Gordon Webster


I went to Sweden the first week of January and allthough it was not a Tin Pan trip per se, I would still love to share some of my experiences on these pages.

Some background: I got hired by Gordon Webster to perform one of Sweden’s top swing dance events called Snowball. It turns out that many of the members of this band happened to be very familiar – most of them having played with Tin Pan at one point or another. Gordon himself played with us at Shanghai Mermaid at least once. Cassidy Holden is one of our go to subs on bass and banjo. Rob Adkins, of course, our steady bass player for more than a year and a half. On horns, Adrian Cunningham and Matt Musselman have both filled in on occasion. My point, I was in good company with folks that I respect and trust.

The scene is Sweden was different from American events that I’ve attended so far. For starters, I loved the cultural diversity. There was the expected diversity in language – I heard a lot of French, Swedish, and more Russian than I expected. There was also more diversity in age and also in background and lifestyle. It was a mixed crowd on many levels and that made it feel even more special when the floor would unify in the dance. The level of daning was also very high at this event. You could tell immediately that the large majority of couples on the floor were reacting intimately with each other and the music at the same time. If you held a note people would flow into a graceful fluid sweep and if you hammered out quarter notes they would get deeper and pulsate. It was a thrill to play a room of that caliber. Another important difference: these people could party!! Most of them were away from home – taking classes all day and then boogie-ing all night long! Oh the Russians! The folks we met there are the most generous partiers and most gracious hosts I have had the pleasure to experience in a long while.

After just a day we all kind of settled into the following sleep deprived schedule: The gig would start at around 10:30pm and we’d play three sets often ending, soaking wet with sweat at around 4am. I’d pop up to the room to put on some dry clothes (still in my suit though!) and although tired – still too wired from an exhilarating show to sleep. Up on the eighth floor was Micha’s room – “The Russian Room.” On our first night I had heard a rumor. The second night I just went up there and saw a few people filling up plastic cups with ice in the hallway. Once in the Russian room I was presented with a dazzling array of rums and vodkas. Just the quantity of empties already amassed near the trash can was staggering. I was at one point presented with a horseradish infused vodka with honey. Please comment on this post and tell me the name of this beverage. It was one of the most interesting flavors of all time. The taste of my people. (My dad’s mom is from this region!) Instant chest hair growth ensued from just one sip! Eventually Cassidy would show up with his guitar and we’d start singing slow draggy blues with a good beat and they’d move the beds back and create a little dance floor and folks would start grinding it.

So now its about 5:30 and breakfast is only an hour away. And you don’t want to miss breakfast because a) It’s frickin’ delicious and deep. Sure, they have eggs, sausage, bacon, pancakes for the Americans but they also have five different types of muesli, dark bread, finn crisps, cheeses, charcuterie, and lox, and five kinds of herring! Yes! Five Kinds of Herring! Did I forget anything? Killer coffee! b) it’s free! comes with our hotel stay c) everything else is so god crazy expensive that you might as well fill up. If you miss breakfast, you’re looking at a world of bad felafel. One night at about 5:45am, Gordon, Cassidy and I found ourselves outside the main ballroom with about twenty or thirty dancers who were also making the breakfast vigil. We started singing songs to entertain the troops and wound up getting into stupid version of “4 or 5 Times” called “45 Minutes.” This was a form of the classic “100 Bottles of Beer on the Wall” kind of thing where we would just keep making up verses about breakfast and breakfast foods. A couple of the dancers got in on the lyric making part and it was a pretty lengthy collective improvisation. In fact, it became a refrain that punctuated almost every other song that we were doing. Bleary, exhausted musicians and dancers trying to hold on till breakfast. It was worth it.

It’s about 8am before you get to bed and then, if you are a brass player, you must get up to warm up before the 1pm rehearsal – (3hrs sleep). After rehearsal, go to the gym/sauna/pool or sleep some more until the 6pm soundcheck – (2hrs sleep). From 7:30 till the gig at 10pm you have about 2.5 hours to watch a bit of Scarface or The Sound of Music on TV or sleep or get some quick bite to eat. And then it starts all over again.

The music itself was a lot of fun and to Gordon’s credit, he really seems to know the tempo’s and styles that these lindy hoppers are going to dig. Steven and Malcolm (AKA The Rhythm Cats) also selected music that was guaranteed to kill the crowd. A veritable mix of what everyone’s favorite DJ’s would be playing. Much of the music had great vocal harmonies and Steven, Malcolm and I spent many hours getting it as tight as we could. Those guys are so open to fresh ideas and so committed to quality. It was a joy working with them. Overall, I must say that I am quite proud of everyone in the band for performing at such a high level and moreover performing 9 hours of repertoire with only one song that got repeated. Kudos!

If you are reading this blog because we shared that wonderful week together, please comment below and say hi and tell me about your good time! For me, it was a total delight. I met such wonderful people and, in general, felt like a total rock star! I love that.

Ciao for now,

Jesse

Galapagos PianoSaturday night was another Shanghai Mermaid extravaganza at Galapagos. This time we shared the stage with the wonderful Gordon Webster on piano.

