
I’ve had a busy DJing fortnight… well, month, really. I’ve done 6 sets this month, including a blues set. The week before last I did a double on Thursday, then a set on Friday, and then last week I did a set Wednesday and one Thursday. I’m about done with this. Remind me to talk about my sore ears, ok?
Any  how, here’re the sets I played that are kind of interesting.
This next set is the double from Thursday 24th April. It was a last minute double set, and for once the gig (CBD) actually had some people. It was the night before a public holiday, so there was an almost full room. Not the biggest ever, but much bigger than other weeks. And a mixed crowd, so I could play a mixed set. But I’d had a pretty horrible day, and wasn’t feeling terribly inspired or great. So I played the  most ordinary set of overplayed favourites ever. But people really liked it. They were dancing like fools, over-energised, over-adrenalined. Which was nice. I started at 8.30 and finished at 11. Here’s the set:
Moten Swing	Count Basie	135	1958	25/04/08 12:07 PM	4:50	Chairman Of The Board [Bonus Tracks]
Jump Ditty!	Joe Carroll and The Ray Bryant Quintet	134		25/04/08 9:49 PM	2:54	Joe Carroll Sings
I Diddle	Dinah Washington	153		1/05/08 10:15 PM	3:05
Tain’t Me	Roy Milton and his Solid Senders	158	1992	1/05/08 10:17 PM	2:34	Vol. 2: Groovy Blues
Fine Brown Frame	Nellie Lutcher	123	2006	25/04/08 12:18 PM	2:54	Fine Brown Frame
Big Fat Mama	Lucky Millinder	135		25/04/08 12:21 PM	3:09	Apollo Jump
Be Careful (If You Can’t Be Good)	Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra	121	1951	1/05/08 10:12 PM	3:09	Walk ‘Em
My Baby Just Cares For Me	Nina Simone	120		25/04/08 10:49 PM	3:38	The Great Nina Simone
Massachusetts	Maxine Sullivan	147	1956	25/04/08 12:32 PM	3:19	A Tribute To Andy Razaf
C-Jam Blues	Lincoln Centre Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis	143	1999	25/04/08 10:23 PM	3:34	Live In Swing City: Swingin’ With Duke
For Dancers Only	Jimmie Lunceford and His Orchestra	148	1937	25/04/08 9:59 PM	2:41	Swingsation – Jimmie Lunceford
Pan Pan	Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five	152	1941	1/05/08 10:20 PM	2:54	Louis Jordan And His Tympany Five (vol 2)
Drinkin’ Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee	Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra  with Sonny Parker	134	1949	25/04/08 9:56 PM	3:24	Hamp: The Legendary Decca Recordings
Solid as a Rock	Count Basie and His Orchestra with The Deep River Boys	140		30/04/08 11:20 PM	3:04	Count Basie and His Orchestra 1950-1951
Joog, Joog	Duke Ellington and His Orchestra	146	1949	30/04/08 11:17 PM	3:01	Duke Ellington and his Orchestra: 1949-1950
Pound Cake	Count Basie and His Orchestra with Lester Young	186	1939	24/04/08 9:23 PM	2:46	Classic Columbia, Okeh And Vocalion Lester Young With Count Basie (1936-1940) (Disc 2)
Good Queen Bess	Duke Ellington	160	1940	1/05/08 10:39 PM	3:00	The Duke Ellington Centennial Edition: Complete RCA Victor Recordings (disc 10)
Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)	Benny Goodman Sextet with Charlie Christian	150	1940	1/05/08 10:36 PM	3:13	Charlie Christian: The Genius of The Electric Guitar (disc 2)
Bli-Blip	Jonathan Stout And His Campus Five	140	2007	1/05/08 10:29 PM	2:44	Moppin’ And Boppin’
Jersey Bounce	Ella Fitzgerald	134	1961	24/04/08 9:36 PM	3:36	Clap Hands, Here Comes Charlie!
