1. Early Hours
    2. It’s Tite [sic] Like That
    3. Trouble in Mind
    4. The Sheik of Araby
    5. Dead Man Blues
    6. Gettysburg March
    7. Just a Closer Walk with Thee
    8. Over the Waves
    9. Summeertime
    10. Bugle Boy March
    11. After You’ve Gone;
    12. Easy Rider Drop-Out Blues
    13. The Old Rugged Cross
    Big Bill Bissonnette – Trombone, vocal (track 4)
    Sammy Rimington – Reeds
    Fred Vigorito – Cornet
    Bill Sinclair – Piano
    Dick Griffith – Banjo
    Mouldy Dick McCarthy – String bass
    Art Pulver – Drums
    Recorded: tracks 1-4, 6-7, 10 at West Haven Motor Inn, Connecticut on
    August 10, 1965;
    tracks 5, 8-13 at Glorieta Manor, Bridgeport, Connecticut on February 25,
    1966.
    This album is vol. 1, “Then,” of a
    two-volume set of the Easy Riders Jazz Band on the Jazz Crusade label,
titled “Then” and “Now.” (The second volume [    “Now” – JCCD3038] is a reunion of as many members of this
    original band as were still alive, assembled in 1998 by the late Big Bill
    Bissonnette.)
    Bissonnette, as many traditional jazz fans know, was dedicated to the
    preservation of New Orleans-style jazz, and three of his projects toward
    that end were first the formation in Connecticut of the Easy Riders Jazz
    Band in the early 1960s and second the creation of the record label Jazz
    Crusade to record local groups and musicians. After a period of inactivity
    of some fifteen years during the 1970s and 1980s, Bissonnette resumed his
    musical ventures and the third project, setting down in 1990 his record of
    the 1960s revival of traditional jazz in the book
    
        The Jazz Crusade: The Inside Story of the Great New Orleans Jazz
        Revival of the 1960’s
    
     
(the book’s publishing date was given as 1992)    and beginning to play again. In addition he arranged tours and
    recordings with New Orleans jazz veterans, most of whom he brought up from
    New Orleans. He assiduously engaged in that “crusade,” carrying the banner
    after his retirement in 2006 until his death a year ago.
    The band here on vol. 1, “Then,” is young
    and relatively inexperienced. It displays much vigor and a somewhat
    primitive quality, but it is quite exciting. In spite of the occasional
    roughness displayed, the dedication is unmistakable, as is the devotion to
    the New Orleans polyphonic style of playing. Rimington is clearly at this
    stage in his career a disciple of George Lewis, and Vigorito of Kid Thomas
    Valentine.
    Rimington is a monster of technique, executing such runs and trills, such
    ease of execution in all of the clarinet’s registers as to belie his young
    age, only some 23 years. He also can, and does, take several choruses in a
    solo. In some ways one could say that the album is a showcase for
    Rimington. Vigorito shows his devotion to Kid Thomas Valentine with his
    many flares and flourishes and mute work on most of the tunes on this CD.
    The tune list is an inspired one—a good mix of the familiar and the less
    so. Several of the tunes were not often heard on traditional jazz CDs back
    then, and still are not. The opening number, “Early Hours,” is one of
    these, getting the proceedings off to a good start, putting one in mind of
    the original Colyer rendition. Rimington is quite dazzling, and Sinclair
    emphatically indicates his presence with short runs, adding up to a
    satisfying performance of one of my favorite tunes. The second track is a
    jaunty, rollicking version of “It’s Tite [sic] Like That,”
    Vigorito throwing in some Kid Thomas voicing, the rhythm section providing
    a solid backing—obviously the band is having a great time with this tune,
    and there is not the vocal one has come to expect. (I don’t know why the
    variant spelling “tite,” unless it is an attempt to pun on “tite” meaning
    fast or quick to complement the tempo.)
    Tempting as it would be to examine each of the selections on the CD, I will
    simply summarize by saying that collectively they exhibit the variety of
    tempo and the abundance of technique the first two tracks display. There
    are a couple of small surprises along the way, perhaps. “Dead Man Blues” is
    not taken at a dirge or very slow tempo but instead is quite perky,
    although ending fairly uncertainly. “Gettysburg March” and “Bugle Boy
    March” comes across as more “runs” than “marches,” but despite the fast
    tempi the band, in each case, manages to avoid any train wrecks or
    collisions.
    For a final comment, I found “Easy Rider Drop-Out Blues” rather strange. It
    is not, as I anticipated before hearing it, a version of “Easy Rider” but
    is rather an up-tempo jam blues which seems to lack direction. Possibly the
    “drop-out” refers not only to high school dropouts, according to
    Bissonnette’s dedication in the spoken intro, but also to the part where
    Rimington is left to carry the tune a couple of times—once for a true solo
    where everyone else “drops out” for the 12 bars, and again in the ending
    choruses where one by one the musicians drop out in successive 12-bar
    choruses until Rimington is left to take the 12-bar coda, again totally
    solo. I find the track is a bit too long, lacking enough interest. But
    these are somewhat minor cavils.
    It is a nice exercise to compare the two bands on this dual set, even
    though there are several changes in personnel. The front line is the same
    in both bands, but the difference in the maturity of their playing is quite
    apparent. In the second set “Now,”
    Rimington is not so intent on amazing the listener with the number of notes
    he can squeeze in but rather seems to choose them by quality rather than
    quantity. Vigorito displays more confidence and comes more to the fore in
    the later set. The entire band is less brash and has less of a
    “take-no-prisoners” approach but retains the excitement.
    This album, “Then,” provides over an hour
    of entertaining, satisfying traditional jazz, some of the musicians still
    playing some 55 years later—Vigorito, Rimington, and, as far as I know,
    Sinclair. Along with vol. 2, it documents an important part of traditional
    jazz history, and by reissuing these Jazz Crusade CDs, Upbeat continues to
    play a valuable part in preserving jazz history and keeping it available.
Jazz Crusade CDs are available on the Upbeat web site    www.upbeat.co.uk as well as from
    on-line sites such as Amazon.
     
    Bert Thompson