As some of you know, Gordon has been taking Rob and I out on the road with his quintet from time to time. It’s a blast for us to play in front of all the swing dancers at these events. It was also a trip to flip it a little and have Gordon working in our band and introduce him to the Tin Pan hang – comes complete with exotic dancers. We did a rehearsal on Thursday and Gordon made a comment that I thought was telling. Essentially he had thought that from hearing us initially that because we were so energetic on stage he could just throw himself in there and play whatever he felt and it would be fine. After about the third song of the rehearsal he realized that we have a really specific structure for each tune and real specific requirements to keep things interesting and spare so that we can be energetic but not have it be just a monster mash. As soon as he realized that his playing immediately followed suit and we all felt that he would really be able to add a lot to our sound.

The piano pictured here is the one at Galapagos. The kind and mellow folks and Galapagos promised that the piano would be tuned. It was tuned. It was also missing about a dozen keys! Even some quite important one’s like the A below middle C and the F just above it. “Hey G., give me an A” “Nope.” At least the piano looked real cool! Gordon was a trooper, though and he made that thing sound great. The Piano was a good choice and we had the idea to add it to the mix to better compliment our host, Juliette Campbell’s voice. Juliette is going for a Peggy Lee sound that is a little more refined than the typical Tin Pan gut-bucket barrage. In the middle of the evening Juliette came up and sang three songs with us. She killed it too: confident, good strong attitude – the crowd ate it up.

photoAlso on the bill with us was Shien Lee and Mamie Minch. Shien did a lovely set of old time Shanghai Jazz tunes with our own Rob Adkins pitching in on the bass. This photo here is of Shien warming up back stage. It was great to hang out a bit with Mamie. MM’s done a few Shanghai Mermaid’s with us and we also had a chance to have her sing with us at Super Fine. She’s got a great voice and a wonderful style. By the middle of her second set, she had everyone in Galapagos enveloped in a real cozy, warm vibe.

The night ended with Gordon, Clifton and I having pizza at Artichoke on 14th street. I got to bed at 6am.


The ox is alleged to be stubborn, hard working, doesn’t complain, keeps its head down, methodical and serious. I read today that the ox and the monkey do not get along too well. I’m a monkey – agile, quick in the mind, playful, does a lot at once, a schemer, etc… But maybe this is the right time to be ox-like. Winter’s hard and the economy is rough right now. An ox would just plow through the tough times and the good times with equal determination and consistency. Anyway, here’s some David Byrne lyrics from the Talking Head’s tune, “Animals”

I’m mad…And that’s a fact
I found out…Animals don’t help
Animal think…They’re pretty smart
Shit on the ground…See in the dark.

They wander around like a crazy dog
Make a mistake in the parking lot
Always bumping into things
Always let you down down down down.

They’re never there when you need them
They never come when you call them
They’re never there when you need them
The never come when you call them down down down down.

I know the animals…Are laughing at us
They don’t even know…What a joke is
I won’t follow…Animal’s advice
I don’t care…If they’re laughing at us.

They’re never there when you need them
They never come when you call them
They’re never there when you need them
The never come when you call them down down down down.

They say they don’t need money
They’re living on nuts and berries
They say animals don’t worry
You know animals are hairy?
They think they know what’s best
They’re making a fool of us
They ought to be more careful
They’re setting a bad example
They have untroubled lives
They think everything’s nice
They like to laugh at people
They’re setting a bad example
(Go ahead) Laugh at me

At the Brookline Tai Chi CenterAs some of you know Rob Adkins and I went to Boston this weekend to play a swing dance event with Gordon Webster. This was the second time that the two of us have joined Gordon for an out-of-town run. Safe to say we had a blast and here’s my side of the story.

The trip part of the trip was a little grueling but just for the rushing and shlepping and waiting for the overcrowded 6 train here in New York and the overcrowded and super slow green T-line in Boston. 3 hours to go a total of 10 miles on the subway and 4 hours to go over 200 on the bus. The bus itself was a lot of fun on the way up and what made the bus a fun ride was the company. We wound up planning a little posse to take the bus together. Gathered were dancer and blogger, Eve Polich, who we saw at Moto the previous night. She brought along Cara Wolinski who is always seems to be smiley good company. Michelle Long was in town to visit with dancer Steven Mitchell and she decided to join us as well. Michelle helps run many of the dance events up in Rochester and she is a wonderfully high energy person who loves to talk about music and dance. FYI: Tin Pan will be performing at Stompology in Rochester in April, 2009.

Eventually we got to the gig after 7 hours door to door (oy!) and did a quick run through of some songs with Naomi Uyama, who was going to be singing with us at the event. Everything felt rushed to me and the sound in that room was so so boooommy without anyone in there. I hadn’t eaten. I was being asked to play music I wasn’t super familiar with. And perform it with musicians with whom I don’t normally play (Rob excluded, of course). Long story short: cranky Jesse. I eventually found some Chinese food and calmed my nerves and felt up to the challenge. I got into my suit and suddenly felt 100% prepared and confident. (more…)