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The Last Night At The Old Place

by Mike Westbrook Concert Band

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  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    6 panel card digipack with inner sleeve including sleeve notes by Mike Westbrook and Richard Williams and unique photos from the Mike Westbrook archive.

    Includes unlimited streaming of The Last Night At The Old Place via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      £8 GBP  or more

     

1.
The Few 06:51
2.
Lover Man 02:59
3.
4.
5.
The Few (2) 03:29
6.
Folk Song 07:38
7.
Flying Home 12:13
8.
Sugar 04:47
9.
Who's Who 13:36
10.
11.

about

recorded at Ronnie Scott’s Old Place 25 May 1968
Exactly 50 years on, a unique event featuring the music of the most exciting British jazz group of its time in full swing, released for the first time

Remembering John Jack
 Mike Osborne, Harry Miller, Paul Rutherford

LAST NIGHT AT THE OLD PLACE
by Richard Williams

So many good things were contained within the Mike Westbrook Concert Band of 1968 that it’s hard to know where to start. Its personnel included the components of a whole scene of young London-based jazz musicians, bursting with energy and the desire to express the sounds they were discovering collectively and as individuals.
For a time, this band gave them the ideal structure. And when they needed a setting, Ronnie Scott and Pete King were there to provide it. The gift of the remaining 18 months of the lease on the basement of 39 Gerrard Street handed young musicians the precious opportunity to perform regularly in the heart of the West End in a sympathetic environment, free from the usual commercial pressures.
What went on in that basement is crystallised in this historic and previously unheard recording of its very last night, during which the band performed Westbrook’s Release, a suite that drew together many of the composer’s own areas of interest while providing space for a selection of magnificent improvisers to display their distinctive and fast-evolving personalities. What Westbrook had learnt from Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus was the importance of treating an ensemble as a group of individual voices. The humanity of the music was never to be compromised by prioritising a display of technical precision. Which is not to say that these guys couldn’t play. John Surman and Paul Rutherford were just two of the band’s members then engaged in extending the available vocabulary of their instruments. But this was never at the expense of the warmth and exuberance that delighted the band’s listeners, and never more clearly than on this night in May 1968 at the Old Place.
Three months later, Release would be recorded by the producer Peter Eden for the Deram label, its episodes trimmed in order to fit the playing time of a 12-inch LP. In this version, with no time constraints and in front of a sympathetic and sometimes vocally appreciative audience, the musicians are allowed to stretch out in a majestic sprawl of relaxed creativity. So we have a chance to appreciate at greater length the frantic brilliance of George Khan’s tenor and Bernie Livings’s alto, Surman reaching a peak of youthful ebullience, the nerve-tingling dialogue between Dave Holdsworth’s trumpet and Alan Jackson’s drums, Harry Miller’s unflagging support play, and the wonderful contrast of trombone approaches set up by Malcolm Griffith’s proud roar and Rutherford’s oblique nurdling. A special place is reserved for the immortal Mike Osborne, whose solo feature linking the standard “Lover Man” and the Westbrook original “For Ever and a Day” occupied four minutes of the studio recording but here is stretched to more than twice that length in a breathtakingly contoured passage of soul-piercing, heart-stopping, sweetly bruised beauty.
I wasn’t lucky enough to be there that night to hear all this magic filling a Chinatown basement. Perhaps you weren’t, either. But we are now.

credits

released May 25, 2018

Mike Westbrook Concert Band:
 Dave Holdsworth- 
trumpet; 
Malcolm Griffiths, Paul Rutherford - trombones
; Mike Osborne, Bernie Living, George Khan, John Surman - saxophones
; Mike Westbrook - piano; Harry Miller - bass
; Alan Jackson - 
drums

Compositions & arrangements by Mike Westbrook, recorded by George Smith

Album produced by Mike Westbrook & Mike Gavin

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