Showing posts with label Michael Ward-Bergeman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Ward-Bergeman. Show all posts
Friday, December 13, 2019
Backstage Virtuoso Improv - St. James Infirmary
Not long ago friend Michael Ward-Bergeman, renowned accordionist and composer, sent me a clip in which he and celebrated jazz trumpeter Dominick Farinacci, sitting backstage, were caught riffing off St. James Infirmary ... you know the song?
I wrote to Ward-Bergeman, and asked how this came about:
"Dominick Farinacci is a virtuoso jazz trumpeter that I have been working with off and on for about a decade. Our most recent collaboration has been a sonata for poets and jazz ensemble titled 'Life and Loves,' produced by the Catskill Jazz Factory. We premiered an early version of this in London last spring.
"When Dominick first got in touch about the project he sent a draft program. It was a bit of a shock to see St. James Infirmary on there."
Ward-Bergeman has had a long association with St. James Infirmary. He has performed the song with Gypsy/Roma bands (featuring members of Taraf de Haiduks), with Yo Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble (including Rhiannon Giddens on vocals, Reylon Yount on yangqin), and has performed it, or variations of it, with a number of renowned chamber groups, roots bands, and so on.
"I said to myself " Ward-Bergeman continued, "'I can't escape this song!!'
"In London, Dominick and I worked with another collaborator, multi-instrumentalist Christian Tamburr, in putting the set together and arranging the songs. We were arranging for a jazz singer and an opera singer. Someone had the bright idea to mashup St. James Infirmary sung by the jazz singer with the violent Mack the Knife (with German lyrics) sung by the opera singer. We pulled this off in one arrangement that was a highlight of the London performances. There are some big things planned for this project over the next couple years.
"Dominick recently invited me to perform with him alongside some of his other collaborators in Easton, MD. It was a show produced by "Jazz on the Chesapeake." The program was a kind of 'best of" of the many projects Dominick has been working on over the past few years.
"About a half hour before show time he asked if we could do St. James Infirmary as a duo. Cool! After the show we were still messing around with the tune backstage and someone caught a bit on camera.
"Here it is."
(Double-click to get the full image via YouTube)
Friday, May 24, 2019
Rhiannon Giddens & St. James Infirmary
Accordionist Michael Ward-Bergeman once vowed to play a gig every day for a year. That took him through North America, Europe, and Asia. He did it. A gig a day. Maybe on the street, maybe in a concert hall.
You can hear some of these on his GIG 365 album.
During this period Bergeman wrote a Romany arrangement of St. James Infirmary: "When I first heard St. James Infirmary Blues performed live in the back room of a dingy London pub," he said, "I felt it was at once a blues song and something that would feel equally at home with my Roma musician friends." You can clearly hear the Roma instruments (and Roma instrumentalists) on the piece:
Since then Michael has performed this arrangement (or a variation of it) many times, including on recordings with chamber band "Eighth Blackbird," (who the Chicago Tribune declared "one of the smartest, most dynamic contemporary classical ensemble on the planet") and with Yo Yo Ma's "Silk Road Ensemble" (a loose collective of musicians from across the geographical and musical spectrum of the Silk Road, a historical trade route through Asia and Europe).
Which brings us to Rhiannon Giddens. When "Silk Road" recorded SJI for their album Sing Me Home, they brought in Rhiannon for the vocals. Along with the Chinese percussive string instrument, the yangqin, the arrangement includes accordion, cello, shakulute, clarinet, bass, darbuka, violin.
By going to this site: http://compmjwb.blogspot.com/, you can view the Silk Road, featuring Rhiannon Giddens, recording/performing the song,. That's the first selection. The third selection features Giddens live at a 2016 TED conference in Vancouver, with the "Silk Road Ensemble" and with Ward-Bergeman again hoisting accordion.
More western, but no less exciting, here's an energetic duet with Tom Jones:
Maybe Rhiannon should record a variation of SJI with every album. Click here for a link to her latest venture, there is no Other (an exciting album, albeit sans "St.James Infirmary.")
Thursday, February 2, 2017
Silk Road Ensemble, live from Vancouver
Michael Ward-Bergeman in the Purgatory Garden |
It might get better than this, but one wonders how.
