Showing posts with label swing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swing. Show all posts

Friday, September 10

Pop Idol Darius becomes big band hero

As we catch up with Darius Campbell, star of stage and small screen, we find him trapped slap bang in between interviews.

He’s busy promoting a musical tour which he’s producing himself, The History of the Big Bands, which visits Lincoln next month.

My slot was scheduled for 5.30pm, then tomorrow, than 4pm, 3pm, 2.30pm and 2.15pm, after he’d done a live broadcast. We settled for 3pm.

It sounds as though the likeable musical polymath is going through it a bit. But he confides that he really is living the dream.

Darius, who used to be Darius Danesh, said: “When I was 12 years old I was part of Scottish Opera in a children’s chorus and performed in the original production of The Trojans.

“Then I was a child actor in Carmen, which went to the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden.

“When I was backstage I always remember what was behind the backdrop curtain.

“There was a space five times the size of the onstage area, and twice the size of a football pitch. It was filled with the stage props and staging from all the great operas – it was a bit like stepping into the other side of the wardrobe into Narnia for me.

“I remember feeling that I wanted to be part of all that.”

But Darius gave up a promising operatic career to study English literature at university, before exploding back onto the scene via Pop Idol and Popstar to Operastar.

His career has now come full circle with the chance to once again beguile the theatre audience.

“I always wanted to be involved in telling a great story. Whether that’s in a love song, acting in Shakespeare or in a West End musical, whatever it might be. It’s the spectacle.”

Having recently performed as Escamillo in Raymond Gubby’s vast production of Carmen at the O2 Arena, this is now Darius’s own chance to run the show.

He said: “I’m experiencing the challenge of producing a tour, which is really exciting.

“I want to transport the audience back to a different era.

“I’ll be reliving the big bands through the eyes of band leaders like Duke Ellington and Count Basie, and taking the audience on a journey through the work of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Nat King Cole. I am supported by big band performers who are among the best musicians in Europe. It’s not just a gig – it’s a show.”

Fans of Darius will know his range. He was Billy Flynn in Chicago, Sky Masterson in the Olivier Award-winning Guys and Dolls and Rhett Butler in Gone With The Wind, all in the West End.

He wrote Colourblind, which went straight to No 1 after Pop Idol, then had a platinum album, five further top 10 singles, and a Sunday Times No6 best-selling book Sink Or Swim.

He has a particular soft spot for swing, and the crooning style that goes with it.

He said: “I love what Amy Winehouse did in reinventing 60s soul. The idea of crooning is something I like. I’m lucky that my training has allowed me to explore the range of my voice.

“The only other singer that’s doing that at the moment is Michael Buble. There’s only six or so specialists.”

So which is his favourite track from the show? After all it takes in music from Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, Woody Herman and Buddy Rich.

Of course, he’s non committal, but offers this as a tempting tit-bit: “I’m a big fan of everything that Not King Cole did.

“Big band was something that lent itself well to his deep velvety voice.”

There’s good news then, for Darius fans – he’s also putting together a tour album to go with the show, so you can hear his own deep, velvety voice whenever you want to...

Friday, August 27

Why it's a numbers game for Buddy Greco

Life is something of a numbers game for Buddy Greco. He’s just turned 84 and this is his 60th visit to the UK.

He’s on a run of 33 dates around the UK, on the back of his 70th album.

The big draw is that he’s no tribute act. The Rat Pack of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis were his best friends in the 60s and a quick search of the internet throws up dozens of images of them all having fun together during those heady days in Vegas.

Frank Sinatra rated his pal highly, saying “Buddy can make anything swing - nobody comes close in that department".

“The originals were my dearest friends in the world and I certainly miss them,” said Buddy.

“I tell stories about my relationship with Frank and Sammy and so on during the evening.”

Buddy Greco is a true legend and has been headlining in Vegas since the 1950s, yet his voice remains mellow and smooth. He started his career as pianist and vocalist for jazz musician Benny Goodman. When Goodman was recruiting for a bebop band, Buddy was one of the musicians he hired. Buddy, of course, went on to become one of America’s most popular entertainers.

He boasts Grammy and Emmy awards along hits including The Lady Is Tramp, Around The World and Girl Talk.

And now he’s taken on this huge UK tour and shows no sign of slowing.
Buddy says: “I’ve been very fortunate. My father lived until he was 99 and I have just turned 84.

“The music business is only a number. I don’t look it and certainly don’t feel it.

“I have always had a very successful career in Britain. This is my 60th trip here over the years.

“I first came with Benny Goodman in 1949. People have been wonderful to me all of my life. At one of the venues this time around a man in his 80s came up to me and asked me to sign a flyer from that Benny Goodman concert.

“Yet we have a whole new audience too. Young kids want to know about what it was like. They want to know about Marilyn Monroe, who was also one of my good friends. I love doing this.

“I do it because I love it. I’m now at that point where I just enjoy it more and more.”

Frank and Buddy

The tour takes in mostly theatres, compared with the cabaret venues of the past.

Buddy takes to the stage and does some numbers from his vast repertoire along with a little bit of chat about his great friends in the Rat Pack and their golden says in Vegas, then the tribute band The Rat Pack Is Back do their stuff, before the intermission. After that, Buddy’s wife of Lezlie Anders - who he is proud to point out is more than a couple of decades younger than he is – comes on for her tribute to Peggy Lee, before the pair combine for the finale. The Goodman Allstars Band and the Flamingo Vegas Showgirls complete the Las Vegas Experience.

While he’s not traveling, he’s settling down in the south-east to tweak his stage musical – a ‘Fever’ tribute to Peggy Lee, which he’s planning to take to the West End next year.

“We’ve found a gorgeous flat in Westcliffe on sea. I sold my house and nightclub in Palm Springs – we’re going to be here for quite a while!”

And there seems to be no stopping the creative talent that already has an impressive pedigree: “I’m a piano player/singer, not the other way around,” he said. “I try to get my hand into as many things as possible.”

“I’ve just finished my 70th album and I’m still writing, and recording and performing. And as long as the good Lord allows that’ I’ll carry on!”

Words by Patrick Astill, first published, and copyright Derby Telegraph