Jam
Magazine Review
AnnaLee and the Lucky
So and Sos
Goin’ To Chicago
Personnel: AnnaLee, vocals; Bill Irvine, guitar(s), vocals;
Steve Smith, sax, violin, vocals; Bob Jolley, drums; Steven
Drummond, piano; David Firman, bass Tracks: I May Be Wrong,
Choo Choo Ch’ Boogie, The Cat and the Kitty, Moonlight
in Vermont, I’m Beginning to See the Light, Goin’ to
Chicago, Real Gone Cat, 5 Guys Named Moe, At Last, Oo Papa
Do, Caldonia, We the Cats (Shall Hep You) Recorded at Cricket
Lounge Studio, 2007.
Arrangements: Bill Irvine and Steve Smith. Engineer, Mixing
and Mastering, Bill Irvine.
It only takes a single track to figure out what Goin’ to
Chicago, the 2007 recording from AnnaLee and the Lucky So and
Sos is all about – 1930’s style jump swing a la
Cab Calloway. It’s a musical style that never really
goes away. It’s fun, it invites toe tapping and dancing
and a beer or two.
This recording is exciting in ways similar to other reincarnations
of this style. Louis Prima and his entourage had a lot of success
with it in the 1950s, the Widespread Depression Orchestra (later
the Widespread Jazz Orchestra) also had a fan base with their
version in the 1970s and 1980s.
You may also hear some similarities to some western swing
and the early rhythm and blues that led to rock and roll.
The songs they choose are either from “the era”,
and even the two Bill Irvine originals sound like they could
have been. There are a couple of famous Basie/Rushing tunes
(“I Many Be Wrong” and “Goin’ to Chicago”),
Duke’s “I’m Beginning to See the Light”,
Cab’s “We the Cats (Shall Hep You)” and Louis
Jordan’s “5 Guys Names Moe”. There is “Caldonia” and “Oo
Papa Do” and “Choo Choo Ch’ Boogie”.
We’ll get to AnnaLee’s vocals in a sec, but I
need to mention a couple of the guys in the band. Guitarist
Irvine (and vocalist on a couple of tracks) is fine both in
lead (try the opening to “Chicago” and his chorus
on his own “Real Gone Cat”) and rhythm (“See
the Light” for example) roles. Steve Smith plays both
sax and violin. The sax may remind you of Jordan or even Hank
Crawford, and his violin does the same work: nice riffs behind
AnnaLee and an occasional solo. Steven Dillman also has some
solo work, and is excellent behind AnnaLee on the ballad “Moonlight
in Vermont”.
Yes, ballad. Ballads, actually, because there is also “At
Last”. On these tracks AnnaLee reminds of a couple of
good and versatile female soul singers from the 1960s, Barbara
Mason immediately comes to mind. And she is good on the ballads.
But the jump blues are where she really shines. She shouts
and growls, she has the rhythm needed to make these tunes sound
great.
Bill O’Connor’s liner notes call this a musical
time machine, an update to a sound that continues to be infectious.
It’s a great sound, and it’s in fine hands with
AnnaLee and the Lucky So and Sos. I’m hepped.
—Roger Atkinson |