Friend Michael Ward-Bergeman composed this brilliant interpretation of St. James Infirmary and is also the accordionist in the video. From the Vancouver TED talks in February 2016, the Silk Road Ensemble cooks at a high heat and the vocalist, Rhiannon Giddens, grabs the song impeccably. Together they run through fields and marshes, howl through trees, bend with the wind, fly across oceans and deliver an interpretation of St. James Infirmary that is fit for the world wherever we are.
Sunday, March 6, 2016
Yo Yo Ma, Rhiannon Giddens, Michael Ward-Bergeman, The Silk Road Ensemble, and St. James Infirmary!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Readers of this blog might recall an entry, three years ago, about a gypsy variation of St. James Infirmary. The New Orleans composer, accordionist (well, multi-instrumentalist), and performer Michael Ward-Bergeman wrote to me back then: "when I started doing 'St. James' I always felt there was a gypsy music connection both spirit and music-wise." As you can hear on his GIG 365 CD, "St. James Infirmary" sounds ready-made for gypsy musicians. As in much Roma music this SJI begins slow and melancholy, eventually opening into an exuberant, energizing celebration of life that will have you dancing in the streets (or in your living room) - reminiscent of New Orleans funeral music, although with different instrumentation.
Yo Yo Ma and his Silk Road Project commissioned Ward-Bergeman to arrange a version for them. With Yo Yo Ma on cello, Ward-Bergeman on accordion, the Silk Road Ensemble on an assortment of world instruments (for instance, the Roma cymbalom was replaced with a combination of marimba and yangqin, a Chinese hammered dulcimer), and Rhiannon Giddens on vocals, they collaborated on a penetrating version of SJI that transcends both time and place.
The musicians of Silk Road Ensemble are international and eclectic, presenting an amalgam of music that reflects our multicultural world. This new album from Yo Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble will be available April 22. Called Sing Me Home, guest artists include many favourites of mine, including African Kora master Toumani Diabete, North Indian sitarist Shujaat Khan, U.S. banjoist Abigail Washburn, and many many other outstanding musicians from around the globe.
As a taste, here is a just-released video of Yo Yo Ma, Rhiannon Giddens, Michael Ward-Bergeman, and the Silk Road Ensemble performing St. James Infirmary. If this is any indication, the album will be outstanding!
(If you double-click on the video below, you can see it in its proper proportion.)
Yo Yo Ma and his Silk Road Project commissioned Ward-Bergeman to arrange a version for them. With Yo Yo Ma on cello, Ward-Bergeman on accordion, the Silk Road Ensemble on an assortment of world instruments (for instance, the Roma cymbalom was replaced with a combination of marimba and yangqin, a Chinese hammered dulcimer), and Rhiannon Giddens on vocals, they collaborated on a penetrating version of SJI that transcends both time and place.
The musicians of Silk Road Ensemble are international and eclectic, presenting an amalgam of music that reflects our multicultural world. This new album from Yo Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble will be available April 22. Called Sing Me Home, guest artists include many favourites of mine, including African Kora master Toumani Diabete, North Indian sitarist Shujaat Khan, U.S. banjoist Abigail Washburn, and many many other outstanding musicians from around the globe.
As a taste, here is a just-released video of Yo Yo Ma, Rhiannon Giddens, Michael Ward-Bergeman, and the Silk Road Ensemble performing St. James Infirmary. If this is any indication, the album will be outstanding!
(If you double-click on the video below, you can see it in its proper proportion.)
Thursday, October 8, 2015
COMING SOON: The second edition of IWDtSJI
Portrait of author by Pamela Woodland |
We anticipate that this second edition will be available by late November. Advance orders can be made through the IWDtSJI website - click here. (It will be a few more weeks before the new edition is also available at amazon.com.)
Of the first edition, we received reviews that included the following:
"A goldmine of information, with an amazing cast of characters. The definitive statement on the subject – and a very entertaining read to boot"
— Rob Walker, author of Buying In and Letters from New Orleans
"What better way to honor a great song than to tell a great story about it?"
— David Fulmer, author of The Blue Door and Chasing the Devil's Tail
"...a fascinating study and anyone who has an interest in the way songs evolve and are passed along through history will find it an utterly compelling read. This critic ... devoured it with relish over a few days, though it will retain a favourite place in his library and remain a reference for years to come."
