Live Dates
April 25 - Kenton Theatre 19 New Street. Henley-on-Thames RG9 2 BS 01491575698 N.B.3PM start
April 28 - Borough Theatre Abergavenney. NP7 5 HD 01873 850 805 +
May 27 - Jazz Coventry Biggin Hall, 214 Binley Rd Coventry CV3 1HG
May 29 - Django Reinhardt Festival, Liberchies, Belgium
July 1 - The Cafe ,Golders Hill Park ,London NW3.
July 2 - Phyllis Court, Henley on Thames. RG9 2HT.
July 10 - St Oswald's Church, Sowerby, Yorks. sowerbymusic.org.uk.
July 12,13 - Pizza Express. Dean St, Soho, London.
Now celebrating it's 12th year together, John Etheridge's Sweet Chorus was originally formed as a personal tribute by John to his mentor and inspiration Stephane Grappelli with whom he worked for 5 years in the 70's and early 80's.
Taking it's cue from the Hot Club of France -the legendary group that featured Grappelli and Django Reinhardt the band features John's dazzling guitar work and the scintillating violin of Chris Garrick. The relationship of these two has been described as one of the most potent in European jazz and backed up by the propulsive drive of Dave Kelbie (rhythm guitar) and Andy Crowdy (bass) the band produces breathtaking sallies through repertoire both old and contemporary. A must for all fans of melodically based inspired, swinging acoustic jazz, particularly in this centenary year of the birth of Django himself.
John Etheridge can play in many styles but he seems very much at home in this flexible QHCF setting celebrating his association with the great Stephane Grappelli. Chris Garrick, another free spirit with broad musical tastes , makes an ideal soloing partner. Their passages of inventive interplay with touches of playful humour are amongst the album's high lights.
Neither adopts a copyist approach - they are too strongly individual for that. The links with Django and Steph are reflected in the passion of their playing, a similar melancholy of feeling at slow tempo and a thrilling joie de vivre at speed. Chris, in particular, that touch of sadness which characterises Steph's more reflective improvising. Bass and rhythm guitar are experts in this style and they support the principals magnificently.
The mix of standards and John's originals is very effective with the new compositions Places Between and I Saw You Passing By being especially attractive. The arrangements are pleasantly varied - only Swing 39 and Don't Worry 'Bout Me hew the close to their QHCF pattern. Most tracks are by the quartet but variety is offered by John's flamenco-tinged short solo features on Porte and Millieu and his use of the electric instrument for more robust outings on Sweet Way and Manha.
Recording equality is superb, capturing every nuance of this skillfully executed music. It is an album to play repeatedly to fully appreciate its subtlety. Lovers of gypsy jazz who welcome a fresh view of the tradition should find this record highly rewarding.
Bob Weir. Jazz Journal
Chris Garrick - violin
Dave Kelbie - rhythm guitar
Andy Crowdy - double bass
- PORTE
- There's A Small Hotel
- When You're Smiling
- GEANTOLOGY
- I'll Be Seeing You
- SWING 39
- Wise Old Wine
- SEVEN COME ELEVEN
- Places Between
- Millieu
- In Your Own Sweet Way
- MANHA DE CARNIVAL
- You Took Advantage Of Me
- Don't Worry 'bout Me
- I SAW YOU PASSING BY
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Listeners who know him best in Soft Machine may be surprised to hear that the guitarist has carved out another life with Sweet Chorus, a small but beautifully formed band who celebrate the legacy of Django Reinherdt and Stephane Grappelli. Chris Garrick fires off another round deft violin solos as the group scampers through a collection of standards and originals. The ghost of another pioneer, Charlie Christian, looms largest of all on Seven Come Eleven, while the disarmingly concise Geantology draws inspiration from vintage Coltrane. Etheridge isn't afraid of wearing his heart on his sleeve when required to, either.
Clive Davis. Sunday Times.
