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BILLY JENKINS, Sunday Times, May 31, 1998 Guitarist Billy Jenkins's new release, True Love Collection, a set of seven 1970s pop standards, has more in common with Vic Reeves'snovelty cash-in record I Will Cure You than with any of the innovative music he's made in the past two decades. "Well, I'm getting older and trying to cross over a bit more to a slightly wider audience," he offers, almost apologetically. "Trying to broaden the parameters. Maybe I'm dumbing down?" After 20 years of defining the fringes of British jazz, Jenkins has left it a little late to "dumb down". To
talk to Jenkins, or see him live - raggedy hair falling around his
Playdoh face as he shoots false starts at his gleefully supportive
ensemble - there's no doubting his sincerity. But jazz fans might
find his apparent irreverence a stumbling block. "Jazz is the
one medium where kineticism is supposedly the name of the game,"
he says, "but it is held back by the attention paid to past
recordings, to old documented dead music that stops musicians being
able to Jenkins
has had plenty of opportunity to work out his philosophy. Born in
1957, by the mid-1970s he had already made two albums for Arista
records with his jazz-rock band Burlesque, and returned home from
shows in Holland to find his Bromley schoolfriends raving about Riding the crest of the next cultural wave, Jenkins formed Trimmer and Jenkins, a musical-comedy double act whose prank of trying to get a pro-CND song adopted as the new national anthem led to questions being asked in the House of Lords. Trimmer and Jenkins headlined over Alexei Sayle in the early days of The Comic Strip comedy club, and provided general musical accompaniment to the young Nigel Planer and French and Saunders. "We got fed up with all the brown-nosing and Grouchoing, and we met Robin Williams and decided he had a big ego and he smelt, so we quit, and then Roland Rivron's Raw Sex took our job." In
1983 Jenkins started working in a recording studio in Greenwich,
and it was watching the 21-piece big band Loose Tubes rehearse that
rekindled his musical ambition. "I was attracted particularly
to saxophonist Iain Ballamy's arrogance, and I thought, 'Here are
some musicians I could work with.' Jazz has been killed by overeducation,
by conceptualising things. But I was a rock guitarist throwing lines
at Ballamy, lines he'd never have got with jazzers, and he was The
CD compilation First Aural Art Exhibition samples definitive Jenkins
moments from 1984 to 1991, for the most part a series of perfectly
observed pastiches set up by sensitive collaborators, ready for
him to scribble all over. Scratches of Spain, from 1987, arguably
his finest album from the period, is packaged exactly as the Gil
Evans and Miles Davis masterpiece, Sketches of Spain, except that
the silhouette of a noble bull is replaced by a depressed-looking
donkey. This isn't the Spanish spirit of Rodrigo's Concierto de
Aranjuez, Much of Jenkins's recent work has seen him step back further from the foreground. His collaborations with the German quartet the Fun Horns were among his most exciting recordings, and made for some thrilling live shows, his guests responding indulgently to his deliberate false starts and tendency to tear up their music in front of them. Mayfest 94, 1994's rough-and-ready live album, is an astonishing display, and sounds like it was conducted by Carl Stalling, the inspirational journeyman who scored the Bugs Bunny cartoons. It's
a comparison that pleases Jenkins. "I see what I'm doing as
aural cartoons of scenes I've observed. I'm a suburban boy, and
I write music inspired by the things I see around me." Jenkins's
cartoon compositional style and suburban reference points meet most
satisfyingly in 1997's Still Sounds Like Bromley, where a bustling
eight- piece band evokes the changing fortunes of a satellite town.
The record ends with Jenkins singing a litany of names of former Jenkins
excuses the 1970s pop covers that make up the new album, True Love
Collection, by virtue of their place in his youth, but in trying
to make a more commercial record he has delivered one of the oddest
ones of his career. Apart from the occasional moment of musical The
day before we spoke, Jenkins had just finished scoring a piece for
a string quartet called Suburbia, which he claims to have been working
on for 25 years, and says he's now looking forward to staying at
home for a bit and playing nothing but blues guitar. In the immediate
future he says he hopes to sell more than 5,000 copies of the next
album and make a bit more money, before signing off with the usual
grumbles about how arts funding goes to all the wrong |
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