— Barry Hammond, Penguin Eggs music magazine
"No biography of (Irving) Mills has been written. The best short treatment of his life and work is in Harwood."
— Terry Teachout in his book Duke: The Life of Duke Ellington
"A fascinating and well-written book ... Robert Harwood's book is not the first devoted to one song, but it is the first to cross so many stylistic fences in its attempt to trace the origins of a tune, one which is lost in the mists of time."
— Mark Berresford, VJM's Blues and Jazz Mart
In celebration of this second edition, here's a treat. From the New Orleans Contemporary Arts Center earlier this month. (Double click to receive the proper video dimension.)
Saturday, August 15, 2015
A new album to celebrate Groanbox's tenth anniversary!
The roots / world music band, Groanbox, has long been a
friend of this blog. If you search through these pages you will find them
playing “St. James Infirmary” with flair and authority. You will find (from
when they were a duo called “The Goanbox Boys”) a song called “Darling Lou,”
which has SJI as its base. You will find Groanbox accordionist Michael
Ward-Bergeman performing SJI with a gypsy band in Bucharest, and with an
experimental classical chamber group in Chicago. And now, Groanbox – grown into a quartet – are celebrating their tenth anniversary with the release of a self-titled CD.
This might be the strangest, the most ambitious of their six
releases – and also their most accessible. Two years in the making, it started
in 2013 in the forests of Northern Ontario where they found inspiration in the
percussive possibilities of fallen trees. “Deep tree diving, oh.” In the echoes
of deep bat-rich caves. “Adios Plato.” In the sounds and the quiet of the wild
spaces, where a chipmunk took them far from the noise of the Demon Trucks that
carry away the harvest of the forest. “Ohhh don’t press your luck, run run away
from the demon truck.” In an encounter with a boulder split by the slow-growing root of
a tree. “The prisoner of war will break free of the stocks/The root will one
day split the rock.” Time spent in an abandoned cabin, said to have once been a
hideout for Al Capone. “We’re all dressed in our best luck ... In the older
days this room would be filled with smoke ... Ah, I just need a blanket for
these bloody finches in my head.” And then into New Orleans earlier this year with
its famous ninth ward that is still recovering from catastrophic flooding a
decade ago. “Barefoot in the ninth....” With its continuing echoes of Katrina.
“Katrina, I wish you’d come and listen to the music coming up through the
floor.” That song features guest musician, New Orleans trumpeter Kenneth Terry (written about previously on this blog). Velvet-voiced Venezuelan singer Yulene Velasquez
adds vocal flourishes that shape the “The Face That You Deserve” into a sweet
exotic charmer. “Each and every drop never stops, till it’s found it’s
way/Every single beam finds its meaning in another’s eye.”
There are four instrumental pieces on this album of eleven
songs. With titles like “Orchestrated Entropy” and “Graveyard of Pines,” they
bristle with original ideas, unusual transitions, atypical harmonies. And with
an instrumental arsenal that includes banjo, guitar, assorted hand percussion,
accordion, trombone, bells, fife, throat-singing, thumb piano, bird calls,
fiddle, piano, and the famous Freedom Boot, these multi-instrumentalists have
created a sound that rewards close listening. This is stellar musicianship in
which one can hear touches of Eric Satie, gypsy music, African and Middle Eastern rhythms and
melodies, blues, New Orleans roustabouts, avant-garde experimentation ... and
much more.
(You can investigate further at the Groanbox site.)
Below, I have been given permission to post an as yet unreleased video about the making of this album. Double-click in order to view it full-frame, or go to YouTube.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Ward-Bergeman and eighth blackbird at the Curtis Institute of Music
I know noble accents
And lucid inescapable rhythms:
But I know, too,
That the blackbird is involved
In what I know.
That is the eighth stanza of Wallace Stevens' Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird.
The chamber group, eighth blackbird (lower case is deliberate), are an adventurous sextet with three Grammy trophies who explore the edges of the modern repertoire, from Reich and Lerdahl to, well, "St. James Infirmary." Clarinet, flute, violin, viola, percussion, piano, cello . . . this is a virtuosic ensemble of great depth and feeling.
