| Woody Allen
Takes Manhattan. |
Norman Weinstein, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
NEW YORK -- There's a Woody Allen quite different from the one we've
seen in films since the 1960s, and to discover this Woody Allen
you need to be in Manhattan on a Monday evening.
HEADLINER: Taking a break from his day job, Allen plays clarinet
as a member of a New York-based jazz band, shown here in Vienna
on a 1996 European tour.
(LEONHARD FOEGER/ REUTERS)
Then Woody Allen the jazz clarinetist regularly performs with his
New Orleans Jazz Band at the Carlyle Hotel. He's publicly performed
in Manhattan on Mondays for a quarter century, and the music created,
which is just now attracting worldwide attention, would be worthy
of attention even if a star like Allen weren't involved.
Allen the jazz fan has been richly evident in his film soundtracks,
where classic tunes by Thelonious Monk and Coleman Hawkins have
been showcased. When Allen portrayed the love-sick hero of his film
"Manhattan" (1979), perhaps a thinly veiled portrait of
himself, he cataloged reasons that made life worth living, with
the recording of "Potato Head Blues" by Louis Armstrong
making the list.
Influenced chiefly by traditional New Orleans clarinetist George
Lewis, Allen and his band - consisting of musical director and banjo
player Eddy Davis, trombonist Jerry Zigmont, drummer Rob Garcia,
bassist Greg Cohen, trumpeter Simon Wettenhall, and pianist Cynthia
Sayer - perform a tremendously entertaining range of pop and jazz
standards from a half century ago.
Yet it would be wrong to consider Allen's band as a retro outfit
steeped in nostalgia. What they communicate is a rowdy, loose, primitive
sensibility that has less to do with re-creating Dixieland jazz
and more to do with projecting a modern Manhattan form of New Orleans
jazz (the rhythm is more Times Square than Congo Square), played
with emotional brio.
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Allen plays like an inspired amateur; he's limited technically,
but he has enormous energy and charm.
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A hint of this flavor, unfortunately only a faint suggestion, can
be derived from listening to the only commercially available recording
of an earlier version of Allen's on the disc "The Bunk Project"
(MusicMasters). Seeing the band in concert permits a clear perception
of the group's winning and unique chemistry.
Allen plays clarinet like an inspired amateur; he's limited technically,
subject to faulty intonation and a reliance upon stock phrases.
But he has enormous energy and charm. The six other band members
are highly skilled technicians - yet Allen's clarinet playing draws
out, in the best sense, their nonprofessional (quirkily imperfect)
selves. So when wrong notes are hit, or entrances missed, the fluffs
are forgotten because the overall spirit of the ensemble is so ebullient.
A set recently heard at the Carlyle included chestnuts like "St.
Louis Blues" and "By the Light of the Silvery Moon."
Most surprising, and not typically heard from a New Orleans-style
jazz band emphasizing up-tempo numbers, was "September Song,"
played as a touching duet, with Davis on banjo and vocals and Allen
on clarinet.
If you're not in Manhattan on Mondays, you may soon have another
way to savor Allen's band. Filmmaker Barbara Kopple has created
"Wild Man Blues," a two-hour documentary of the band during
their first European tour in 1996, set for release in April.