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The Jazzmania Big Band, writes leader Peter Guidi, “represents the highest level of the
Muziekschool Amsterdam’s Jazz department and contains some of the best young Jazz talents in
The Netherlands.” No doubt about that. The players are indeed young (as the group photo in the
album’s booklet attests) and remarkably talented -- the ensemble is taut and agile, the soloists bright
and enterprising, and the youthful energy fairly leaps from the speakers.
Best of all, Jazzmania chooses wonderful music, combining popular standards by Gershwin,
Rodgers, Ray Noble and Bronislau Kaper and Jazz sketches by Quincy Jones, Horace Silver, John
Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie and Rob van Bavel with Guidi’s spellbinding originals, “Princess of
Flutopia” and the two-part “Up at Seven,” and infallibly nailing superb big-band charts by van Bavel,
Sammy Nestico, Les Hooper, Mark Taylor, Jerry van Rooyen, Mike Tomaro, Jan Wessels, Michael
Philip Mossman and others.
Any album as good as this one makes choosing highlights exceedingly difficult, as almost
everything transcends one’s personal yardstick: from Nestico’s dynamic arrangement of Gershwin’s
“Strike Up the Band,” which kicks the album into high gear, through the spirited finale, Dizzy’s bop
classic “Groovin’ High,” smartly arranged by Taylor. Guidi’s Caribbean-flavored “Princess of
Flutopia,” arranged by Henri Gerrits, is simply enchanting, while his tour de force for solo
flute, “Low-Down Morning Blues” (part 1 of “Up at Seven”) suggests the second coming of Rahsaan
Roland Kirk, an impression that is further enhanced by Guidi and clarinetist Joris Roelofs as they
swing impetuously through part 2.
Roelofs, this time on alto, is featured on Nestico’s arrangement of Jones’s “Quintessence,”
trombonist Erik Blok on Rodgers and Hart’s wistful ballad “Where or When,” handsomely scored by
Patrick Schenkius. Alto Carlo Banning has his say on “Green Dolphin Street,” “Nica’s Dream,” “The
Touch of Your Lips” and “Groovin’ High,” trombonist Michael Rorby on “Green Dolphin Street,”
“Impressions” and “Groovin’ High.” Other laudable improvisers include drummer Balijon, tenors
Thomas Bruijn and Christiano Giardini, trumpeters Herwin Lokken and Robbert Scherpenisse,
guitarist Joeri de Graaf and especially pianist Jasper Lekkerkerk who’s a standout on “My Favorite
Things,” “The Touch of Your Lips” and van Bavel’s feverish flag-waver, “Please Take Notice.”
A further word about the charts, as they contribute so much to the album’s over-all excellence
and charm. Mossman arranged Silver’s “Nica’s Dream,” Taylor, Coltrane’s “Impressions,” Tomaro
“Woody ‘n You,” van Rooyen “My Favorite Things,” Wessels “The Touch of Your Lips,” and each one
is a concise model of how to do it right.
The Jazzmania Big Band, now ten years old, has won a total of sixteen prizes (including
fourteen firsts) in national or international competitions, and it won’t take the informed listener long
to understand why. This is a remarkably impressive ensemble that serves, in Guidi’s words, as “a
stepping stone for many talented young players.” Jazzmania has them in abundance, and the future
of big-band Jazz, at least in The Netherlands, seems as luminous and breathtaking as the aurora
borealis.
Visit Jazz Mania at
www.jazzmania.nl.
Visit
Peter Guidi at
www.peterguidi.com
or email at
P.Guidi@chello.nl.
~ Jack Bowers
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Track Listing: Strike Up the Band; On Green Dolphin Street; Quintessence; Princess of Flutopia; Where or When;
Low-Down Morning Blues; Up at Seven; Please Take Notice; Nica’s Dream; Impressions; Woody ’n
You; My Favorite Things; The Touch of Your Lips; Groovin’ High (66:19).
Personnel: Peter Guidi, leader, flute; Carlo Banning, alto, soprano sax; Joris Roelofs, alto sax, clarinet; Thomas
Bruijn, Christiano Giardini, tenor sax; Mechteld Bannier, baritone sax; Herwin Lokken, Ywo
Lamonaca, Wim Bouman, Robbert Scherpenisse, trumpet; Erik Blok, Michael Rorby, Anton Kuut,
trombone; Santi Matsumoto, bass trombone; Jasper Lekkerkerk, piano; Joeri de Graaf, guitar; Eric
Hartgers, bass; Klaas Balijon, drums.
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