Recently they met with composer, singer, accordionist Michael Ward-Bergeman at the Curtis Institute of Music in Chicago, for a rendition of a Ward-Bergeman arrangement of SJI. Readers of this blog know of Michael Ward-Bergeman as an accomplished composer of contemporary classical music, as well as a musician deeply committed to roots music, blues, Americana ...
The link below is via YouTube. You can also access this video through Ward-Bergeman's site at http://compmjwb.blogspot.ca/ In fact, he has recently posted the score for this performance on his site. You can read it by clicking here. The performance is eight minutes of stellar musicianship and takes us to many places, including a lively gypsy campfire.
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Cory Seznec: Beauty In The Dirt
The roots-music group, Groanbox, has been a friend of this blog for some time now. You can find them on YouTube performing versions of "St. James Infirmary," or their own variation, "DarlingLou." Each member of the trio are accomplished musicians (accordionist and multi-instrumentalist Michael Ward-Bergeman, percussionist and multi-instrumentalist Paul Clifford, and guitarist/banjoist and multi-instrumentalist Cory Seznec) who branch out into multiple projects of their own, some of them of a most esoteric nature. Earlier this year Seznec released his first solo album, Beauty In The Dirt.
Two of the songs on this album are covers - "East. St.
Louis Blues" was written by Blind Willie McTell, and recorded by him in
1933. "East Virginia" is a traditional song with very long roots,
recorded by- among many others- banjoist Buell Kazee in 1927 and guitarist
David Bromberg in 2007. Seznec credits the influence of string duo The Alabama
Sheiks' "Travelin' Railroad Blues" on his song "(21st Century) Traveling
Man." Well, the Alabama Sheiks were in the studio in 1931 for that one. (The
Alabama Sheiks recorded a total of four songs - you don't get much more obscure
than that.)
I mention this because while Seznec did not include
"St. James Infirmary" on this disc, the blog you are reading covers
not only the song itself, but the period in which it found popularity. And this,
from the blues to Appalachia, is the musical period that resonates throughout Beauty In The Dirt.
The CD opens with a brief instrumental, "Southern Bound
1" which, in variations, appears three more times as a kind of unifying
theme. And then . . . "Dragon Tree." As with many of these songs you
might find yourself scratching your head
and searching your memory: it sounds familiar, like a traditional song from the early days of American settlement. But
it is an original composition. And so it goes, song after song.
For instance, "Sisyphus" opens with a traditional
sort of lyric/melody:
You know I feel the spirit and I'm so glad
You know I feel the spirit and I'm so glad
You know I feel the spirit and I'm so glad
The world can't do me no harm
And then:
The stolen throne of Sisyphus hath crumbled beneath his feet
Condemned to push a giant boulder borne of his own greed and deceit
You know I feel the spirit and I'm so glad
You know I feel the spirit and I'm so glad
The world can't do me no harm
And then:
The stolen throne of Sisyphus hath crumbled beneath his feet
Condemned to push a giant boulder borne of his own greed and deceit
Even with a lyric like this, the song feels as if it had been written in a bygone time.
There is also a significant African influence here, both in the strength of his melodies and in the restrained use of percussion. Seznec - who
spends much of his time in Africa - plays ngoni, a sort of gourd-lute, on some
of these songs.
This might be the best album I have heard this year, with superlative musicianship throughout. A chorus from Seznec's "Dragon Tree" gives a hint of how we might approach these songs:
Hey children let's go down
This might be the best album I have heard this year, with superlative musicianship throughout. A chorus from Seznec's "Dragon Tree" gives a hint of how we might approach these songs:
Hey children let's go down
Down to the creek get mud on our feet
Hey children let's go down
And leave the future behind us
Hey children let's go down
And leave the future behind us
To put a bit more of an SJI spin on this, two of the early musicians
mentioned earlier, Buell Kazee and Blind Willie McTell, recorded their
own versions of "St. James Infirmary." Buell Kazee was - in
1928 - the second person to record the song, which he titled "Gambling
Blues." Blind Willie McTell recorded SJI for record shop owner Ed Rhodes
in 1956. That recording has never been released.