Blue Monday	Jimmy Witherspoon With Jay McShann And His Band	125	1957	1/05/08 10:05 PM	3:40	Goin’ To Kansas City Blues
Hallelujah, I Love Her So	Count Basie	145	1959	24/04/08 9:42 PM	2:36	Breakfast Dance And Barbecue
Tickle Toe	Count Basie and His Orchestra	234	1960	24/04/08 9:45 PM	2:36	The Count Basie Story (Disc 2)
Hop Skip and Jump	Mora’s Modern Swingtet	191	2004	24/04/08 9:47 PM	2:44	20th Century Closet
The Back Room Romp	Rex Stewart and His 52nd Street Stompers	152	1937	1/05/08 2:17 PM	2:49	The Duke’s Men: Small Groups Vol. 1 (Disc 2)
A Viper’s Moan	Willie Bryant And His Orchestra	153		24/04/08 9:54 PM	3:26	Willie Bryant 1935-1936
Apollo Jump	Lucky Millinder	143		30/04/08 11:08 PM	3:27	Apollo Jump
Jump Through The Window	Roy Eldridge and his Orchestra	154	1943	24/04/08 10:00 PM	2:42	After You’ve Gone
The Heebie Jeebies Are Rockin’ The Town (Alt Tk)	Red Allen & Lionel Hampton, vocal, & His Orchestra	141	1939	24/04/08 10:02 PM	2:44	The Complete Lionel Hampton Victor Sessions 1937-1941 (disc 3)
Walk ‘Em	Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra	131	1946	25/04/08 10:04 PM	2:53	Walk ‘Em
Hey! Ba-Ba-Re-Bop	Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra	136	1945	24/04/08 10:09 PM	3:22	Lionel Hampton Story 3: Hey! Ba-Ba-Re-Bop
Savoy Blues	Kid Ory	134		24/04/08 10:12 PM	3:01	Golden Greats: Greatest Dixieland Jazz Disc 3
Joshua Fit De Battle Of Jericho	Kid Ory And His Creole Jazz Band	160	1946	1/05/08 2:42 PM	3:13	Kid Ory and his Creole Jazz Band 1944-46
Shake That Thing	Vince Giordano	230	2004	24/04/08 10:18 PM	2:59	The Aviator
Blues My Naughty Sweetie	Sidney Bechet	140	1951	30/04/08 10:49 PM	5:44	The Blue Note Years
Tishomingo Blues	Carrol Ralph	128	2005	1/05/08 2:27 PM	4:15	Swinging Jazz Portrait
Going To Chicago	Barbara Morrison	126	2002	24/04/08 10:33 PM	5:35	Live At The 9:20 Special
Every Day I Have The Blues	Clark Terry Quintet and Carrie Smith	122	2001	24/04/08 10:38 PM	5:12	The Clark Terry Quintet: Live On QE2
Mumbles	Oscar Peterson	188	1964	24/04/08 10:40 PM	2:02	Ultimate Oscar Peterson As Selected By Ray Brown
Froggy Bottom	Jimmy Witherspoon With Jay McShann And His Band	155	1957	25/04/08 10:13 PM	2:37	Goin’ To Kansas City Blues
Sent For You Yesterday	Count Basie and His Orchestra with Joe Williams	163	1960	25/04/08 10:16 PM	3:10	The Count Basie Story (Disc 2)
Blues In Hoss’s Flat	Count Basie	144	1958	1/05/08 10:08 PM	3:13	Chairman Of The Board [Bonus Tracks]
Lavender Coffin	Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra with Sonny Parker and Joe James	134	1949	25/04/08 10:07 PM	2:47	Hamp: The Legendary Decca Recordings
On Revival Day	Lavern  Baker	144		25/04/08 10:10 PM	3:16	Lavern Sings Bessie Smith
As I said, it’s very ordinary. Nothing new except a Carole Ralph track and a Jimmy Witherspoon, neither of which are actually new.
