Advertisement
Advertisement

JJ 08/80: Eddie ‘Cleanhead’ Vinson at the 100 Club

Forty years ago Peter Vacher applauded the "searing emotionalism" of the blues and bebop altoist. First published in Jazz Journal August 1980

If you know Cleanhead from his hit records you’ll recall that he employs self-mocking humour as a powerful tool, and it’s the combination of wry insight and strutting bravado that makes him such a compelling performer.

He looks sharp, in full command, taking human frailties as his theme and it’s just a touch ironic that his voice, as he discourses on our weaknesses, is so magnificently resonant. He’s emotional in the best sense, soaring and dipping and seemingly capable of bending his vocal line around the beat at will.

Advertisement

He paraded all his trademark songs, to everyone’s evident satisfaction. But to categorise Vinson as just a blues artist is hardly to do him credit. For, as this two-nighter showed, he’s a rewarding modern jazz alto-saxophonist, keen to stretch himself harmonically in the right company.

Happily, he exulted in the lively support given him by his London rhythm section of John Burch (piano), Lennie Bush (bass) and drummer Bobby Orr, offering original tunes and bebop staples in a very spirited and hard blowing session.

Of course, he’s touched by Charlie Parker’s genius but he’s a bebop authentic himself and a resourceful player in his own right as capable of searing emotionalism as any on the scene.

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Ray Blue: Work

At first this seemed to be a straightforward session – nothing too stretching, the band going through its repertoire of good time, accessible material...
Advertisement

Obituary: João Gilberto

A key figure in the bossa nova explosion of the early 1960s, João Gilberto was often reclusive, rarely gave interviews, and disliked performing in...
Advertisement

Roy McCurdy: drumming royalty /2

The 86-year-old sticksman concludes by focusing on his time with the Adderleys, the first stirring of fusion and Cannonball's tragic demise
Advertisement

Jazz Images by William Claxton

Photographer William Claxton (1927 to 2008) was born in Pasadena, California. When he was only 12 years old he regularly took the bus to...
Advertisement

John McLaughlin/Paco De Lucia/Larry Coryell: Meeting Of The Spirits

A guitar summit, held in the Royal Albert Hall in 1979, Meeting Of The Spirits brings together three musicians with a collective background in...
Advertisement

JJ 01/60: In My Opinion – Steve Race

This is one of a series of taped interviews with musicians, who are asked to give a snap opinion on a set of records...