| |
ASTORIA
JAZZ BIG BAND
NEW
YORK BIG BAND CAROLING
From the Queens Q-guide,Thursday,
4/15/99. Astoria-born Sudhalter hits big time with own jazz band.
by Roy Fox
There
are two quotes that come to mind as I listen to the hip jazz band sounds
created by Carol Sudhalter and her surrounding cast of merry musical
men. First, is the response of Satchmo when asked what jazz really is.
Said Louie: "Man, if you gotta ask, you'll never know". Along those same
lines is the comeback of Fats Waller when asked to explain rhythm: "Lady,
if you got to ask, you ain't got it".
Carol
Sudhalter need not ask. She's got it. And she knows it. Let me rework
that. With the confidence that comes from being good, she knows she's
got it. But then, it runs in the family, with a brother who plays trumpet
and a father who played sax. A guy thing. Like father, like son. Yes,
and typical, too, of jazz musicians, Pop (Albert) Sudhalter wanted something
better for his daughter, better than the difficult life that often seems
to haunt jazz musicians when they step offstage. The current Broadway
show, "Side Man", is a story of exactly that kind of troubled life. Tough
enough for a guy, but a daughter? Pop Sudhalter's verdict: unthinkable.
Not my daughter.
And
so, Carol headed off to school, made the effort towards a 'legitimate'
career of some kind or other and satisfied her musical longing by taking
up the flute. After all, what kind of trouble could come from playing
the flute? It's such a refined instrument, both in shape and in sound,
that it conjured up visions of chamber music; polite Sunday Afternoon
concerts at a park gazebo. Something right and proper. Civilized. Carol
Sudhalter's jazz scene gene was left to bide its time. Until her epiphany,
that is; her moment of self-discovery. For Carol, it arrived with the
death of her dad. The same day, she both defied and honored him by picking
up the saxophone and declaring music her life's true ambition.
Alright,
so words like 'epiphany' are too highfalutin' for the life of a jazz musician.
And maybe this didn't happen in one fell swoop. Yet, the vision that I've
created for you is not far off the mark. In short order, she packed her
Boston bags, followed the rails to New York, marked out Astoria as her
home turf, and lives for music just as she brings about music that lives.
Currently, the Astoria Jazz Band under
Carol's direction is performing a month of Mondays at Danny's Skylight
Room in Manhattan. With two Mondays still to go (April 19 and 26), you
can sit in for an hour's worth of the big band jazz sound. More than that,
you will be part of a recording session as the Sudhalter group is using
these get-togethers to create a new CD. The end result: incorporating
music by Sudhalter groups of various sizes, but all of it in the big jazz
band tradition of hip sounds that swing pretty good. Actually, there is
something extra special about the Astoria Jazz
Band sound. The arrangements of Charlie Camilleri and Mickey
Tucker. The night I was at Danny's I heard fabulous arrangements of
"Moonlight Becomes You", "Stairway to the Stars", "Gone
with the Wind", "Close Your Eyes", "Slow Boat to China",
"Lullaby of the Leaves" and more.
The
individual musicians (as with Mae West, Carol surrounds herself with the
male element, a female at the piano being the exception) are all very
good when taking their turn in the spotlight, but then blend perfectly
into the unifying force, that driving sensation that pulsates with excitement,
a musical kaleidoscope that so fills my brain that it is saturated with
joyful exaltation. No wonder that jazz can so
easily be incorporated into the church experience. Something else that
the Astoria Jazz Band has done, right
here in Queens. The group is still getting its feet wet and this is a
wonderful time to see and hear them in action. Action is the word, alright.
Action, active, and alive. Carol provides various sized versions of her
band for all kinds of gatherings, depending on the occasion, and they
perform throughout the area. Many of the other musicians in the band are
also Queens-based, and as with Carol, are involved in any number of additional
tasks waiting for those moments when they can come back and together make
wonderful music. Next time you have the opportunity of enjoying the
Astoria Jazz Band, pay special attention
to Carol as she oes a solo with her baritone sax. Here is a woman who
has obviously found her niche.
In
listening to this talented musician blowing to her heart's content, I
got to thinking about her father. Perhaps, he would disapprove of his
daughter's decision to live the life of a jazz musician. But, he'd have
to love the way it sounds. After all, it was music to his ears.
More Reviews:
Carol
Sudhalter: Shades of Carol (jazzitalia.net, 2/06)
Shades
of Carol (allaboutjazz.com)
Carol
Sudhalter's Women Composers of Queens (jazznow.com, 12/05)
Femminilità
in Sax (traspi.net, 11/05)
Carol
Sudhalter: Shades of Carol (egeamusic.com, 10/05)
Featured
Artist: Carol Sudhalter; CD Title: Shades of Carol (jazzreview.com)
Living
Up to Its Namesake (Washington Post, 5/04)
The Ninth Annual Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Festival (jazzreview.com,
5/04)
Carol
Zittisce Tutti (L'Arena, Il Giornale di Verona, 12/29/02)
The
New York Pops
Saxophonist: Carol Sudhalter (6/00)
New York Big Band Caroling
Click
here
to hear clips of Carol's music.
Click here
to see Carol's recent photos.
Click below
to read Carol's music journal:
To
order any of Carol's recordings, call (718) 278-5331 or e-mail
carol@sudhalter.com. |