Any how, the next night I played the Funpit gig. The room was absolutely solid. You couldn’t push your way into the room, let alone the dance floor. It was all beginners, too – people who’d only had a lesson or two. Plus a few other people with more experience. But no one who’d been dancing more than a year or two besides me, the teachers and one or two other people. In a room that was the crowdedest gig I’ve ever played in Melbourne. It was heaps of fun to play. But I was coming down with a cold, so when I got up to dance after my set I was too tired to dance more than a song. I spent the weekend being very ill, but I still had fun that night.
Here’s the set (Friday 25th April, 9.30-10.45pm, Funpit):
Splanky	Count Basie	125	1957	3:36	Complete Atomic Basie, the	25/04/08 9:47 PM
Jump Ditty!	Joe Carroll and The Ray Bryant Quintet	134		2:54	Joe Carroll Sings	25/04/08 9:49 PM
Hungry Man	Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five	135	1949	3:08	Louis Jordan And His Tympany Five (vol 6)	1/05/08 2:11 PM
Drinkin’ Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee	Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra  with Sonny Parker	134	1949	3:24	Hamp: The Legendary Decca Recordings	25/04/08 9:56 PM
For Dancers Only	Jimmie Lunceford and His Orchestra	148	1937	2:41	Swingsation – Jimmie Lunceford	25/04/08 9:59 PM
Are You Hep To The Jive?	Cab Calloway	160	1994	2:50	Are You Hep To The Jive?	25/04/08 10:01 PM
Walk ‘Em	Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra	131	1946	2:53	Walk ‘Em	25/04/08 10:04 PM
Lavender Coffin	Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra with Sonny Parker and Joe James	134	1949	2:47	Hamp: The Legendary Decca Recordings	25/04/08 10:07 PM
On Revival Day	Lavern  Baker	144		3:16	Lavern Sings Bessie Smith	25/04/08 10:10 PM
Froggy Bottom	Jimmy Witherspoon With Jay McShann And His Band	155	1957	2:37	Goin’ To Kansas City Blues	25/04/08 10:13 PM
Sent For You Yesterday	Count Basie and His Orchestra with Joe Williams	163	1960	3:10	The Count Basie Story (Disc 2)	25/04/08 10:16 PM
Blues In Hoss’s Flat	Count Basie	144	1958	3:13	Chairman Of The Board [Bonus Tracks]	1/05/08 10:08 PM
C-Jam Blues	Lincoln Centre Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis	143	1999	3:34	Live In Swing City: Swingin’ With Duke	25/04/08 10:23 PM
Be Careful (If You Can’t Be Good)	Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra	121	1951	3:09	Walk ‘Em	1/05/08 10:12 PM
Pan Pan	Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five	152	1941	2:54	Louis Jordan And His Tympany Five (vol 2)	1/05/08 10:20 PM
Ain’t Nothin’ To It	Fats Waller & His Rhythm	134	1941	3:10	Last Years (1940-1943) (Disc 2)	1/05/08 10:27 PM
Laughing In Rhythm	Slim Gaillard and his Peruvians	142	1951	2:56	Laughing In Rhythm: The Best Of The Verve Years	25/04/08 10:35 PM
Bli-Blip	Jonathan Stout And His Campus Five	140	2007	2:44	Moppin’ And Boppin’	1/05/08 10:29 PM
A Viper’s Moan	Mora’s Modern Rhythmists	143	2000	3:30	Call Of The Freaks	1/05/08 10:33 PM
Squatty Roo	Jonathan Stout And His Campus Five	173	2003	3:43	Jammin’ the Blues	25/04/08 10:45 PM
My Baby Just Cares For Me	Nina Simone	120		3:38	The Great Nina Simone	25/04/08 10:49 PM
Again, nothing new or exciting. I’m really quite a boring DJ these days. Partly because most of the stuff I’m buying (helloooooooo Jelly Roll Morton!) is completely inappropriate for lindy hop. Not so bad for blues dancing, though.
