www.allaboutjazz.com
Jack Bowers
BILL PRINCE
Happy Thoughts
Some people, it seems, will do almost anything to avoid hiring a band.
(Sorry, Bill; couldn't resist the cheap shot.) The truth is, Bill Prince
is no one-man band - but if it weren't for Rick Kirkland he would be!
Kirkland plays drums on Prince's spectacular new "big-band" album, Happy
Thoughts, and Prince plays everything else. That's right - trumpets,
trombones, reeds, even piano and bass! How does he do it? That was
the first question that sprang to mind as I listened to this
awe-inspiring tour de force by an enormously impressive but relatively
unknown musician from Jacksonville, FL, thinking all the while - as I
laughed out loud at the sheer improbability of what I was hearing - that
there should be a law against anyone harboring that much talent in one
body (shades of James Morrison!). Here's how Prince explains it:
"Creating this CD was a four-step process. Step one involved developing
sequenced bass and piano tracks. Then, the horn parts were recorded. The
next step was the addition of the drum tracks by Rick Kirkland. For the
final step I replaced the sequenced rhythm tracks with live bass and
piano. The end result is a live recording. The entire project spanned a
two-year period." And the result, we should add, was well worth waiting
for. Oh, and did we mention that Prince also wrote and arranged every
song on the album? Yes, that too. And not one of them is second-rate.
Solos? They're amazing as well. Prince even changes his "personality"
(musical ideas) while improvising on various instruments, and
on the same ones too, as for example his several disparate trombone
solos on "Bone Amis" or trumpet "duels" on "Lester's Leap" or "Song for
Two Trumpets." In a blindfold test, I'd suspect, only the most
knowledgeable and perceptive Jazz connoisseur could tell there's only
one person playing (or less than a dozen, for that matter). What else
does Prince do? Well, on "You Be That Way" he uses five clarinets in
unison, much like a saxophone section, to pay homage to Benny Goodman
and other clarinet maestros; pairs trumpet, soprano sax and electric
piano on "Samba de Oro," features trumpets and baritone sax on "Lester
Leaps," clarinet again on "Ebony Dance," two C flutes, two alto flutes,
two flugelhorns and three trombones on "Lila," uncloaks a warm,
well-modulated tenor sax on the ballad "Lush" - and we've barely
scratched the surface. Kirkland, meanwhile, has his moment in the sun on
"Aw! Gimme a Break," dedicated by Prince "to all those drummers who are
relegated to keeping time and never get a chance to shine." Kirkland
shines. Happy Thoughts - as Prince writes, "That's what this CD is all
about." And if you're not happier than before after listening to this
thoroughly tasteful and charming album, I honestly don't know what it
would take to put a smile on your face.
Track listing: Happy Thoughts; Song for Two Trumpets; Lester's Leap;
Ebony Dance; Lila; Bone Amis (Amee); Theme for a Love Story; You Be That
Way; April's Song; Karen's Song; Aw! Gimme a Break; Lush; Samba de Oro;
Closing Blues
Personnel: Rick Kirkland, drums; Bill Prince, everything else (trumpets,
trombones, reeds, bass, piano).
There are few musicians who can play virtually
every instrument in a jazz band, fewer still who could sound
professional playing a bebop trombone soli or swing clarinet passage,
and yet fewer still who can solo effectively on all the instruments,
much less compose and arrange for them. The only person I know who has
documented such expertise is Bill Prince on his outstanding CD, "Happy
Thoughts"; and his performance and writing is at such an incredibly high
musical
level that you will simply not believe it can be achieved by a single
individual. Get the CD, and get inspired by the best!
Antonio J. Garcia
Editor, IAJE Jazz Educators Journal
Director of Jazz Studies,
Virginia Commonwealth University