Labels:
Alabama Sheiks,
americana,
Beauty in the Dirt,
Blind Willie McTell,
Buell Kazee,
Cory Seznec,
David Bromberg,
East St. Louis Blues,
East Virginia,
Michael Ward-Bergeman,
Paul Clifford,
roots music,
St. James Infirmary,
Travelin' Railroad Blues
Friday, September 12, 2014
MP3 - The Kenneth Terry Jazz Band updates SJI
Michael Ward-Bergeman, friend of this blog, sent me a copy of a local - that is, New Orleans - rendition of "St. James Infirmary." Now, this is a real treat, because the performer, Kenneth Terry, has given permission to post the performance on this site. A great talent, his recorded output as a feature artist is woefully inadequate. As soon as you tune in to the music below, I have no doubt you will agree. Talent and renown are not necessarily related.
At about nine minutes, Terry's rendition flows through a history of jazz, flawlessly connecting the past to the present, and includes an unabashed nod to Louis Armstrong's 1928 recording. There is not a wasted second.
Kenneth Terry is one of the premiere trumpet players in New Orleans, as a performer, as a band leader, and as a teacher. The members of the band on this recording are:
kenneth terry - vocals, trumpet
julius mcgee - tuba
keith anderson - trombone
elliott callier - saxaphone
dwane scott - drums
john michael bradford - trumpet
bruce brackman - clarinet
You can buy the CD from Kenneth if you happen upon a performance of his in New Orleans.
I feel honoured to offer this to you. At over nine minutes, here is: "Kenneth Terry Jazz Band - St. James Infirmary."
Many thanks to Michael Ward-Bergeman for alerting me to this and sending the file. Thanks to Kenneth Terry for giving permission to post the recording here.
At about nine minutes, Terry's rendition flows through a history of jazz, flawlessly connecting the past to the present, and includes an unabashed nod to Louis Armstrong's 1928 recording. There is not a wasted second.
Kenneth Terry is one of the premiere trumpet players in New Orleans, as a performer, as a band leader, and as a teacher. The members of the band on this recording are:
kenneth terry - vocals, trumpet
julius mcgee - tuba
keith anderson - trombone
elliott callier - saxaphone
dwane scott - drums
john michael bradford - trumpet
bruce brackman - clarinet
You can buy the CD from Kenneth if you happen upon a performance of his in New Orleans.
I feel honoured to offer this to you. At over nine minutes, here is: "Kenneth Terry Jazz Band - St. James Infirmary."
Many thanks to Michael Ward-Bergeman for alerting me to this and sending the file. Thanks to Kenneth Terry for giving permission to post the recording here.
Sunday, January 19, 2014
I Went Down To SJI - in New Orleans
Photograph by Michael Ward-Bergeman |
Friday, January 3, 2014
St. James Infirmary Soap???? Yessirree.
Michael Ward-Bergeman, a well-known musician living in New Orleans, surprised me with a bar of St. James Infirmary soap. It arrived in the mail this morning. SJI soap? Really? "Yes," I was assured, "really." With reviews such as, "What a great soap!" and "Saved me from psoriasis," the soap is made in New Orleans. The owner of Sweet Olive Soap Works relates that she was born in "the aftermath of the great flood of '78 and was brought home in a canoe on the still-flooded streets of New Orleans." Her grandmother, Anna Mae, had been a soapmaker.
I am going to keep this bar on my bookshelf.
This is a sweet way to start 2014. Happy New Year! And thanks, Michael.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Brushing the borders of anarchy: SJI in today's New Orleans. Wow!
Michael Ward-Bergeman, a musician about whom I have previously written on this blog, will soon be moving to New Orleans, and he sent me a link to a current New Orleans performance of "St. James Infirmary." Of course SJI has long been associated with New Orleans, and one might be tempted to consider the song a kind of city anthem. The only time Louis Armstrong mentioned the song in his writings was in relation to a funeral in New Orleans. A member of his club, the Tammany Social Club, had died and Louis was one of the pall bearers. This was around 1917 (he mentioned that "Livery Stable Blues" had just been released) so Louis would have been about sixteen.
