Young Chang Muggsy would have been proud....
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Young Chang
Muggsy would have been proud. Jazz was dying out in the late ‘20s
when big bands and swing took over the music scene. But Muggsy
Spanier and his Ragtime Band swooped in toward the late ‘30s and
helped to revive Dixieland music, demonstrating with a “seven-piece
band that he could get all the excitement of the ‘20s,” said Brian
White, co-leader of the group Muggsy Remembered.
White and his six bandmates, co-led by cornetist Alan Gresty, will
perform at the Costa Mesa/Orange County Classic Jazz Festival through
Sunday with a repertoire that is based on, but not limited to, the
works of the famous cornetist who White affectionately refers to as
just “Muggsy.” The four-day event devoted entirely to jazz’s many
genres, across seven stages and with about 20 musical acts, more than
confirms that the music Muggsy committed to reviving has more than
stayed alive.
“People have lost sight of the fact that he was the man that
started the revival that was in his heyday in Chicago,” said White,
who flew from London this week to be a part of the festival. “We’re
only too delighted to be spreading the word.”
And if there’s a place to spread the sounds of jazz, the Costa
Mesa-based jazz fest would be it.
Formerly the L.A. Classic Jazz Festival, the tradition that’s in
its third year in Costa Mesa invites artists from around the world to
perform American music that was popular from the turn of the century
to the 1950s. Genres include ragtime, Dixieland, swing, boogie-woogie
and others. This year, three international acts from Australia,
England and Holland join American musicians hailing from as close as
Cerritos to as far as Largo, Fla.
“What distinguishes our festival from other similar events is it
is exclusively the American music of this period,” said Connie Baker,
one of the festival’s three directors. “And when you buy a ticket,
you don’t get a seat. What you get is a badge. That badge lets you
into every performance. The audience is totally in charge of what
they want to listen to.”
Special events include a performance titled “Twin Pianos” by
pianists Robbie Rhodes and David Boeddinghaus at 7:30 p.m. today in
the Hilton, a joint show with the High Sierra Jazz Band and Joep
Peeters and His Gumbo Gabbers at 8:45 p.m. Saturday at the Hilton,
and a one-time performance by dancer/entertainer Fayard Nicholas with
Banu Gibson and the New Orleans Hot Jazz at noon Sunday at the
Hilton.
The seven stages of the music smorgasbord will be in the Hilton
Costa Mesa and the Holiday Inn Costa Mesa, which sit across the
street from each other.
Featured musicians include the New Wolverine Jazz Orchestra from
Australia, Peeters from Holland, Gibson from New Orleans and more
than 15 other groups from around the country.
“We would like to introduce them to the United States’ traditional
jazz audience,” Baker said of the international artists. “The really,
really serious jazz aficionados may already know who they are.”
White characterized the collective mood of the music that will be
performed as “feel-good music.”
“It puts smiles on people’s faces. Everybody seems happy around
this sort of music,” said the 67-year-old clarinetist, whose group
formed in the mid-’80s to pay tribute to Spanier.
For the members of Muggsy Remembered, the festival is a chance for
them to play Spanier’s “Great 16,” a set of 15 titles, and pieces
from their expanded repertoire, in a foreign country with foreign
audiences.
“The fact that there are a lot of bands here means there are a lot
of people,” White said. “And it gives us a chance when we’re not
playing to go around and hear the other guys.”
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