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Presenting some of LIFE's ODDITIES and plenty of RANDOM JOTTINGS

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Showing posts with label Pete Strange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pete Strange. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 January 2021

High Hopes and Big Flops

Humphrey Lyttelton "Best of Jazz" March 1st 2004



"High Hopes and Big Flops"

And NO Teazers









1.Stan Kenton, The Big Chase (1957)
2.Dutch Swing College Band, Riverside Blues (2004)
3.Ernie Andrews, Come on Back
4.Pete Strange, The Strange Mr Peter Strange (1989)
5.Sidney Bechet, Blame it on the Blues  (1940's)
6.Joe Harriott-Amancio D'Silva, Jaipur (1969)
7.Gene Krupa-Ben Webster, I'm Coming Virginia (1950's)
8.Duke Ellington, "How could you do a thing like that to me"
9.Blossom Dearie, Sweet Surprise
10.John La Barbera Big Band, Mayreh (2003)

No Flops Here

Friday, 13 December 2019

Humphrey Lyttelton "Best of Jazz" to be continued... 

                  Taking the opportunity of this gap in the archive, until the next batch of shows dated back from the 27th March 2006 are processed, I will be presenting special shows featuring tributes to members of Humph's band that have sadly passed on or that have achieved significant milestones in their life.

            Number One .. Pete Strange   



"Humph"






Young Pete Strange (with Quiff) (Discogs)


Peter Vacher, wrote for the Guardian Wed 18 Aug 2004




Jazz trombonists are by nature a gregarious, often bibulous bunch, and Pete Strange, who has died of cancer aged 65, was no exception to the rule. He loved the company of fellow musicians, enjoyed a pint, but most of all lived to play first-rate jazz.

Strange's family were from Plaistow in east London, where his father worked for Cable and Wireless. The youngest of three brothers, Strange caught the jazz bug in the 1950s when one of his siblings brought home a Humphrey Lyttelton record. According to Strange's wife Cath, the invitation for him to join the later Lyttelton band as a full-time member in 1983 came as the fulfilment of a lifelong ambition.



Strange adopted the trombone at school in East Ham, after having started out on the violin, and soon found a coterie of musician friends who liked jazz, too.


"A Technical bit or two"
This recording was made in September 2004 from Radio Two digital satellite channel, it was saved directly from a Hauppauge Satellite PC card in variable bit rate (128-256k) mode, so may sound a little better that some of the other shows that have come from FM via DAT audio tapes.

R.I.P Pete Strange