The New Zealand Herald

Jazz star does Ella and Louis

Listening to the greats of music together made the budding instrument­alist really appreciate the genre

- Richard Betts What: Where and when:

The look on UK chat show host Michael Aspel’s face is priceless. It’s 1990 and Ella Fitzgerald, jazz legend, first lady of song, has just told Aspel that she wants to record the theme tune from Aussie soap Neighbours.

“Ella Fitzgerald sings Neighbours.

I can’t . . . ” Aspel says, shaking his head, unable to process this informatio­n.

“I might have a hit with it,” she tells him.

She might have, too. Ella Fitzgerald could do anything. She magicked base metal into gold — see her first hit, the nursery rhyme A-Tisket, A-Tasket. She made great songs greater (her Song Books series recordings of Gershwin, Cole Porter et al). She played with the immortals and elevated them by her very presence: Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Frank Sinatra.

Few could keep up with her; Louis Armstrong could. He wasn’t the first jazz musician but he was the first great one. The sounds that came from his trumpet weren’t notes; they were joy with a key signature. When the two got together, well ...

“They didn’t get in each other’s way, neither diminishes the other,” says Australian trumpeter James Morrison, who leads an Ella and Louis celebratio­n with the Auckland Philharmon­ia Orchestra this month. Morrison remembers, as a 7-yearold, hearing Armstrong and loving the sound but getting annoyed when Louis sang. “Stop the singing and pick up the trumpet!”

Listening to Ella and Louis together made the budding instrument­alist appreciate jazz singing. “It was the most influentia­l example I had of two musicians with very strong voices working together and being greater than the sum of their parts.” Forget the beaming middle-aged crooner of What a Wonderful World, Armstrong’s period of greatest achievemen­t came 40 years earlier, as leader of the Hot Five and Hot Seven groups.

“Louis was an innovator,” says Morrison. ”He was out on the front

edge.” In the mid-1920s Armstrong laid the template for New Orleans jazz. His recordings from that period are short and sharp bursts of energy, with extended improvised solos and scat singing that echoed his trumpet playing.

If Louis popularise­d scat, Ella perfected it. She could do a good Armstrong impersonat­ion, too. In a famous recording of Mack the Knife, she forgets the words and makes up new ones on the spot, variously mimicking Louis’s gravelly voice and scatting like a trumpeter. That performanc­e earned Fitzgerald a Grammy. Remarkably, given their importance as a duo, Ella and Louis recorded just a handful of singles and three albums together, Ella and Louis (1956), Ella and Louis Again (1957) and Porgy and Bess (1959). The first two were with a small group led by Oscar Peterson, while Porgy and Bess was a full orchestral number, with arrangemen­ts by Russ Garcia. (In the late 1960s Garcia moved to New Zealand, living in Kerikeri until his death in 2011, aged 95.)

These albums are fun and swing hard — Again’s Stompin’ at the Savoy

A Celebratio­n of Louis and Ella, with James Morrison and the APO ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre, Thursday, August 16

is unhinged — but Ella and Louis’s music together almost belongs to an earlier era. When Ella and Louis was released, Little Richard and Chuck Berry had enjoyed their first hits and Elvis Presley’s debut album changed music forever. Even in jazz, the Fitzgerald/Armstrong collaborat­ions were throwbacks.

Around the same time, the pair released their selections from Gershwin’s folk opera — itself a quarter-century old by then — Miles Davis went modal with Kind of Blue and free jazz pioneer Ornette Coleman made his intentions clear with the chaotic The Shape of Jazz to Come.

Ella and Louis immediatel­y hit number one on Billboard’s jazz chart and went top 10 in the pop vocal list. The three records remain among the best-selling jazz discs in history.

“The main thing is to live for that audience, ’cause what you’re there for is to please the people.” Armstrong said a few years before his death in 1971.

James Morrison has Armstrong’s quote on the wall of his music academy in South Australia. “There are other reasons to play trumpet,” Morrison says.

 ??  ?? Australian jazz trumpeter James Morrison and fellow Aussie vocalist Emma Pask.
Australian jazz trumpeter James Morrison and fellow Aussie vocalist Emma Pask.
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