Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Vince Giordano: New York, NY, August 14, 2012
Vince Giordano: New York, NY, August 14, 2012
BySofia's Restaurant
New York, NY
August 14, 2012
Vince Giordano receives well-deserved attention for the twenties and thirties repertoire he's brought to the radio on A Prairie Home Companion, films such as 2008's Revolutionary Road and 2004's The The Aviator, and most recently the HBO series Boardwalk Empire, for which Giordano and his band the Nighthawks received a Grammy. Coverage also mentions Giordano's home, full of records, instruments, sheet music and more, evidencing his lifelong dedication to this era. Yet, perhaps Giordano and the Nighthawks' most important contribution is ensuring that this repertoire and era remain live music, every Monday and Tuesday night at Sofia's in midtown Manhattan.
Words like "early" and "vintage" often appear when describing the Nighthawks, yet the band simply has its own style, chronological qualifiers notwithstanding. Filling in for regular Nighthawks drummer Arnie Kinsella, John Meyers' snare technique and finger cymbals, Jim Fryer's hot euphonium, and soloists sticking to just one chorus were either "authentic" touches or simply a different aesthetic, as productive for these musicians as the post-war jazz vocabulary is for others.
The Nighthawks perform a rotating program of classics and obscurities from Giordano's collection. Instead of the typical head-solos-head format, it's what the bandleader glowingly describes as ..."a combination of orchestrated stuff and loose jazz." Tuesday night included intriguing works such as

Paul Whiteman
composer / conductor1890 - 1967
Rube Bloom
b.1902Giordano's band, consisting of New York pros obviously at home in any musical setting, play with a drive, humor and precision that takes this music beyond mere recreation. "Glad Rag Doll" pitted

Andy Rothstein
guitarFud Livingston
b.1906
Jon-Erik Kellso
cornetb.1964

Dan Block
saxophoneSolos are a means rather than an end of musical expression for the Nighthawks, with every member of the eleven-piece band taking a turn at some point. Jazz purists may be unnerved by the band playing many of the same solos heard on the original records, but Mike Ponella sounded just as inspired by

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Benny Morton
tromboneb.1907

Fletcher Henderson
arranger1897 - 1952
Giordano did open up some charts for additional solos, such as a white-knuckled "Casa Loma Stomp." He also mixed in improvised additions, like his own impressive bass sax bridge on "Glad Rag Doll" (Giordano also slapped string bass and occasionally sang in a rhythmic, earnest tenor). The Nighthawks also stripped down to a smaller front line with rhythm section to jam on warhorses such as "That's A Plenty." Guitarist/banjoist Ken Salvo and pianist Peter Yarin (put through his paces a few times on lightning fast features) rounded out the rhythm section and supported the Nighthawks' buoyant, infectious rhythm.
Rhythm might be this music's most recognizable element, and judging from the dancers and listeners, perhaps the Nighthawks' most magnetic draw. Sometimes more stomp than swing, other times more familiarly smooth (for example on a glow-in-the-dark "Begin the Beguine," spotlighting

Dan Levinson
clarinetTags
Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks
Live Reviews
Vince Giordano
Andrew J. Sammut
United States
New York
New York City
Gordon Jenkins
Paul Whiteman
Rube Bloom
Andy Stein
Fud Livingston
Jon-Erik Kellso
Dan Block
Louis Armstrong
Benny Morton
Fletcher Henderson
Dan Levinson
Comments
About Vince Giordano
Instrument: Composer / conductor
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