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Jacqui Dankworth: I Can't Help Pouring My Heart Out

Things of worth often happen quietly, like when a flower grows or when you gain enlightenment--you don't necessarily know it's happening. After losing dad I started to realize what he meant to me.

John Dankworth
saxophone1927 - 2010

Cleo Laine
vocals1927 - 2025
Jacqui's recording career started in the early '90s. It encompasses jazz, blues and crossover recordings, including an album with The Passion, a trio with

Liane Carroll
piano and vocalsThis interview was planned to take place after the album launch at one of the regular Music In The Garden concerts held each year in the grounds of The Rectory at Wavendon: the Dankworth family home since the early '60s. The British weather intervened. Torrential rain forced the postponement of the launch and so the interview took place two days before the event, during a week which Jacqui had spent reorganizing the event, and the band.
She began by talking about the album's genesis. "We started work on it maybe two years before dad died, so the first sessions were done about three and a half years ago, in early 2008. We did it in three or four different stages. The first lot of recording was done in mum and dad's front room: I was singing in the conservatory, the mobile studio was outside with loads of wires leading into the house. Then mum broke her leg, soon after that initial recording."
Dame Cleo's recovery took almost a year, after which she and Sir John caught up with touring commitments. Sir John became seriously ill soon after, but continued to work on the album's arrangements and orchestrations with the help of Ken Gibson, his ex-student. Gibson, along with producer Tony Platt, was key to the album's sound. "Ken has been a friend of the family for 25 or 30 years. When dad was really ill we would all sit around his bed and listen to the arrangements and dad would give Ken notes. Dad had done quite a few of the arrangements himself but as he got too weak to carry on, when it became too difficult to concentrate for more than half an hour or so, we would work a little at a time and Ken came down to help."

There are plenty of well-known and instantly recognizable songs on It Happens Quietly, including standards such as "Make Someone Happy" and "At Last." The title song was co-written by Sir John and Buddy Kaye in the early '60s, as Jacqui explains: "It was written for a film called Salt And Pepper (1968), which starred

Sammy Davis Jr.
vocals1925 - 1990
Just before this interview Jacqui found another, rather fitting, connection to the song's title. "I Google'd "It Happens Quietly" the other night and found a reference to this Indian guru who talks about how things of worth often happen quietly, like when a flower grows or when you gain enlightenmentyou don't necessarily know it's happening. And I thought that this was quite poignant: after losing dad I started to realize what he meant to me."

Although that alto solo is Sir John's only performance, his personality is stamped across the album through his arrangements, and also through his vocal presence on "A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square" and "The Man." On both tunes Sir John can be heard organizing the recording, counting in the musicians. "We did that at the beginning and the end of the album: we thought it made a nice sort of 'bookend' for the recording. It's important for people to know that he was involved in it, that he was very much part of the whole process."
The lineup of musicians on It Happens Quietly is outstanding: almost a who's who of contemporary straight-ahead British jazz. Some, such as drummer Steve Brown, have worked with both Jacqui and Sir John over many years. The selection of these musicians was another collaboration: "The rhythm players are people I've worked with a lot. Malcolm Edmonstone is my regular pianist and musical director, I've worked with him for ten years or more. Chris Allard, the guitarist, is also in my band." Jacqui's brother Alec Dankworth plays bass on most of the tunes, with Steve Watts taking on the role for three numbers. "Alec is on the numbers from the first session, the session which we did in mum and dad's house. He couldn't make the second session, which was in London, so Steve came on for that one." There's a large wind section, featuring yet more top players. "Yeah, that's true.

Henry Lowther
trumpetb.1941

Tim Garland
clarinet, bassb.1966
On tour there will be different combinations of players, varying by venue and event and ranging from trios to larger ensembles with strings. "We've got different versions of the arrangements, but it's nice to have Ben Davis on cello because you can then hint at the full string arrangements. We are aiming to do some gigs with the orchestra next year: we'll also be doing a concert at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester later this year, with a string section formed by the students."
The string arrangements are one of the most striking elements of the album. There's a lush romanticism to some of them that, while they are very definitely contemporary, gives them a feel that harks back to the '30s and '40s. Jacqui pauses for a few seconds to consider this before replying. "I'm not sure if dad would like that interpretation or not. He was composing right up until he died and it certainly wasn't a deliberate thing, to try to recreate that period's sound. But I'm glad it's got that classic feel."

Jacqui's parents were both talented individuals, and a central part of the British music scene, so following in their footsteps in some way seemed inevitable. "I don't think there was ever a time when I thought I would do something else. There was never anything else I was any good at, to be honest," she says, laughing. Jacqui's first move was not into singing, however, but acting. Eventually, her singing career took precedence and acting was put to one side, but she is once again looking towards acting. "I've just got an agent again, in the last few months. It was quite hard, coming back after I hadn't done anything for a while, but we'll see how it goes."

Talking of the link between acting and singing, Jacqui is reminded of one of the great singers, and his acting skills, as she relates: "I remember seeing

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998
Selected Discography
Jacqui Dankworth, It Happens Quietly (Specific Jazz, 2011)
Jacqui Dankworth, Back To You (Cadiz Music, 2009)
The Passion, One Good Reason (Qnote Records, 2008)
Jacqui Dankworth, Detour Ahead (Candid Records, 2004)
Jacqui Dankworth, As The Sun Shines Down On Me (Candid Records, 2003)
Jacqui Dankworth and James Pearson, For All We Know (Black Box, 2000)
Jacqui Dankworth and New Perspectives, Housman Settings (Spotlite Jazz, 1996)
Photo Credits
Page 1: Courtesy of

Jacqui Dankworth
vocalsb.1963
All Other Photos: Bruce Lindsay
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