|
Monday, June 15, 2009
 |
On the last Ghost Train gig, Michael Attias and I were talking about Don Redman. I was familiar with his work as the musical director of Fletcher Henderson in the early 1920s. Redman was one of the first great jazz arrangers. Michael was really excited telling me about Redman's work with a band called McKinney's Cotton Pickers. This was a band out of Detroit who nabbed Redman from Henderson in 1927. By the early 1930s, Redman was leading his own band and in 1933, Dave Fleischer hired him to score and appear as "special guest" in this Betty Boop cartoon "I Heard". (Redman is the voice of the singing waiter.) I think it's clear the Fleischer brothers enjoyed jazz because they did something similar with Cab Calloway (not to mention the fact that Betty herself loved jazz, being a flapper and all.) Redman's own compositions, including his "The Chant Of The Weed", featured here, have a mysterious quality to them. McKinney's band played this piece at about twice the tempo here. Check out this hilarious opening bit with Redman's orchestra swaying as part of Betty Boop's saloon. Pee Wee's Playhouse, anyone??
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Friday, May 01, 2009
 |
The Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston will be presenting new works by the most innovative of the New England animators, including Lorelei Pepi, whose film Happy & Gay I scored and recorded with the Ghost Train Orchestra. Show times are Sunday, May 3 at 3 pm and Thursday, May 7 at 7:30 pm. Tickets and more information here.
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
 |
Two great reviews of recent live shows:
November 22 2008 at Barbes by Lucid Culture
Nine-piece band squeezed into the little back room playing hot jazz from the late 20s and early 30s, all of it good and much of it sensational. Much in the same vein as Michael Arenella, trumpeter Carpenter and his crew play boisterous three-minute Prohibition-era dancehall hits. While it was strange to watch the crowd simply sitting there while the band ripped through one tune after another – this is dance music, after all – it was a treat to be literally on top of the band, watching the interplay between musicians. Jazz snobs may scorn this stuff, but it’s great fun. “This is Woody Allen jazz,” one astute woman in the crowd remarked to her boyfriend between songs.
Minor keys are what this band does best, and that’s what they opened with, a frenetic, somewhat klezmerish stomp from 1929 called Mojo Strut, Carpenter playing harp through a bullhorn to add the strange, carnivalesque edge that continued throughout most of their set. They did a couple of ridiculously catchy numbers written by Fess Williams (Charles Mingus’ uncle), the best of these being Friction, driven by plinking banjo and soaring violin. The single best song of the night, the boisterous yet haunting Boy in the Boat had an early Ellington feel, its eeriness brought out most intensely by a sizzling violin solo and some expertly spooky work by One Ring Zero’s Michael Hearst, sitting in on theremin.
Because the songs are short, this group’s solos are brief: the only extended improvisations of the night were intros, duels in fact: first sax and trombone, then sax (Jessica Lurie bringing a modernist yet smartly melodic sensibility to the old stuff whenever she was called on) vs. clarinet. A couple of times the banjoist began songs using a bow, building tension to the breaking point. After over an hour onstage, Carpenter – now playing slide trumpet – took them scurrying out the way they’d come in, dark and mysterious. Kudos to Barbes for squeezing them – literally – into the room. A band this good deserves a stand at the Vanguard. They’d bring out a lot of people out of the woodwork. Probably some ghosts too.
===================================================================
July 24 2008 at MOMA by Audrey Henkin, Gay City News
The sculpture garden at the Museum of Modern Art has been one of the city's secret venues to hear jazz for decades; well, maybe not secret given the couple of hundred people there July 24 watching Brian Carpenter's Ghost Train Orchestra, but less known than the usual major and minor jazz haunts. The museum hosts music throughout the summer in front of its huge bay window, a grandiose setting to be sure. Access to the concerts comes with museum admission and the music is drawn into the scope of the artwork. This season's programming is under the auspices of "Dalí: Imagined Musical Landscapes," with special emphasis given to the late surrealist as "a proponent of the 'anti-artistic' in art," according to the series brochure.
