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PREVIEW
That
70's Show
Portland's Original
Cats splash in jazz's fountain of youth.
by BILL SMITH
243-2122
"Gentlemen,
I have a long drive back to Washougal," says the 68-year-old bassist
with mock formality. "Let's play some music."
Three horn men
step to the footlights, looking old enough that they could have
purchased their '40s suits brand new. The drummer swings a mid-tempo
blues, and the horns pop to attention in unison. The trombonist
and trumpeter seem mic-shy, stammering tentative solos.
But the tenor
saxophonist delivers a confident chorus, swaggering just behind
a strident beat. By the time the vocalist, a tall man dressed in
black from his patent leathers to his fez, steps forward, the band
has found communion.
"I took a trip
on a train," he sings in rich baritone. "And I thought about you."
This is not
a sepia-toned outtake from Ken Burns' ponderously reverent Jazz.
This is live from Portland, where a group of septuagenarian jazz
pioneers have banded together as the Original Cats, intent on breathing
old-school vitality into the new scene. Don't mistake the Cats for
some Preservation Hall-style touristic nostalgia trap, either. These
guys have never relinquished their love for the jam.
"Man, we're
just having fun," says vocalist Sweet Baby James Benton.
Between them,
these five heavyweights boast a staggering 200-plus years of experience.
First cousins Bobby Bradford and Cleve Williams have been a trumpet-trombone
tag team since their teens. Bass journeyman Frank de la Rosa put
his stride behind Ella Fitzgerald and others. The senior among seniors
at 77, tenor swing master Bobby Hernandez backed up hundreds of
singers in Vegas pitcrews, including Sinatra himself.
Bradford's first
stage gig was in Bill Clinton's own Hope, Ark., where he tap-danced
with the Ike Wilson Band.
Soul shouter
Benton is a human landmark of Portland jazz, one of the instigators
of the thriving '50s scene on North Williams Avenue. Anchored by
Benton's own Jimmy's House of Jazz, Williams was one of a chain
of West Coast hot spots, strung together like pearls from Seattle
to L.A.
Benton tells
a tale of his early days on drums, adding rhythmic rim shots in
synch to the gyrations of nine "lady dancers" at the Desert Room.
"I remember
arguing with the guys in the band," says Benton, "to allow a certain
17-year-old drummer on the bandstand. They finally agreed, and young
Mel Brown had sparks flying off the walls." Brown, Portland's reigning
drum god, will sit in with the Cats sometimes.
The group's
recent debut gig at Berbati's was a sweet shot of Kansas City-style
soul that proved how well the big-band jam-session fabric has worn.
At one point, Benton crooned the refrain to
"I Want a Little Girl," trawling the line with his head back and
eyes closed. Then his eyes opened wide as his arms sketched the
air, and he locked his gaze on one of the young female scenesters.
As she smiled back, he cooed, "You, baby, you turn me on," with
a mix of teen testosterone bluster and Barry White's knowing sensuality.
The horns swelled
beneath him. He sailed the refrain again and again, to a climactic
and sublime blues--raw and laced with the bittersweet elegance of
a man who knows he can't quite quench every appetite anymore, but
he can try.
By the closer
"Flip, Flop and Fly," the group had the crowd standing and singing
along on the chorus--"I don't care if I die"--and believing it.
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