What do you do when your listeners clap on 1 and 3 instead of 2 and 4? Do you stop the music and chastise the audience for crippling the song with a stilted beat?
This is the situation Harry Connick Jr found himself in when performing in France a dozen or so years ago. But rather than stop the song Connick got the audience to clap on 2 and 4 without them even knowing it.
Here’s the clip. Pay attention to what happens around 0:39.
WTF! Up until 0:39 everybody is clapping on 1 and 3 but from 0:42 the audience is clapping on 2 and 4.
How’d he do that?
He added a 5/4 bar; that is, he added one extra beat that displaced the audience clapping so the tune went from square to hip.
Brilliance. And that he came up with the solution mid-performance is genius.
We had a wonderful turnout last month and have some nice videos to share, care of Brickman Studios.
Thanks again to all who came out and to the bandmembers that night:
Rob Paparozzi, Andricka Hall, Russ Velazquez, Clifford Carter, Al Orlo, Gene Lewin, Larry Etkin, Louise Baranger, Bill Harris, Jon Saxon, Alessandra Levy, Anne Carpenter, and Sarah Peck.
and our guests:
Bobby Harden and Steve Walter.
When Something is Wrong with My Baby
Featuring Andricka Hall and Bobby Harden.
Soul Man, Hold On, Wrap It Up
“Sam and Dave” medley, featuring Rob Paparozzi, Bobby Harden, and Russ Velazquez.
Tell Me Something Good
Featuring Andricka Hall on vocals, Rob Paparozzi on harmonica, and Al Orlo on guitar.
When I associate actors with theme songs I come up with combinations like Alan Alda and Mash, Hal Linden and Barney Miller and Alan Reed (voice of Fred Flintstone) and, well, The Flintstones.
But there’s one actor that is associated with three great theme songs.
Last Thanksgiving I mentioned to my brother, Rick, that I was thinking of performing the theme from Secret Agent at The Top Shelf’s next show. Secret Agent was a popular spy show from the 1960s, starred Patrick McGoohan, and had a great theme song (“Secret Agent Man”) that became a big hit for Johnny Rivers.
Here’s a clip of Rivers performing the song for the TV show Live at the Hollywood Palace.
Rick thought that “Secret Agent Man” was good, but that I should do “High Wire” instead.
I looked at my brother like I didn’t know what he was talking about because I in fact did not know what he was talking about.
Rick, showing more patience with me than usual, explained that “High Wire” was the theme song to Danger Man.
I again looked at my brother like I didn’t know what he was talking about because…
With even greater patience, Rick explained that Danger Man was the name in the UK for Secret Agent and that Danger Man had its own theme song, “High Wire.”
And that theme song is terrific. Here’s a clip of it performed by Jools Holland and his band from a documentary about the song’s composer, Edwin Astley.
But wait, there’s more.
Patrick McGoohan starred in a cult sci-fi / mystery series called The Prisoner and it, too, had a great theme song (one at the start of the show and a different one for the closing credits). Here’s a snippet.
Does any other actor come close to having this many great theme songs?
And if this arsenal doesn’t elevate McGoohan to “serious badass” in your eyes, consider this clip of him playing drums from the 1962 film All Night Long.
While McGoohan is not, in fact, playing drums he apparently worked very hard so that it would be convincing.
Earlier this year the music world lost Wilton Felder. Most people familiar with Felder know him as a brilliant saxophone player and founding member of the jazz / funk / soul super group The Crusaders.
What many people don’t know is that in the early 1970s Felder was also a first-call studio bass player and is responsible for laying down one the greatest bass lines in pop music history.
Here for your enjoyment is Felder’s isolated bass line to The Jackson 5’s “I Want You Back.” I’ve studied and played this line countless times and marvel at Felder’s tone, clarity, and rock-solid groove. This is as good as it gets.
The Top Shelf is celebrating its fifth anniversary — we performed for the first time on April 3, 2010 (at 12 Grapes in Peekskill, NY.)