Then this week just passed I did my first set at Madame Dynamite’s. This is what I played:
Blue Monday	Jimmy Witherspoon With Jay McShann And His Band	125	1957	3:40	Goin’ To Kansas City Blues	1/05/08 10:05 PM
Hungry Man	Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five	135	1949	3:08	Louis Jordan And His Tympany Five (vol 6)	1/05/08 2:11 PM
Give Me Some Skin	Lionel Hampton and His Sextet	138	1941	3:16	The Complete Lionel Hampton Victor Sessions 1937-1941 (disc 5)	5/05/08 12:06 PM
The Back Room Romp	Rex Stewart and His 52nd Street Stompers	152	1937	2:49	The Duke’s Men: Small Groups Vol. 1 (Disc 2)	1/05/08 2:17 PM
Just Kiddin’ Around	Artie Shaw and His Orchestra	159	1941	3:21	Self Portrait (Disc 3)	1/05/08 2:20 PM
Bli-Blip	Jonathan Stout And His Campus Five	140	2007	2:44	Moppin’ And Boppin’	1/05/08 10:29 PM
Tishomingo Blues	Carrol Ralph	128	2005	4:15	Swinging Jazz Portrait	1/05/08 2:27 PM
The Blues B	Artie Shaw And His New Music	122	1937	2:59	Self Portrait (Disc 1)	1/05/08 2:30 PM
Deep Trouble	Jimmie Noone	161	1930	2:49	The Jimmie Noone Collection	5/05/08 12:09 PM
The Basement Blues	Nobel Sissle with Sidney Bechet	153	2000	3:16	Ken Burns Jazz Collection: Sidney Bechet	1/05/08 2:36 PM
Ballin’ The Jack	Bunk Johnson’s V-Disc Veterans	156	1944	2:45	Bunk And The New Orleans Revival 1942-1945	1/05/08 2:39 PM
Blues My Naughty Sweetie	Sidney Bechet	140	1951	5:44	The Blue Note Years	30/04/08 10:49 PM
Stuffy	Jonathan Stout And His Campus Five	153	2003	3:46	Jammin’ the Blues	30/04/08 10:53 PM
The Grabtown Grapple	Artie Shaw and His Gramercy 5	178	1945	2:57	Self Portrait (Disc 3)	30/04/08 10:56 PM
Peckin’	Johnny Hodges and His Orchestra	165	1937	3:10	The Duke’s Men: Small Groups Vol. 1 (Disc 2)	30/04/08 10:59 PM
The Heebie Jeebies Are Rockin’ The Town	Red Allen & Lionel Hampton, vocal, & His Orchestra	139	1939	2:44	The Complete Lionel Hampton Victor Sessions 1937-1941 (disc 3)	30/04/08 11:01 PM
Pan Pan	Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five	152	1941	2:54	Louis Jordan And His Tympany Five (vol 2)	1/05/08 10:20 PM
Apollo Jump	Lucky Millinder	143		3:27	Apollo Jump	30/04/08 11:08 PM
Half Tight Boogie	Jonathan Stout And His Campus Five	150	2003	3:13	Jammin’ the Blues	30/04/08 11:11 PM
Bogo-Jo	Lionel Hampton and His Sextet	158	1940	2:55	The Complete Lionel Hampton Victor Sessions 1937-1941 (disc 5)	30/04/08 11:14 PM
Joog, Joog	Duke Ellington and His Orchestra	146	1949	3:01	Duke Ellington and his Orchestra: 1949-1950	30/04/08 11:17 PM
Solid as a Rock	Count Basie and His Orchestra with The Deep River Boys	140		3:04	Count Basie and His Orchestra 1950-1951	30/04/08 11:20 PM
Till Tom Special	Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra	158	1940	3:24	Tempo And Swing	30/04/08 11:23 PM
Summit Ridge Drive	Artie Shaw and His Gramercy 5	128	1940	3:21	Self Portrait (Disc 2)	30/04/08 11:27 PM
Easy Does It	Big 18	129		5:14	 	30/04/08 11:32 PM