He wrote: "The funeral left from the corner of Liberty and Perdido Streets. All the members had to wear black or real dark suits, and I had been lucky enough to get my black broadcloth suit out of pawn in time for the funeral. In those days we did a good bit of pawning. As soon as a guy got broke the first thing he thought of was the pawn shop. All out of pawn that day. I looked like a million dollars. . . . It had been raining all morning; the gutters were full of water and the streets real muddy. I had on a brand new Stetson hat (like the one in St. James Infirmary), my fine black suit, and patent leather shoes. Believe me, I was a sharp cat."
In Louis' case the funeral didn't go quite as planned. His girlfriend Daisy saw him chatting with another girl, and in a jealous rage chased him down the street with a razor. His Stetson fell off, and she cut it to ribbons. (From Armstrong's "Satchmo, My Life in New Orleans," 1954)
Which might be a round-about way of introducing this contemporary version of "St. James Infirmary." But even before Louis' time, SJI had been played at New Orleans funerals, and the singer we are about to encounter works within this venerable tradition, being employed in his off-hours at a New Orleans funeral parlor.
Malcolm "Sticks" Morris is the lead vocalist, and also plays a fine bass drum and cymbal on this song. The group is called the New Creations Brass Band, and they can be found on this Facebook Page. Their musicianship is a wonder. The percussive drive here threatens, at all times, to turn the song into a runaway train, but the group is tight and incredibly energetic, and somehow everything holds together. Well, of course it holds together; this is a rehearsed and polished performance, and its effect is deliberate. There are nods to the 1930s Cab Calloway with the call and response and the hi-de-hos. But this 2013 interpretation is its own creature, lurching down the streets, scraping against buildings, staggering through the lyrics, blasting clouds out of the sky, before finally succumbing to the (inevitable) funeral march, but never giving up the ghost.
This is a "St. James Infirmary" for the 21st century. Wow! As you will soon hear, this song just keeps getting better.
I recommend turning up the volume for this. At 192 kbps and clocking in at 6:22, here is the New Creations Brass Band and St. James Infirmary Remix. (Many thanks for your permission to post this!!)
The New Creations Brass Band have a new CD coming out - as soon as I hear more, I shall let you know where to find it.
He wrote: "The funeral left from the corner of Liberty and Perdido Streets. All the members had to wear black or real dark suits, and I had been lucky enough to get my black broadcloth suit out of pawn in time for the funeral. In those days we did a good bit of pawning. As soon as a guy got broke the first thing he thought of was the pawn shop. All out of pawn that day. I looked like a million dollars. . . . It had been raining all morning; the gutters were full of water and the streets real muddy. I had on a brand new Stetson hat (like the one in St. James Infirmary), my fine black suit, and patent leather shoes. Believe me, I was a sharp cat."
In Louis' case the funeral didn't go quite as planned. His girlfriend Daisy saw him chatting with another girl, and in a jealous rage chased him down the street with a razor. His Stetson fell off, and she cut it to ribbons. (From Armstrong's "Satchmo, My Life in New Orleans," 1954)
Which might be a round-about way of introducing this contemporary version of "St. James Infirmary." But even before Louis' time, SJI had been played at New Orleans funerals, and the singer we are about to encounter works within this venerable tradition, being employed in his off-hours at a New Orleans funeral parlor.
Malcolm "Sticks" Morris is the lead vocalist, and also plays a fine bass drum and cymbal on this song. The group is called the New Creations Brass Band, and they can be found on this Facebook Page. Their musicianship is a wonder. The percussive drive here threatens, at all times, to turn the song into a runaway train, but the group is tight and incredibly energetic, and somehow everything holds together. Well, of course it holds together; this is a rehearsed and polished performance, and its effect is deliberate. There are nods to the 1930s Cab Calloway with the call and response and the hi-de-hos. But this 2013 interpretation is its own creature, lurching down the streets, scraping against buildings, staggering through the lyrics, blasting clouds out of the sky, before finally succumbing to the (inevitable) funeral march, but never giving up the ghost.
This is a "St. James Infirmary" for the 21st century. Wow! As you will soon hear, this song just keeps getting better.
I recommend turning up the volume for this. At 192 kbps and clocking in at 6:22, here is the New Creations Brass Band and St. James Infirmary Remix. (Many thanks for your permission to post this!!)
