APPEARANCES
New Orleans Jazz And Heritage Festival
French Quarter Festival
Best of the Beat “Best Traditional Jazz Album” Nominee
Preservation Hall
DCLX Washington D.C. Lindy Exchange
Ultimate Lindy Hop Showdown
Boquete Jazz And Blues Festival Boquete, Panama
Abita Opry
Dew Drop Social And Benevolent Jazz Hall
Botanical Gardens In City Park
Blue Room Roosevelt Hotel
New Orleans Swing Dance Festival
Carousel Bar Hotel Monteleone
Abita Springs Busker Festival
Satchmo Fest
Ogden Museum Of Southern Art
Old U.S. Mint
WWOZ New Orleans
New Orleans Creole Tomato Festival
Louisiana Music Factory
Los Angeles Jazz Scene Review Of Our 2023 Release
Six Blueses, Five Joys & A Stomp
By Scott Yanow
One of the most exciting New Orleans jazz albums of recent times is the Smoking Time Jazz Club’s 6 Blues, 5 Joys & A Stomp. In addition to their excellent musicianship and the group’s irresistible spirit, the players in Smoking Time did a superb job of picking out and interpreting a fresh and lively repertoire from the 1920s and ‘30s. Only a handful of the 13 songs on their new CD (which is at least their tenth release) would be considered standards and, even then, the group does not feel compelled to repeat the past. They are consistently creative within the genre of classic jazz and blues, creating their own versions of the vintage material.
On this set, the group consists of trumpeter Jack Pritchett, the always-rambunctious trombonist Charlie Halloran, Jory Woodis on clarinet and alto, bassist John Joyce, drummer Mike Voelker, singer Sarah Peterson and, on various tracks, Brett Gardner, Hunter Burgamy and/or James McClaskey on banjos with Gardner and Burgamy doubling on guitar and McClaskey switching to alto-sax for two numbers. In addition, McClaskey and Joyce take one vocal apiece.
The singing of the versatile and bluesy Sarah Peterson is always rewarding, the individual solos are full of personality, and the ensembles never fail to be rousing. Highlights include Clarence Williams’ “Dreamin’ The Hours Away,” “My Slow & Easy Man,” Jelly Roll Morton’s “Kansas City Stomp,” “Am I Blue,” “Come & Get Me Papa Before I Faint,” and Blind Boy Fuller’s “Step It Up & Go.” If you love 1920s-type jazz, do not even hesitate about picking up this exhilarating release.
Scott Yanow was a contributor to and co-editor of the third edition of the All Music Guide to Jazz. He continues to write for Downbeat, Jazziz, the Los Angeles Jazz Scene, the Jazz Rag and Jazz Inside.
Syncopated Time Review Of Our 2023 Release
Six Blueses, Five Joys & A Stomp
By Dave Doyle
Our man Joe Bebco has reviewed several previous works by New Orleans outfit Smoking Time Jazz Club, a longstanding live fixture in the city and a prolific recording outfit to boot. Covering Mean Tones and High Notes, he described them as “one of the big three in New Orleans, along with Tuba Skinny and the Shotgun Jazz Band.” Joe suggested that I take a listen to their latest release, to offer a fresh take on the group by someone who isn’t so familiar with them.
Well I hate to disappoint, but I don’t think my verdict—passed on thirteenth full-length, 6 Blueses, 5 Joys and a Stomp!—is going to be any less complimentary than Joe’s prior appraisals. Perhaps the record benefits from my present circumstances: I was hoping to finally visit the Big Easy in 2023 but, having just bought a very old house, I’m not sure my stretched budget will reach across the pond this year. So the chance to hear a new record which captures the energy and variety of the NOLA scene, transporting me there in spirit if not in body, was very welcome.
6 Blueses, 5 Joys and a Stomp! delivers precisely what it claims to: twelve tracks (plus one reprise) of foot-tapping jazz and blues which plunder the city’s rich musical heritage for both its crown jewels and more hidden treasures. Of the former, we get classics like Clara Smith’s “It’s Tight Like That,” Kid Rena’s “High Society,” and Jelly Roll Morton’s “Kansas City Stomps”—the latter include Ada Brown’s “Tia Juana Man” and Margaret Carter’s “Come and Get Me Papa Before I Faint.”
Smoking Time’s sound is what many critics would call “authentic”—but what does that word mean? To me they sound rough and ready, but in a way which has been carefully considered and expertly executed. Jack Pritchett and Charlie Halloran’s trombone squeal and squawk as though well-worn and bent out of shape, while Sarah Peterson’s vocals slur around the scales. Meanwhile, Mike Voelker’s drums on Ethel Waters standard “Am I Blue” seem to slip and slide like a drunk on an icy pavement—it all screams smoky, bourbon-soaked juke joints, of the sort I hope to visit once we’ve had all these leaks repaired…
The collection is a dancer’s delight, too, with a range of tempos from the sedate to the strenuous—and, with a few dozen balboa classes under my belt up to now, I reckon I could even have a go at the quicker ones. Smoking Time’s rendition of Blind Boy Fuller’s “Step It Up and Go” takes the guitar blues classic and gives it a stomping second-line makeover. That said, the one which really makes me want to get and move is the mid-tempo “Come and Get Me Papa…” with its thumping two-step bass by John Joyce and soaring clarinet and thrilling, trilling sax work from Jory Woodis
I’d say that authenticity is about recapturing the energy of a live performance and making the listener feel the emotions the musicians want to convey: something the members of Smoking Time do very well. Joe says they have been at the top of their game for a while now, consistently delighting audiences with their regular spots at iconic New Orleans venues the Spotted Cat and Maison Frenchman. Check out the dozen albums they have on Bandcamp, and see if you agree. I’ll certainly be making an effort to see them live, when I get there…
Dave Doyle is a swing dancer, dance teacher, and journalist based in Gloucestershire, England. Write him at contact@davedoyle.co.uk. Find him on Twitter @DaveDoyleComms.