As with almost any academic notion, creative perspective can adapt almost anything to its guidelines; thus the Ghost Train Orchestra, a ten-piece band playing works from jazz's early history in the '20s, has its nostalgic bent turned into a sort of socio-musical commentary. That frankly may be pushing it a little as there are many ensembles happily exploring "primitive" sources without a hint of irony. Much of the music that the Ghost Train Orchestra presented came from Chicago, a melting pot of blues, early jazz, and other folk musics. Short, punchy renditions of tunes like "Slide Mr. Jelly Slide," "Dixie Stomp," and "Hot Temper Blues" played well with a crowd that more than likely wandered outside from an afternoon of art-gazing.
For some reason, large ensembles are always more popular for casual crowds and also project far better in an outdoor environment like the sculpture garden. Carpenter, who leads while sporting either a traditional or slide trumpet, has gathered together some of the modern New York jazz scene's brightest players, an opportunity for them to go out by coming back in. Special mention should be made of saxist Briggan Krauss, trombonist Curtis Hasselbring - playing a comic style far removed from his usual approach - and drummer Rob Garcia, who was also featured on washboard. Evocative touches like banjo and tuba - Andrew Stern and Ron Caswell, respectively - made for a rounded boisterousness. Violist Jordan Voelker put down her instrument to bow a saw for one number. The only original played was written by Carpenter to accompany a burlesque act. The band's polyphony was both updated Dixieland and proto-klezmer.
Carpenter is also known for writing music for cartoons (including Lorelei Pepi's queer revisionist history "Happy & Gay") and that is telling. As with the scores - most notably by Carl Stalling - that accompanied early Loony Tunes, Carpenter's music is multi-purpose. It can entertain kids in the crowd dragged there by their parents as well as seniors dragged there by their grandkids. If you're looking for shtick, look elsewhere; there might be some schmaltz, though, if you ask nicely.
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
 |
Five rough mixes have been posted from Brian Carpenter's original score to acclaimed filmmaker Lorelei Pepi's cartoon "Happy & Gay". Recorded April 2005 by Danny Blume, Good & Evil Studios. Brian Carpenter, trumpet, compositions Jim Hobbs, alto saxophone Briggan Krauss, alto, baritone saxophones Matt Darriau, clarinet, flute, tenor saxophones Josh Roseman, trombone Katt Hernandez, Stroh violin Brandon Seabrook, banjo Ron Caswell, tuba Matt McLaren, traps All music composed and arranged by Brian Carpenter Recorded April 2005 by Danny Blume, Good & Evil Studios, Brooklyn, NY Here is a still from the scene "18th & Vine": 
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Friday, November 02, 2007
 |
Our NYC debut is Saturday November 17th at Barbes in Brooklyn. On the November show, I will be presenting unearthed music mined from the dusty vaults of a basement record collection, new arrangements of "voodoo music" and spirited stomps from the most incredible of the late 1920s Chicago and Harlem jazz bands, plus original music commissioned for the cartoon score and vaudeville shows.
The November 17 show will feature tubist Ron Caswell (Beat Circus), drummer/percussionist Rob Garcia (Woody Allen Band), saxophonist Briggan Krauss (Sex Mob), trombonist Curtis Hasselbring (Golem), violinist Karen Waltuch (Roulette Sisters), clarinetist Michael Winograd, multi-instrumentalist Petr Cancura, banjoist Brandon Seabrook, and I lead on trumpet, slide trumpet, harmonica, and chanting. Following our set at 8PM (early set!!!) will be The Moonlighters featuring Bliss Blood.
--BC
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Thursday, April 19, 2007
 |
This feels like an anthropological expedition. I've been digging up old dance orchestra music and historical photos from late 1920s Harlem and Chicago and imagining what it would sound like today. These recordings are of such poor quality that one has to do a lot of extrapolation and educated guessing when it comes to the transcriptions. But these bands were on fire. Lately I've been particularly obsessed with Fess Williams...he led bands in Chicago and Harlem and was the uncle of jazz great Charles Mingus. As an arranger working off these old scratchy recordings, it's a riveting and visceral moment when you hit the first rehearsal and hear these pieces played for the first time in some 90 years. It's like watching an old black-and-white cartoon and having the characters suddenly leap out of the television set in front of you in technicolor. This summer we have a few shows coming up in Boston and NYC. I hope y'all can check us out. More information at our website here. --B.C.
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|