The New Creations Brass Band have a new CD coming out - as soon as I hear more, I shall let you know where to find it.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
St. James Infirmary for Solo Accordion
Photo by Gerson Matos |
Okay. St. James Infirmary. For solo accordion.
Here, from Toronto's Ideacity concert hall, which has as its motto "The Smartest People - The Biggest Ideas . . . a constellation of top talent in the world," is accordion wunderkind Michael Ward-Bergeman performing "St. James Infirmary."
Enjoy.
ps You will get a fuller video view by going directly to the YouTube site.
Sunday, January 27, 2013
St. James Infirmary - the gypsy version!! MP3
"GIG 365" CD cover by Kate Mayfield |
When I was a young lad, a very young lad, in Belfast, I remember looking out the window of a double-decker bus at the people walking on the sidewalk, and being astonished at the notion that every single one of those people were as aware of their own existence as I was of mine - and yet, none of us could sense or deeply feel each others' realities. This is one of the memories that has haunted me through my life
Now, here we are in 2013, fifty-five years later. Michael
Ward-Bergeman has recorded a selection of songs he performed during a
year in which he pledged (to himself) to perform publicly at least once every
day. I sit at my desk with headphones on and I feel as if I am listening to those people on the
Belfast sidewalk.
In 2011 master accordionist Michael Ward-Bergeman undertook a "GIG 365," in which he vowed to play at least one gig a day for 365 days. He performed throughout North America, in Europe, and in Venezuela, often on the streets. He recorded many of these moments, including conversations with spectators; some of these are available on his blog GIG 365.
In 2011 master accordionist Michael Ward-Bergeman undertook a "GIG 365," in which he vowed to play at least one gig a day for 365 days. He performed throughout North America, in Europe, and in Venezuela, often on the streets. He recorded many of these moments, including conversations with spectators; some of these are available on his blog GIG 365.
Michael has just released a CD of a few of these performances (and conversations). I can say that the first question one might ask oneself after listening is, "What a pity he did not include more selections!" Because this CD is a marvel. AND, to make it even better, it contains a six minute interpretation of "St. James Infirmary," recorded with a gypsy band in Bucharest (cimbalom, violin, clarinet, saxophone, bass, and a second accordion). More about that a little later.
He's a difficult fellow to keep track of, is Michael Ward-Bergeman. While a charter member of the roots music trio Groanbox, he also performs with symphony orchestras, writes classical compositions, has been contracted to write a piece for the Silk Road Ensemble, and performs wherever the opportunity arises, from the back streets of New Orleans to the concert halls of America and Europe. He wields an accordion like Jimi Hendrix wielded his guitar, like Wilhelm Kempff played his piano. And – as the CD "GIG 365" will attest – he is able to adapt to just about any music genre and make it sound as if he was born to play it. One example from this CD is the song "Mississippi," which he wrote (and sings), but which could belong to a post-Stephen-Foster world of American roots music. This is one song on the album that features the percussionist Jamie Haddad, and Haddad's performances are as much a revelation as are those of Ward-Bergeman's accordion. That is, Ward-Bergeman has teamed up with some remarkable musicians on his travels, and you can hear the sharp focus of their collaborations. This is magical stuff.
But this site's primary concern is "St. James Infirmary," so let me focus my attention there.
Michael wrote to me that "when I started doing 'St. James' I always felt there was a gypsy music connection both spirit and music wise." In earlier postings I have included YouTube videos of the Groanbox trio performing "St. James Infirmary" as well as a song that Ward-Bergeman wrote, based upon SJI, called "Darling Lou." Both are dazzling performances.
And now, on this GIG 365 undertaking, Ward-Bergeman has added another dimension to a song that continues to offer itself to us in surprising ways
I listen to this, and I am back on that Belfast bus, looking out at the people strolling on the sidewalks as we drive past. This time, though, it is different. I can hear them, I can almost touch them, almost understand them. The music on this CD communicates such a sense of collaboration, such a sense of us all that it starts to dissolve the boundaries that separate us. One cannot help but wonder at the mystery of our lives.
Here, then, is a real treat. At 6:38 and 256 kbps (anything of a lower resolution would be sacrilege) is Michael Ward-Bergeman and friends with "St. James Infirmary" MP3 - the gypsy version.