B-Sharp Boston	Duke Ellington and His Orchestra	126	1949	2:55	Duke Ellington and his Orchestra: 1949-1950	30/04/08 11:35 PM
It Takes Two to Tango	Lester Young and Oscar Peterson	104	1997	6:09	Lester Young With the Oscar Peterson Trio	1/05/08 2:04 PM

It was the second set (Wednesday 30th April, 9.30-late), there weren’t many people there at all and the floor was really slippery. I really struggled to find the right vibe that night. I’d expected a crowd who’d want old school, and mostly faster. I was looking forward to playing some of my newer, more obscure stuff. But that didn’t happen so much. I’m not sure if it was because I sucked or because the dancers just weren’t in the mood. I find it really difficult to work smaller crowds – I just need critical mass to really make them do what I want… or to get where I want to go. This crowd was also really into a bit of talking rather than dancing as well. So this set is more of the same, especially at the beginning, then there’s some newer stuff. I did play that ‘Give Me Some Skin’ song from my new Hampton Mosaic set (which I adore), I screwed up and played ‘Bogo-Jo’ instead of … some other song from that same set, and it didn’t work so well. So I recovered with a safety song, ‘Joog, Joog’. Overall, I wasn’t too happy with that set, but it didn’t suck. I mean, I liked the music a lot, and would  have liked to dance to it, but it didn’t really work the crowd properly. I also learnt that it’s important to be able to see the people sitting down not dancing as well as the dancers when I’m DJing. At the Funpit I couldn’t see anyone because it was so packed, but that’s kind of easier to work. At MD’s I couldn’t see the people sitting down, so I couldn’t judge their body language to see how they were feeling. Oh well.
I quite liked the bit from ‘The Blues B’ to ‘Ballin’ the Jack’. I’m especially fond of ‘Deep Trouble’. But that stuff doesn’t make for good lindy hop. It’s too early. I’m really loving 1927-1930 right now (incidentally, that’s the period the third season of House of Eliot is set, and I’m loving THAT – the skirt hems are so HIGH (knees! knees!)), but even though I know that’s when lindy began, people in Melbourne can’t dance to it. There’s not enough swing, and it still feels a bit too oomp-a, oomp-a for proper lindy. D says that that type of music is good for ‘one and five’ dancing, and that people overseas dig it atm. I dig it, I’d like to dance to it, but it simply doesn’t make for nice lindy hop. People at MD’s seemed to like it, but they weren’t really sure what to do with it.
In fact, I’m finding that people generally quite like the songs, but that they don’t really know how to dance to it. Some of the songs I  played at the blues night had a similar effect. People really liked them, but their dancing looked pretty awkward. And I could hear an awful lot of stompy, clattering feet during a few tracks.
