JJ 08/70: Salute To Satchmo, London 1970

Fifty years ago Ron Brown saw Alex Welsh, Wally Fawkes, John Chilton and Humphrey Lyttelton mark the 70th birthday of Louis Armstrong. First published in Jazz Journal August 1970

On July 4th, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, the Melody Maker staged a tribute to Louis Arm­strong for his seventieth birthday.

Alex Welsh and the Band kicked off, and gave some typically excellent performances of a few Satch numbers, none more impressive than the swinging version of Muskrat Ramble performed by a Hot Five from within the Welsh ranks.

Advertisement

Beryl Bryden, that ebullient virtuoso of the chrome-plated washboard, contributed a good-humoured set, then the rhythm team provided a base for some dazzling pianistics from Lennie Felix. However, brilliant though he is, Mr. Felix didn’t impress me as much as did Fred Hunt, the lightness of whose touch always pro­duces music which is a joy to hear.

The Wally Fawkes-John Chilton Feetwarmers played swingingly, with Mr. Fawkes producing a fat sound on soprano and guest Bruce Turner turning in some of the best solos of the even­ing. That great jazz musician George Chisholm played magnificently, offering one of the most beautiful versions of Stardust I’ve ever heard, before duetting with Roy Williams of the Welsh band in an exciting Tea For Two.

Humphrey Lyttelton, compere for most of the concert, emerged towards the end as the star of the show; deep in his Pops bag, he blew Struttin’ With Some Barbecue straight from the heart, then broke things up with a moving That’s My Home, accompanied only by Fred Hunt’s sensitive piano.

Apparently tapes of the show were to be sent to Louis without delay; if he digs them as much as we who were there, he’ll have a ball.

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Christian Sands: Be Water

This might well be the best album yet by Christian Sands. His releases under his own name seem to have been gathering momentum, and...
Advertisement

Count Me In… 05/25

In 2024, having spluttered speechlessly at the non-jazz headline acts of major jazz festivals for several years, I came across Montreux and its 58th...
Advertisement

Dave Quincy, English jazz-rock pioneer

The saxophonist and writer for the jazz-rock bands If and Zzebra, now 84, reckons he's at last playing as well as he always wanted to
Advertisement

Dana Gillespie – Weren’t Born A Man

If anyone has a stronger claim to being a missing link between David Bowie and Bessie Smith than Dana Gillespie then I don't know...
Advertisement

The Humbler – Danny Gatton

Comprehensive chronicle adds new footage of 'the greatest guitarist you never heard', one perhaps isolated by his eclecticism and virtuosity
Advertisement

JJ 09/70: The Manne at Scott’s

July's visitors to Ronnie Scott's were the Shelly Manne Sextet, a group of young players led by the doyen of West Coast percussionists, Shelly...