The CD can be purchased here:
amazon.ca
amazon.com
emusic.com
As well as on iTunes, and elsewhere.
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Groanbox and a variation on SJI - prepare to be dazzled
Since posting the previous article, I have received more information about "Groanbox" and feel a need to update you.
The video in the previous post was made before "The Groanbox Boys" included a percussionist (check out that link), thereby expanding the duo into a trio and modifying their name to Groanbox. Man, they work well together!
So . . . about this video. Michael, the accordionist, wrote that they had every intention of recording their version of "St. James Infirmary," but "at the last minute I managed to come up with some new words, and a few new chords to turn it into an 'original' composition." Bravo! This is what songs like SJI - had it remained in the public domain from the start (where it belonged) - should have been inspiring all along.
The version below differs quite a bit from the one on their pre-trio album, Fences Come Down, but I think both are stellar performances. Here, about three minutes in, the singer intones "I wake up and she's gone gone gone," as the percussionist mimics a bird flying away, and then, led by the banjo, the group launches the song into a kind of uptempo gypsy jazz.
It's not easy to make music like this.
So, without further ado, here is Groanbox with their SJI inspired "Darling Lou." Prepare to be dazzled.
(And if you like this song, please show your support of Groanbox, they are a unique and rewarding experience!)
The video in the previous post was made before "The Groanbox Boys" included a percussionist (check out that link), thereby expanding the duo into a trio and modifying their name to Groanbox. Man, they work well together!
So . . . about this video. Michael, the accordionist, wrote that they had every intention of recording their version of "St. James Infirmary," but "at the last minute I managed to come up with some new words, and a few new chords to turn it into an 'original' composition." Bravo! This is what songs like SJI - had it remained in the public domain from the start (where it belonged) - should have been inspiring all along.
The version below differs quite a bit from the one on their pre-trio album, Fences Come Down, but I think both are stellar performances. Here, about three minutes in, the singer intones "I wake up and she's gone gone gone," as the percussionist mimics a bird flying away, and then, led by the banjo, the group launches the song into a kind of uptempo gypsy jazz.
It's not easy to make music like this.
So, without further ado, here is Groanbox with their SJI inspired "Darling Lou." Prepare to be dazzled.
(And if you like this song, please show your support of Groanbox, they are a unique and rewarding experience!)
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Contemporary performances
With this blog I have always (with one exception) been careful to limit my postings to matters referring to the early days of SJI. That was largely due to my respect for Rob Walker's very fine No Notes blog which, for over six years, has been tracking the evolution of the song and (among other things) referring us to its most recent variations. Sadly, Rob recently decided to put his blog on hiatus, and until further notice will not be writing further articles.
And so, every now and again, until Rob returns, I shall be posting links to more recent interpretations on the "St. James Infirmary" song, as well as to other songs intimately related to SJI. In fact a number of postings are already waiting in the wings, including some wonderful MP3s from Max Morath, an artist I have already referred to several times.
Today we are introducing (at least as far as this blog is concerned) a version of SJI that was posted on YouTube. This is by a duo (I think now a trio) called The Groanbox Boys. One of the Boys recently purchased a copy of I Went Down to St. James Infirmary and informed me of this video. And, you know, it is really good! At about 1:45 into the song they pick up the pace and with accordion, banjo, and vocals launch into the stratosphere.
I have already ordered a copy of a Groanbox CD. You might want to look into this group too. Here they are with "St. James Infirmary."
And so, every now and again, until Rob returns, I shall be posting links to more recent interpretations on the "St. James Infirmary" song, as well as to other songs intimately related to SJI. In fact a number of postings are already waiting in the wings, including some wonderful MP3s from Max Morath, an artist I have already referred to several times.
Today we are introducing (at least as far as this blog is concerned) a version of SJI that was posted on YouTube. This is by a duo (I think now a trio) called The Groanbox Boys. One of the Boys recently purchased a copy of I Went Down to St. James Infirmary and informed me of this video. And, you know, it is really good! At about 1:45 into the song they pick up the pace and with accordion, banjo, and vocals launch into the stratosphere.
I have already ordered a copy of a Groanbox CD. You might want to look into this group too. Here they are with "St. James Infirmary."
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