies, "Very Live At Ronnie Scott's --
Set One": Liner Notes
"Steve
Smith and Buddy's Buddies -- Very Live At Ronnie Scott’s -- Set
One" featuring Steve Marcus, Andy Fusco, Mark Soskin and
Baron Browne
Steve Smith -
drums
Andy Fusco - alto sax
Steve Marcus - tenor and soprano saxes
Mark Soskin - piano
Baron Browne - electric bass
Recorded Live
at Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club, London June 7 and
8, 2002
Read
a review of "Steve Smith and Buddy's Buddies -- Very
Live At Ronnie Scott’s -- Set One"...
The
lights come up on the famous stage at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in
London as Steve Smith and Buddy's Buddies launch into their first
set of the evening. Up front, Steve Marcus, with that familiar
professorial shock of white hair, spirited and mercurial on tenor
and soprano, partners towering ex-footballer Andy Fusco, dwarfing
his alto, evincing the essence of swing, snapping his fingers,
dancing. Meanwhile, Mark Soskin smiles from behind the grand
piano, adding colour and texture, swagger and drive, digging every
minute. Electric bassist Baron Browne is happy to sit at the back,
pumping away, getting funky when it's needed, and soloing more
than I've ever seen him.
Then there's
drummer Steve Smith, who just gets better each year. He's studied
the history and it shows. You don't have to be a drummer to
appreciate his mastery, the erect posture, the economy of motion.
Like Buddy, he's visually riveting - slicing cymbals up and down,
making acrobatic cross-overs. Where Buddy was instinctive Steve's
more studied. Buddy would work up a sweat in no time while Steve
always appears cool. Yet he's capable of the same crowd-exciting
solos and driving swing that were Buddy's stock-in-trade. He's
from a different era but the work ethic is the same. Night after
night. Just like Buddy.
Looking back to
when Buddy Rich first came to England in 1967 he caused a
monumental stir amongst British musicians. Buddy crammed his
mighty orchestra into Ronnie Scott's intimate Soho club and blew
the roof off. Later, in 1980, "Buddy Rich Live At
Ronnie's" became one of the orchestra's great recordings. So
when Buddy's Buddies were offered a week's residency at Ronnie's
(Monday, June 3 thru Saturday June 8, 2002) the chance to revisit
history and make a live album was unmissable. Especially since
both Marcus and Fusco were very much featured on the classic 1980
recording. Marcus offers, "Playing Ronnie Scott's with Buddy
each year -- for twelve years consecutively -- was always a major
event... great music and great memories. Coming back after sixteen
years absence with this band was glorious."
But first, a
brief update. Since the first Steve Smith and Buddy's Buddies CD
was released in 1999 (Tone Center TC-40062) there's been a change
of personnel. Smith says, "Since (bassist) Anthony Jackson
and (pianist/arranger) Lee Musiker were not available for touring
we asked Baron Browne and Mark Soskin to play with the band. We've
been gigging occasionally for the past couple of years and they're
exactly the type of players Buddy would have loved." Browne
is of course Steve's long-time rhythm section cohort in Vital
Information, while ex-Sonny Rollins pianist Soskin has taken over
where Musiker left off, contributing new arrangements and
compositions. Of this new recording, Smith says, "I'm very
happy with the music. As it turned out we had enough material for
two CDs so I left the sets intact, exactly as we played them on
the gig. Then I added some 'bonus' material, tunes that we had
very good alternate takes of." The recording is indeed
superb. Every note is crystal clear, the instrumental balance
faultless. And the music? Well, take a listen - you won't be
disappointed…
Casting caution
to the winds, the band opens with "Love
For Sale,"
arguably the most swinging, dynamic, and melodic of Buddy's
classics. Surely a quintet cannot do it justice? But of course
they do. Mark Soskin's arrangement perfectly mirrors the big
band's famous tour-de-force and within minutes the live audience
is won over. By the time the band reaches the tempestuous shouting
climax it's almost like the orchestra itself is in the room.
Cheers greet Smith's take on Buddy's famous
four-bar-dead-stop-single-stroke snare roll -- one of the great
moments in big band drumming. After that you know you're in for a
great night.
Keeping up the
momentum, Horace Silver's "Nutville" sees tenor and alto
horns in close harmony. Once more the band builds to a stunning
climax. Smith's solo respectfully recreates some of Buddy's
trademark licks, his crisp snare work underpinned by stabbing bass
drum accents.
Now Andy Fusco
steps up for his alto showcase, "Big Man's Blues,"
created for him by another Buddy alumnus, Walt Weiskopf. There's
also space for a tingling soprano solo from Marcus. The dynamic
drops for Soskin to build again with an explorative and angular
workout, Smith's solo cuts across the piano and bass ostinato,
controlled and confident. Next up is Soskin's "Bopformation,"
the sort of belter Buddy would have loved to get his teeth into.
Soskin originally wrote the tune for the history section in
Smith's Hudson Music DVD: "Drumset Technique and History of
the U.S. Beat." Steve says, "The tune is so strong that
the guys wanted to play it at Ronnie's so Mark whipped up a quick
arrangement for the two horns." Then it's time for a breather
with a ballad feature for Steve Marcus on the Michel Legrand song,
"How Do You Keep The Music Playing?" Buddy accompanied
Frank Sinatra on this tune during Sinatra's 1983 tour. Buddy loved
playing ballads with brushes and Smith follows suit while Browne
keeps the whole piece bubbling along.
The band leaves
the stage as Smith treats us to his specialty hi hat and cymbal
improvisation. Soloing on the cymbals was an eagerly anticipated
feature of Buddy's live performances, but Steve takes it further,
creating a show-stopping composition. Aurally it's a feast of
subtle touch and timbre. Visually, the audience's gasps hint at
the amazing juggling, stick tapping and twirling that Steve is
constantly adding to with new tricks and ideas. My advice is to
catch Steve live at the earliest opportunity.
Soskin and
Browne return to the stage for another twist in the proceedings --
a piano trio featuring Soskin's composition, "Manfredo's
Fest." The pianist shows off his love of Latin music with
rhythmic invention and lithe runs, while there's plenty of space
for Browne to shine with a spiky samba groove leading to a
swooping, melodic bass solo treat. The set is shaping up nicely
and the two frontline men return for the high energy closer,
"Ya Gotta Try," which catapults off at a blistering
tempo. There are testing arranged passages, which the twin saxes
negotiate and the band underpins with alarming ease. Smith's
playing recalls Buddy's miraculous, ever-moving left hand comping,
his fantastic breaks and set-ups. The set climaxes with virtuoso
exchanges on tenor and alto until both saxes blaze away in a
controlled fury.
That's set one
- a mixture of Rich favourites and a couple of original tunes
given superlative performances by a band at its peak. But
remember, there are two killer bonus tracks to enjoy - Coltrane's
"Moment's Notice" and the stunning "Airegin."
Like the
audience at Ronnie's you'll be left breathlessly awaiting the
second set. Be sure to check out "Steve Smith and Buddy's
Buddies -- Very Live At Ronnie Scott's -- Set Two."
-- Geoff
Nicholls, November 2002
Geoff
Nicholls is a British journalist drummer who has contributed
to numerous music publications including Rhythm, Modern Drummer,
the Melody Maker and Mojo, as well as newspapers The Guardian and
The Independent. Current books include The Drum Book: A History of
the Rock Drum Kit, John Bonham, A Thunder of Drums and Cream: The
Legendary Supergroup.
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