Packham, Kit & One Jump Ahead: Jumpin' on the Bandwagon

Packham, Kit & One Jump Ahead: Jumpin' on the Bandwagon

Packham, Kit & One Jump Ahead: Jumpin' on the Bandwagon

Format: CD

Regular price $15.52
/

On average, orders containing available-to-ship items are processed and dispatched within 1-2 business days, although this is not guaranteed.

Orders containing preorder items will ship as 1 fulfillment once all items in the order are available to ship.

Please note, Tower Records Merchandise and Exclusives are dispatched separately. On average, these items take 3-4 business days to dispatch, although this is not guaranteed.

The estimated shipping times that are displayed at checkout are from the point of dispatch. 

See our shipping policy for more information.

We have a 30-day return policy, which means you have 30 days after receiving your item(s) to make a return.

To be eligible for a return of an unwanted item, your item must be in the same condition that you received it and in its original packaging.

In the unfortunate situation that a product is damaged/faulty/incorrect, let us know and we will endeavor to correct any issue as soon as possible.

Please see our refund policy for more information.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Description

Title: Jumpin' on the Bandwagon
Artist: Packham, Kit & One Jump Ahead
Label: CD Baby
Product Type: COMPACT DISCS
UPC: 5036098002164
Genre: Blues

'...We're not trying to push back any frontiers...' - part of the lyrics from 'Jumpin' on the Bandwagon' which express the band's intentions for this album. '...we try to use the familiarity and durability of past classics as a springboard to express our own feelings about life in the new millennium', says bandleader Kit Packham in his sleeve notes. He goes on to say a few words about each track which draw on a wide variety of musical genres within a broad jazz and blues spectrum. You may hear Louis Jordan, Ian Dury, Willie Dixon, Charles Mingus, Chuck Berry, Viv Stanshall, Louis Prima, Noel Coward, Mose Allison... or none of these! What you will hear is some great songs played by a great band. R E V I E W S Humorous blues lyrics don't come any better - cleverer or funnier - nowadays than those from Kit Packham's pen, and there are two or three new examples here which are as good as anything I've heard from him before. 'We Don't Normally Work This Cheap' in particular is exceptionally witty, and actually had me laughing out loud the first time I heard it. 'Cleaning Up My Act' too, is as amusing a piece of 1920s-style-jazz-vaudeville as you'll hear this side of the Bonzos. Anyone expecting this surfeit of good humour to equate with a lack of musical seriousness would be wildly mistaken, since Packham's comedy sits upon a bedrock of real jump'n'jive know-how and instrumental earnestness - this is a band, after all, which even gives a 'beats-per-minute' reading beside each track title. Personnel-wise, the band is not greatly changed from that which appeared on 1999's From Top to Toe, with Billy Jenkins again displaying the subtler side of his guitar range and tastefully producing throughout. Also worthy of mention here are the keyboard skills of Perry White, Simon Da Silva's trumpet work, and the fine rhythm backline of Chris Rodel (double bass) and Kenrick Rowe (drums). Sax duties are shared between Tracey Mendham and Kit himself. The songs, all originals this time, display a wide range of influences, not just the blues, jazz and jive tunes Packham praises in his amusingly honest sleeve note, but also Caribbean and Latin American music. The band switch styles and tempos with ease, and although Kit is not the greatest singer on the block, he plays the "personality vocalist" card with some aplomb. All things considered it's a very impressive set. Rating: 8 - Paul Lewis (copyright 2001 Blueprint magazine) S S S S S S S S S S S S I confess that I haven't checked, but with this CD, I'm pretty sure I now have the first reference to David Beckham's haircut in my collection! Singer and saxophonist Kit Packham inhabits a nightmare world where clouds follow him around just to rain on him, his cat disappears under mountains of junk mail, maniac truckers rule the roads and only leave the cab "for diesel, the toilet or a doner kebab", his mobile phone never works and, when he does get to play a gig, he finds that "a big screen above us plays an old cup final, the dressing room doubles as the men's urinal" - welcome to the third millennium! As you may have guessed then, all the material is original - very original at times - if occasionally just a little too wordy (but these songs do stay in your head long after the album has ended). Much of the music is jump or jive, owing a lot to the likes of Louis (take your pick - Jordan, Prima, even a snatch of Satch) but often with it's own little musical twists, most often provided by guitarist Billy Jenkins, a well-known innovator on the UK jazz and blues scenes, whose solos and fills are kind of, er, Jimi Hendrix plays Tiny Grimes as imagined by Vernon Reid of Living Color. Drummer Kenrick Rowe also deserves a mention for being totally on the ball, though there are no slackers here. There are a couple of Caribbean styled pieces in "Fried Bananas" (cod Louis Jordan plays cod calypso) and the mellow "Simple Things In Life", "Junk Mail" is almost Little Richard style, "Rough and Ready Blues" is virtually that, and the final number is a lyrically very clever and up to the minute song with a twenties jazz accompaniment and delivery. Oh, and "Big Swinging Dick" is about "a long-legged sleuth with a sideline in syncopation" - why, what did you think it was? Yeah, this is nice. If you like your jump-jivers note for note from old 78s, avoid this like the plague; otherwise, if what you have read here has piqued your interest, check it out by all means.... And by the way, don't take the title too literally. Kit has been purveying this brand of music around South London and environs for well over twenty years now. Norman Darwen (copyright 2001 Blues & Rhythm) S S S S S S S S S S S S This is Packham's best album to date. All originals from the leader with help from guitarist Billy Jenkins and arranged within a framework of jump, jive and boogie. The band (One Jump Ahead) play like a well-oiled machine but not like clockwork. There's loose rhythmic feel and the vibrant happy sound of people enjoying themselves. Packham and Jenkins supply some quality tunes including a number that will strike a chord with many bands (We Don't Normally Work This Cheap). The lyrics cover all the deflating experiences of a struggling band and even established ones no doubt. The Big Swinging Dick is obviously about a private eye with rhythm and is a good rousing number to boot! A good mixture of serious blues and tongue-in-cheek numbers that could make a party swing. David Lands (copyright 2001 Jazz Journal International) S S S S S S S S S S S S ........Once again Kit Packham and One Jump Ahead have come up with a highly entertaining album..... As always, the music from this big swinging outfit is superb and such is the range - everything from Chicago blues to boogie-woogie, jumpin' jive and and good time singalong - that this CD is a complete show in itself....... Chris Woodford (copyright 2001 Now Dig This)

Tracks:
1.1 Jumpin' on the Bandwagon
1.2 The Blues Is in My Blood
1.3 Sad Times. Co. UK
1.4 We Don't Normally Work This Cheap
1.5 Junk Mail
1.6 The Day My World Collapsed
1.7 Fried Bananas
1.8 The Big Swinging Dick
1.9 The Simple Things in Life
1.10 Rough ; Ready Blues
1.11 Tarmac Jack
1.12 Talk, Talk, Talk
1.13 Cleaning Up My Act

Audio Sample:
All soundclips are provided by Tidal and are for illustrative purposes only. For some releases, the tracks listed may not accurately represent the tracks on the physical release.
Recently viewed