Daily jazz blog, Marlbank

John Dokes, Our Day, Swing Theory Entertainment ***

First thoughts hearing the bounce and buoyancy of jazz singer John Dokes out of Oakland, California via Little Rock, Arkansas backed by a swinging horn section and firmly stroked rhythm section: we don't hear him at all like a Nat King Cole …

Published: 15 May 2024. Updated: 37 days.

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First thoughts hearing the bounce and buoyancy of jazz singer John Dokes out of Oakland, California via Little Rock, Arkansas backed by a swinging horn section and firmly stroked rhythm section: we don't hear him at all like a Nat King Cole soundalike even if the inspiration is there. If pushed his sound is more like Nat's brother, the late much missed Freddy one of the most pleasant musicians we have ever met who did Billy Eckstine classics very well. To these ears Dokes' baritone voice would resonate with anyone like us er bigly into Eckstine and even into the hard edged but immortal sound of Lou Rawls.

Bobby Timmons' 'Moanin' is covered a lot - but we never tire of hearing it. And Dokes does it well, there's strong saxophone soloing in the treatment. The Billy Ocean-Keith Diamond 1980s classic 'Suddenly' isn't such a good choice in context as we get more into supper club crooner sing everything fare! But it is always good to hear the powerful ballad again and recall how the 1980s was a good decade for the power ballad even in a pop act environment.

Dokes is with a nonet drawn from the George Gee Swing Orchestra who he has sung with a lot. Songs are arranged by trombonist David Gibson and they are very good not too try-hard or even straying to over egg the pudding in the settings. The idea it strikes us is to bounce along behind the classy vocals and take all the time in the world. There's genius in the effortless mastery of that approach.

Among the name players in the band are the great reedist Patience Higgins heard to effect on Toot's Two Continents, One Groove out the year before last and trumpeter Freddie Hendrix. Freddie is on the faculty in Sligo this summer at the annual Project gathering down by the Garavogue under Knocknarea.

Highlights and we didn't think we'd ever type out this sentence include the Bert Kaempfert-Milt Gabler soppy classic, 'L-O-V-E'. Regrettably there's no pick your jaw up off the floor slow ballad done glacially enough anyway and the treatment of Bernard Ighner’s wondrous 'Everything Must Change' from Quincy Jones’ 1974 Body Heat isn't sufficiently heart wrenching. But I'm sure this would all go down a storm in a London venue like Boisdale Canary Wharf or Berts in Belfast if Dokes ever makes it over across the pond and would feed off the vintage glamour that these very upmarket places thrive on. Let's hope he does.

Tags: Reviews

John Surman Words Unspoken Manchester Jazz Festival concert RNCM theatre show previewed

A big highlight of the 2024 Manchester Jazz Festival which begins tomorrow. By now some six years since we have had a new ECM album by the iconic British saxophonist and bass clarinettist John Surman, who turns 80 this summer, Words Unspoken is a …

Published: 15 May 2024. Updated: 37 days.

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A big highlight of the 2024 Manchester Jazz Festival which begins tomorrow.

By now some six years since we have had a new ECM album by the iconic British saxophonist and bass clarinettist John Surman, who turns 80 this summer, Words Unspoken is a beautiful, resonant, quartet album that, like its predecessor, Invisible Threads, was recorded at the Rainbow in Oslo. American vibist Rob Waring who like Surman lives in Norway is once again in Surman's band but both are joined for the first time by British guitarist Rob Luft and by Norwegian drummer Thomas Strønen. It's all very pared back and softly conveyed containing a pastoral, naturalistic feel shaped around robust motifs that are delicately unpeeled harmonically by Luft and Waring while Surman himself weaves weighty explorations around the themes with both a gravitas and a sense of grace and playfulness as active ingredients. Certainly up there with some of Surman's best work in a long and distinguished career and one of 2024's top jazz albums.

The Manchester Jazz Festival Words Unspoken concert is to be held in the theatre of the Royal Northern College of Music on the Oxford Road on Saturday 25 May. Joining Words Unspoken are Stuart Mørch Kerrison who adds sound design and electronica to the sonic blend. The Words Unspoken players l-r in the photo: John Surman, Thomas Strønen, Rob Luft and Rob Waring.