Anyhow, here’s that set list:
Do I Move You? (Second Version) (Bonus Track)	Nina Simone	70	2006	2:20	Nina Simone Sings the Blues
Save Me	Aretha Franklin	122		2:19	Greatest Hits – Disc 1
Get Back Temptation	Ollabelle	80	2004	2:50	Ollabelle
I Left My Baby	Kansas City Band	83	1995	7:24	Kansas City: A Robert Altman Film
St. James Infirmary	The Cairo Club Orchestra	109	2004	3:33	Sunday
Reckless Blues	Velma Middleton with Louis Armstrong and the All Stars	88		2:30	The Complete Decca Studio Recordings of Louis Armstrong and the All Stars (disc 06)
Back Water Blues	Dinah Washington with Belford Hendricks’ Orchestra	71	1957	4:58	Ultimate Dinah Washington
Cloudy	Jimmy Witherspoon With Jay McShann And His Band	69	1957	3:16	Goin’ To Kansas City Blues
Wee Baby Blues	Count Basie with Mahalia Jackson	64	1968	3:14	Live In Antibes 1968
Amtrak Blues	Alberta Hunter	95	1978	3:24	Amtrak Blues
Long John Blues	Dinah Washington	97	1948	3:10	Dinah Washington:the Queen Sings – Disc 2 – Stairway to the Stars
My Daddy Rocks Me	Jimmie Noone’s Apex Club Orchestra	114	1929	3:09	The Jimmie Noone Collection
New Orleans Bump	Wynton Marsalis	128	1999	4:36	Mr. Jelly Lord – Standard Time, Vol. 6
Black And Tan Fantasy	Lincoln Centre Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis	88	1999	4:36	Live In Swing City: Swingin’ With Duke
Joshua Fit The Battle Of Jericho	Mahalia Jackson	130	1958	2:13	Live At Newport 1958
Goin’ To Chicago	Count Basie and His Orchestra with Jimmy Rushing	79	1952	3:22	Complete Clef/Verve Count Basie Fifties Studio Recordings (Disc 2)
I Want A Little Girl	Big Joe Turner with Pete Johnson and Freddie Green	91	1956	4:19	The Boss Of The Blues

It’s from the SP blues night, 13th April, 10.30-11.30. I especially love that song ‘My Daddy Rocks Me’. I’ve heard a more recent version played lately round town – something hi-fi. But this version is the BEST. The older versions always sound so much dirtier. I wonder if it’s because the contemporary singers, today, don’t know what the words mean? Or if they can’t make it work because they don’t use those expressions themselves in their everyday talk (vernacular much?), so they can’t give it the right weight….? Any how, Jimmie Noone is my man. My homey. My main squeeze. We are having a Thing. If you read the Red Hot Jazz entry about him you’ll see where my musical taste is at at the moment – I am still really keen on Kid Ory (and following him through Jelly Roll’s bands), nuts for Johnny Dodds and chasing some Earl Hines.
This blues set was quite varied, moving from an excellent (truly great) set by Leon. But Iiked the part from Long John Blues onwards especially. I played the Winton Marsalis version of ‘New Orleans Bump’ rather than the Jelly Roll one because I needed to get up out of the scratchy sound quality for the room to get a bit of energy. People really have trouble with those blues tracks with tango type rhythms, though. Me, I lubbs them, because I have experience with Argentinian tango. And because I really like blues music which makes you feel like moving around the floor rather than just standing there getting your frottage cheeze on. Also, the guy who wrote ‘St Louis Blues’ said in an interview I read somewhere that he wrote the song with a ‘tango’ intro because tango was so cool with dancers at that moment, and he wanted to get them on the floor before hitting them with the blues action…. now I think about it, I’m not sure it was ‘St Louis Blues’. But whatever, it’s an interesting point. And I really should look up the quote so I can get it right. But I like the late 20s for all the interesting stuff that was going on. We see early labour movement stuff. Women’s movement stuff (where women were beginning to reap the benefits of the suffragette movement of the late 19th century). Sweet-as music stuff. It was just an interesting period.
Any how, I played the LCJO version of ‘Black and Tan Fantasy’ rather than a bit of sweet Ellington because of the scratch factor. This crowd isn’t all that used to or comfortable with really old stuff – they prefer the hi-fi. And the sound gear and room just wasn’t working with so much lo-fi, scratchy, messy sounding music. Which is a real shame.
Some day I’d like to do a set that played all the music from a particular period, regardless of tempo or style, just working it all together to make for an interesting night of dancing. I’d like to play the really slow stuff and the really fast stuff, working it all together so it kind of flowed, but not having to think ‘oh, these speed freaks won’t dance slow’ and vice versa.
Sigh.
— Note: all  pics are from this interesting site, www.mainspringpress.com. —
