Hot Town, Ghost Train Orchestra’s third album, follows in the very large footsteps the ensemble created for itself with its 2011 debut Hothouse Stomp, an album that made it on to the NPR top ten jazz releases of the year, and its equally fine sophomore effort, Book of Rhapsodies (2013). Like its predecessors, the album specializes in band music from the early decades of the last century, not the big names spotlighted over the years, but lesser known outfits—indeed, names long forgotten if ever known even to the most avid jazz fans. Nonetheless it is fun music, and in the hands of the Ghost Train Orchestra’s musical director and arranger trumpeter Brian Carpenter, it is music that sparkles.
According to Carpenter’s liner notes, the new album features
unreleased arrangements omitted from the debut disc along with some new pieces.
The music is culled from Chicago and New York based bands like Fess Williams’
Royal Flush Orchestra, Cecil Scott’s Bright Boys, Charlie Johnson’s Paradise
Orchestra, and Tiny Parham and His Musicians. This is not a sentimental
nostalgia trip. It’s hard to be nostalgic for the music of a quartet of bands
you’ve never heard of. The Ghost Train Orchestra takes this music and fits it
out for a new day. It is music that has been nursed, rehearsed and pushed
through a horn giving birth to the blues with a modern touch and a something
more as well.
Ghost Train opens with the album’s title song which has an
almost otherworldly quality at the beginning before it moves into a train
imitation and blasts into the hot town. They end the set with the jumping
“Charleston is the Best Dance After All.” In between there are forgotten gems
like the quirky “Mo’lasses,” a happy romp through “Skag-A-Lag,” a low down
“Harlem Drag” and “Bright Boy Blues.” There are vocals by violinist Mazz
Stewart on “You Ain’t the One” and “You Can’t Go Wrong.”
Hot Town is music
you’ve more than likely never heard before, but more than likely it is music
you’ll want to hear again. . .and again; it’s that infectious.
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