Thank you to everyone who has come out to see the band, the venues where we’ve performed (The Cutting Room, Mohegan Sun, The Towne Crier, DROM, and 12 Grapes), the families and organizations that have hired us, and especially the stellar musicians who have performed in the band.
Keyboard
Saxophone
Trumpets
Vocals
Jon Cobert
Jon Saxon
Louise Baranger
Angela Clemmons
Clifford Carter
Joe Meo
Tim Ouimette
Edlene Hart
Lon Hoyt
Bill Harris
Clay Beard
Russ Velazquez
David Keyes
Mark Fineberg
Dave Stangarone
Andricka Hall
Jeff Schiller
Chris Pasin
Keith Fluitt
Drums / Percussion
Shane Kirsch
Greg Ruvulo
Rob Paparozzi
Gene Lewin
Rick Kriska
Lew Soloff
Dennis Collins
Roger Post
Joe Giorgianni
Tom “Blues Buddha” Dudley
Denny McDermott
Guitar
Jon Leonard
Curtis Winchester
Mark Dodge
Peter Calo
John Trombetta
Chrissi Poland
Norberto Goldberg
Al Orlo
Chris Melito
Wondress Hutchinson
David Yee
Andrew Zinsmeister
Bill Ash
Diana Wexler
Duncan Cleary
Rosharra Francis
Will Van Sise
Alessandra Levy
Hank Decora
Mariama Ceesay
Sarah Ann Sillers
Carly Cantor
Here’s a recording of “Rehab” featuring Edlene Hart from our first show at 12 Grapes.
Here’s a video from our most recent show at The Cutting Room on February 6, 2015.
Trumpet Legend Lew Soloff passed away in the early morning hours of Sunday, March 8, 2015 in New York City.
Soloff was the consummate New York musician whose 50-plus year career spanned thousands of recording sessions and live performances with artists such as Gil Evans, Blood Sweat and Tears, Frank Sinatra, Carla Bley, Barbra Streisand, Machito, Marianne Faithfull, Paul Shaffer, Manhattan Brass, Jon Faddis and Ornette Coleman.
The Top Shelf had the honor of working with Lew on September 27, 2013 when he took over the lead trumpet duties for a performance at The Cutting Room. A highlight of the evening was Lew performing his iconic solo from the Blood Sweat & Tears’ hit “Spinning Wheel.”
Thank you, Lew, for all the great music and for a terrific gig.
Click to read Soloff’s obituary in the New York Times.
First it was “Blurred Lines” and then “Happy”. It looks like the next “gonna-hear-it-at-every-wedding song” will be Bruno Mars’ “Uptown Funk”.
Except … it’s not a Bruno Mars tune. Officially, it’s a Mark Ronson song that features Bruno Mars.
And just who is Mark Ronson? He’s a household name in the UK but is not well known in the US despite producing Amy Winehouse’s mega hit album Back to Black and its Grammy winning single “Rehab”.
No matter whether it’s by Bruno Mars or Mark Ronson, it’s a really fun tune, with a great performance from Mars and an excellent arrangement and production from Ronson.
And I’ll be okay hearing it and playing it. Probably a lot.
Thank You, Lew Soloff
Trumpet Legend Lew Soloff passed away in the early morning hours of Sunday, March 8, 2015 in New York City.
Soloff was the consummate New York musician whose 50-plus year career spanned thousands of recording sessions and live performances with artists such as Gil Evans, Blood Sweat and Tears, Frank Sinatra, Carla Bley, Barbra Streisand, Machito, Marianne Faithfull, Paul Shaffer, Manhattan Brass, Jon Faddis and Ornette Coleman.
The Top Shelf had the honor of working with Lew on September 27, 2013 when he took over the lead trumpet duties for a performance at The Cutting Room. A highlight of the evening was Lew performing his iconic solo from the Blood Sweat & Tears’ hit “Spinning Wheel.”
Thank you, Lew, for all the great music and for a terrific gig.
Click to read Soloff’s obituary in the New York Times.