Copyright © 2016
John F. Oyler
September 8, 2016
The Nighthawks
When my son John and his family invited me to visit them in
New York, they asked me if there was anything specific I would like to do. My reply was that I would like to see and
hear Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks.
I had already confirmed that they played Monday and Tuesday nights at
the Iguana Restaurant.
I had seen Giordano and some of the men in his band at jazz
festivals and have several of the Nighthawks’ records. I was also familiar with their involvement in
movies – several Woody Allen films including his most recent one (Café
Society), “The Aviator”, and “Finding Forrester” – as well as in the HBO series
“Boardwalk Empire”.
When I got to New York and we began to investigate the
possibility of seeing the Nighthawks I researched the Iguana Restaurant and was
discouraged to learn that it is a well-known Tex-Mex restaurant, hardly the
normal place for a jazz band that plays music from the ‘20s and ‘30s. Nonetheless we made reservations and showed
up there fifteen minutes before the 8:00 pm show time.
My concerns were aggravated when we walked into the
restaurant – it certainly was not the venue I associate with classic jazz. We
were directed up a staircase to the second floor, and suddenly everything
looked better. A small dance floor, a
reasonably large bandstand with a few tuxedoed musicians shuffling around, and
busy waiters threading their way between tables crowded with enthusiastic fans.
Our table was down front, very close to the musicians. We placed our orders and then began to
inspect the musicians. Giordano leads
the band while providing a remarkably effective bass line – sometimes with an
upright string bass, sometimes with a tuba, and sometimes with a bass
saxophone. Keeping track of what he is playing is worth the price of admission
alone.
I recognized Andy Stein, another remarkable musician who
plays baritone saxophone when he isn’t playing violin (jazz fiddle?). Trumpeter Jon-Erik Kellso and
Saxophonist/clarinetist Dan Levinson were also familiar faces, from Allegheny
Jazz Society events I have attended. The
rest of the band was made up of reed players Mark Lopeman and Dennis Joseph, trumpeter
Mike Ponella, Ken Salvo on guitar and banjo, trombonist Jim Fryer,
percussionist Paul Wells, and pianist Simon Mulligan.
We had just started on our meal and I was beginning to feel
that this was going to work out well when drummer Wells hit the downbeat for
the first song and suddenly we were back in 1926! I have always been a fan of
time travel, and tonight I had achieved it. Absolutely everything was exactly
as I had imagined it.
I thought Vince announced the first selection as “90 in the
Shade”. Later research indicated that
was the name of a 1915 Broadway musical by Jerome Kern that, surprisingly, did
not include a song with that title. Not
to worry – it was wonderful, as were all the two dozen songs that followed it
in the three set performance.
Asking me which songs I liked best is akin to asking me
which grandchild I love most – they were all magnificent. Maybe “Ring Dem Bells” from the first set,
“Isn’t It Romantic” from the second, and “You’re the Cream in my Coffee” from
the third.
Singer Carol Woods, fresh from a tour with “Chicago”, came
up from the audience and sang “Orange Colored Sky” before belting “Blues in the
Night”. Another audience celebrity was
society pianist and ‘20s music historian Peter Mintun. He sat in with the band
and played “Riding High”.
And, finally, a gentleman whose introduction I missed
grabbed the microphone and sang “Let Yourself Go”. If there was any residual question about time
travel, this man dispelled it. He was
dressed completely in white, with a red rosebud in his boutonniere. I am sure that, as soon as the set was over,
he hurried outside to get into Jay Gatsby’s convertible with Nick and Daisy,
and then to speed off to West Egg.
Margaret Whiting’s daughter Deborah was also in the
audience. In honor of her grandfather the band performed an outstanding version
of his “True Blue Lou”.
The current Nighthawks take their name from the Coon-Sanders
band, an extremely popular jazz band that performed from 1919 to 1932. Formed
in Kansas City by drummer Carleton Coon and pianist Joe Sanders, the Nighthawks
were the first jazz band to achieve popularity with late night (midnight to
1:00 am) clear channel radio broadcasts. They later moved to Chicago and New
York and became famously nationally.
I remember my father talking about the Coon-Sanders
band. I assume he was aware of them
because of their radio broadcasts and records, but it would be nice to think
that he and my mother saw them perform in a nightclub in New York when they
honeymooned there n 1930. The only thing I know about that trip is that my
mother said they went to lots of baseball games.
I have listened to a number of original Nighthawks records
and can attest to the fact that Giordano’s band is an appropriate descendant of
them. I think Coon-Sanders had similar
instrumentation, ten pieces lacking only the fourth reed/violin player
Giordano’s band uses. Their bass player was not as versatile as Vince – he only
played tuba.
John’s comment was “This is terrific. Why did they quit
playing jazz this way?” My response was that the evolution of jazz followed the
same trajectory as other art forms. The early practitioners took a couple of
concepts – syncopation and improvisation – and experimented with them until
they perfected a simple, elegant approach to playing music, an approach some of
us call “classic” or “traditional” jazz.
Then performers began to incorporate variations, primarily
in harmony and rhythm, and developed “Swing”, “Bebop”, “Progressive Jazz”, “Cool
Jazz”, and a dozen others. I enjoy all
of them, but none as much as traditional.
The three hours passed rapidly, suddenly it was 11:00 and
Vince announced their final selection. I
can’t recall any other musical event I have experienced in recent years that
was nearly as enjoyable as this evening. I hope we can re-engage our time
machine again soon and travel back to the “Roaring Twenties”.
Coming attractions – I will moderate a series of monthly
workshops on specific topics in Bridgeville area history at the History Center
beginning at 7:00 pm Tuesday, September 13, 2016. The first one will deal with
the J B Higbee Glass Company.
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