Kansas Smitty’s: Things Happened Here

In brief:
"The orchestration, with only three horns to deploy, is ingenious and effective. At other times it's catchy riffs, go-for-it swing and the kind of easy togetherness that's quite rare in jazz nowadays"

In a splendid example of cutting out the middle-man, this band had scarcely been born before it acquired its own venue. That’s how both a seven-piece band and a basement club in Hackney, east London, come to have the same name: Kansas Smitty’s.

When I first heard the band, about three years ago, its general style was a kind of latter-day swing, but likely to wander off into other territory if it seemed like a good idea at the time. Now, with its fourth album, things are still stylistically assorted, but a perhaps bit calmer.

Advertisement

All the numbers here are composed by leader and founder, Giacomo Smith (alto, clarinet, bass clarinet), and this is the way he hears them. Even so, it couldn’t be any other band than Kansas Smitty’s playing them.

According to Smith, there’s a common idea behind all nine pieces, that occasional feeling when one enters an old building that it has a memorable past, that “something happened here”. I can’t imagine how that can be expressed in music without a few prior hints, but there’s certainly an atmosphere to some of these to numbers.

You get it at once in the opening track, Riders, with the bass clarinet stalking around menacingly. Soloists all fit beautifully into the ensemble, rising out of it and gracefully merging with it again. Peter Horsfall (trumpet) and Alec Harper (tenor) play brilliantly on Temple Of Bel. The orchestration, with only three horns to deploy, is ingenious and effective. At other times it’s catchy riffs, go-for-it swing and the kind of easy togetherness that’s quite rare in jazz nowadays.

That may be where the basic charm of Kansas Smitty’s lies. It’s a real band, like bands used to be – rehearsing in back rooms of pubs, even when there was no immediate chance of a gig, just to do it. (In Kansas Smitty’s case, of course, they’ve got their own premises to themselves in the daytime.)

London used to be full of such bands, from trios like Major Surgery to big stuff like Mike Westbrook’s. That’s how unique styles come into being. They evolve. It very rarely happens with a temporary “project”, no matter how brilliant its individual members may be. Kansas Smitty’s sounds the way it does because the people in it are truly in it. I’ve played this album repeatedly, because it’s so congenial, unpretentiously sure of itself and, well, enjoyable.

Hear/buy Kansas Smitty’s: Things Happened Here

Discography
Riders; Dreamlane; Two Dancers; Sambre et Meuse; Alcazar; Temple Of Bel; Sunnyland; Things Happened Here; Judgement (40.25)
Peter Horsfall (t); Giacomo Smith (as, cl, bcl); Alec Harper (ts); Joe Webb (d); Dave Archer (g); Ferg Ireland (b); Will Creasby (d) London, 2019.
Ever/!K7

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Constant Stranger: Constant Stranger

In this quietly intense trio, plus guests, bassist Martin Nevin stands out for his stalwart and always interesting contributions, whether delivering vital pizzicato interruptions...
Advertisement

Obituary: Henry Grimes

The young Henry Grimes was beginning to make quite a name for himself as a double bass player, first in bop and then the...
Advertisement

A Tower Of Inspiration: Dave Weckl’s Master Plan at 30

Some dismiss it as a time of mullets and macho chops, but 1990 gave birth to the much-admired debut album by the Missouri-born drum virtuoso who had come to prominence with Chick Corea
Advertisement

Le Destin Inattendu De La Tapette À Mouches

The title of this rather extraordinary book translates as "The Unexpected Destiny Of The Fly Swatter" and the photo on the cover immediately reveals...
Advertisement

Motherless Brooklyn

Actor Edward Norton secured the rights to Jonathan Lethern’s best-selling novel Motherless Brooklyn on publication in 1999. Exactly 20 years later he brings it...
Advertisement

JJ 05/81: John Etheridge & Ric Sanders + Ron Carter Quartet at Camden Jazz Week

On Tuesday there were more string players on stage than in a Palm Court Orchestra - not a horn player in sight. On paper...
"The orchestration, with only three horns to deploy, is ingenious and effective. At other times it's catchy riffs, go-for-it swing and the kind of easy togetherness that's quite rare in jazz nowadays"Kansas Smitty's: Things Happened Here