Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Red Holloway Quartet: San Diego, February 8, 2011
Red Holloway Quartet: San Diego, February 8, 2011

Plas Johnson
saxophoneb.1931
Saville Theater, San Diego City College
San Diego, CA
February 8, 2011
Red Holloway has "been there and done that" when it comes to jazz standards and all forms of the blues. While normally his specialties are both playing the tenor saxophone and belting out blues vocals, a recent fall had left him with an injured left hand. But no worrieshe just placed a call to his long time friend, Plas Johnson, who covered the tenor chair and left him to concentrate on singing.
If there is one word to sum up the extraordinary group of musicians assembled for this date, it would be: experience. Holloway himself has a ridiculously long c.v., which includes work with hard-bopper

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982

Jack McDuff
organ, Hammond B31926 - 2001

John Mayall
harmonica1933 - 2024

Henry Mancini
composer / conductor1924 - 1994

Charles Brown
piano and vocals1922 - 1999

B.B. King
guitar, electric1925 - 2015

Peggy Lee
vocals1920 - 2002

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998
The concert was sponsored by the jewel of San Diego radio, KSDS Jazz 88, and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. They've been presenting this monthly series, year in and out, for decades. The small, but acoustically superb Saville Theater was sold out a week in advance, and the audience was pumped for their manprobably on the strength of a concert he had given ten years earlier at the same venue.
The band wasted no time launching into a slow, sumptuous reading of the

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Ben Webster
saxophone, tenor1909 - 1973
Then Holloway joined the group for a grooving stroll through "Locksmith Blues." Like most of the blues tunes that followed, it featured double entendres and sexual innuendoes that the crowd cheered at every opportunity. The vocalist upped the humor quotient with his randy delivery of "Yes, Yes, Yes" (sample lyric: "You could tell, she had a lot of class/ As I gazed at her yes, yes, yes.") and induced loudly enthusiastic sing-alongs on multiple occasions. One could tell from his playful banter in between songs that this degree of audience participation seemed to energize him. He was having a blast.
Bassist Reid soloed on almost every tune, and his contributions were swinging, succinct and synchronized with his gravelly humming. Johnson was the main soloist, his warm, pliant tenor running the changes with a relaxed and elegant élan, a sound that harkens back to players like

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

James Brown
vocals1933 - 2006
There were serious moments as well, like Johnson's tender reading of "Talk Of The Town," which made one think about the original intent of the lyrics. Perhaps the most poignant story of the concert came when pianist Hillary got his feature and chose the seldom played standard "Delilah," laying it out with a deliciously paced slow burn. His solo built from spare legato single notes and sparse voice leading into an ever-insistent crescendo that stopped well short of showing off, demonstrating a

Hank Jones
piano1918 - 2010
Holloway promised that the drummer would be featured on the finale with a wild, swinging romp on the Ellington / Tizol vehicle "Caravan." He wasn't kidding. King started off with a long drum solo, then took another one at the half-way mark. It could have come off as showboating, but instead just seemed ebullient, and the man didn't repeat himself once in either solo as he laid out a master class in swing.
Before the last notes of "Caravan" had disappeared into the night, the audience rose to their feet, cheered wildly, and remained for several moments until the lights came up. Holloway seemed humbled by all of the attention, and stood at the edge of the stage, gesturing with gratitude and drinking it all in.
Photo Credit
Anthony Cecena
Tags
Red Holloway
Live Reviews
Robert Bush
United States
Plas Johnson
Sonny Stitt
Jack McDuff
John Mayall
Henry Mancini
Charles Brown
B.B. King
Peggy Lee
frank sinatra
duke ellington
ben webster
Dexter Gordon
James Brown
Hank Jones
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