REVIEW POTPOURRI: MobLand
by Peter Cates
MobLand
A new Paramount series MobLand depicts the activities of Conrad Harrigan, a gentlemanly head of a crime family in London and his calculating, slightly shrewish wife Maeve, both portrayed with consummate persuasion by Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren. The gentlemanly quality masks a ruthless cold-blooded evil and greed as he decides that fentanyl is far more profitable than heroin and guns.
Harrigan’s fixer, Harry da Souza, is constantly putting out fires, dealing with contentious cohorts, threatening potential witnesses and dealing with his own family issues at home, including agreeing to see a marriage counselor with his wife, Jan. Tom Hardy and Joanne Froggatt do superb work as the couple.
I have only seen the first of what will be a ten weekly episode series , and highly anticipate viewing the second which is available as of tonight, April 6.
Charlie Barnet
Charlie Barnet – The Heart You Stole from Me-F.T.; Murder at Peyton Hall-F.T. Bluebird 11292, ten inch 78, recorded 1942.
The F.T. denotes fox trot.
Charlie Barnet (1913-1991) was one of the finest musicians to emerge during the Big Band Era of World War II. In 1989, I first discovered him through reading George T. Simon’s immensely interesting 1968 encyclopedic volume The Big Bands in which the author commended Barnet for the intelligence and very listenable musicality.
In short, Barnet was on the same high level as Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey, Glen Gray, Woody Herman, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Stan Kenton and a few others. A short time later, I purchased an RCA Bluebird cassette re-issue of roughly 20 sides from the original 78s. I played that tape numerous times, became familiar with his two lead singers Bob Carroll and Lena Horne and discovered what an oasis of beauty and excitement the Big Bands were.
The above two sides were typical of Barnet’s own quality control standards and can be accessed on YouTube along with numerous other sides of the bandleader.
Johnny Carson once mentioned on the Tonight Show a special fondness for Charlie Barnet’s Band.
George T. Simon was the much younger brother of Richard Simon (1891-1960), the co-founder of the publisher Simon and Schuster; and the uncle of pop singer Carly Simon. The author mentioned visiting Benny Goodman during the ‘60s at Goodman’s palatial Connecticut mansion. Because he was walking with a cane in recovery from surgery, Goodman insisted that Simon feel free to use his swimming pool at any time for its health benefits.
Simon’s journalistic connections were such that Frank Sinatra wrote the introduction to Simon’s book and recommended to would be readers that, if any family or friends wanted to borrow the book, to tell them to buy their own copy.
Sarah Vaughan
Sarah Vaughan – Sarah’s Golden Hits; Mercury, cassette.
Although Sarah Vaughan (1924-1990) was often labeled a jazz singer, she resented the label, loved all kinds of music, and brought elements of all kinds of music to her singing. Several musicians claimed that her vocal range was wide enough to where she could have been a successful opera singer like Leontyne Price.
Frank Sinatra contended that listening to her singing made him want to slit his wrists. (Much like when Fritz Kreisler first heard Jascha Heifetz, he and all other violinists might as well break their fiddles.)
This cassette includes a special favorite Broken Hearted Melody, Misty, Autumn in New York, Whatever Lola Wants, the perpetually charming Make Yourself Comfortable and seven other classics.
Sarah Vaughan passed away from lung cancer in early April 1990 just shortly after her 66th birthday. Her close friend Ella Fitzgerald was so grief stricken that she went into a lengthy period of mourning.
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