John Etheridge can handle just about any style from 1930s Hot Club swing to flat-out bebop, Frank Zappa avant-rock and Claptonesque blues. This set catches him in the Sweet Chorus mode, in which he recalls the vivacious unplugged music of guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stéphane Grappelli (Etheridge is a one-time Grappelli sidekick), but with the stomping, four-square swing and graceful serenading of that style updated with some originals - plus a little amplification invoking the groundbreaking 1940s guitarist Charlie Christian on Seven Come Eleven. Etheridge's full and emphatic sound mixed with superb violinist Chris Garrick's languid top notes and cascading codas makes for an ebullient musical chemistry. Garrick's ideas are in the tradition but arrestingly modern in their incisiveness; the electric interludes and Andy Crowdy's bass provide just enough variation; and one or two resolving episodes border on free-floating improvisation.
John Fordham. Guardian.
John Etheridge and Sweet Chorus: Small Hotel (Dyad)
Here's another delightful outing from the wonderful guitarist, John Etheridge, who in partnership with violinist Chris Garrick deploys the classic Hot Club de France sound to highly individual ends. Originals like Geantology and I Saw You Passing By
are intelligent and engaging, and classics like Swing 39 and You Took Advantage of Me are performed with imagination and warmth. Etheridge's playing is splendid throughout, and Garrick demonstrates once again that there's no more talented violinist in jazz.
Andrew Vine. Yorkshire Post.
Tribute to Stefan Grappelli
"This quartet is a working band. Since recording their first CD 'Sweet Chorus' they have chalked up nearly 150 live performances in a rhythmic cohesion and creative flow that is evident from the first bar... Dave Kelbie's rhythm guitar is a joy in itself, firm but relaxed, clearly executed but never obtrusive. Chris Garrick is simply the most accomplished and expressive jazz violinist on today's jazz scene... consistently inventive. Malcolm Creese is one of the most in demand bass players around.. A virtuoso who never overplays, his handsome broad bass sound underpins the quartet...
As an improviser John Etheridge will go fearlously where he has never gone before bringing a constant sense of adventure and suprise to the music. As a solo guitar performer he gives a delicate reading...
After listening to this album nobody can doubt the Etheridge/Garrick partnership is one of the most fertile in jazz today."
Charles Alexander
Stephane Grappelli 70th birthday concert
with John Etheridge - guitar, Diz Disley - guitar, Brian Torff - bass
SWEET CHORUS A TRIBUTE TO STEPHANE GRAPELLI
JOHN ETHERIDGE : ACOUSTIC & ELECTRIC GUITARS - CHRISTIAN GARRICK : VIOLIN
MALCOLM CREESE : BASS - DAVE KELBIE : RHYTHM GUITAR
-
LA CHANSON DE RUE
SWEET CHORUS
I WONDER WHERE MY BABY IS TONIGHT
THE NEARNESS OF YOU
Swing Guitars
I GOT IT BAD AND THAT AIN'T GOOD
RHYTHM FUTUR
Here, There And Everywhere
How Insensitive
Nuages
Shine
Isn't It Romantic
The Folks Who Live On The Hill
SORRY SOLD OUT CD's are £12.00 (incl p&p)
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"This album is dedicated to Stephane Grappelli and gives me a chance to revisit some musical areas I associate with my time with him. There are a good proportion of tunes linked to the Hot Club in which Stephane made his early reputation. This wasn't the whole story by any means, so I have included a number of solos, duos and trios reflecting the flexibilty of his later work."
JOHN ETHERIDGE
Etheridge left Grappelli's quartet in 1981 and for the last twenty years he has pursued a career involving associations with many of the great players of the jazz and classical worlds. Either in single concerts, touring or recording, he has appeared with, among others - Barney Kessel, Herb Ellis, Mundell Lowe, Miroslav Vitous, Birelli Lagrene, Dizzy Gillespie, Tony Williams, Yehudi Menuhin, Pat Metheny, Andy Summers and Nigel Kennedy (an association now in its ninth year) and John Williams.
In the late 80s Etheridge started to lead his own bands and is currently fronting a quartet 'Sweet Chorus' dedicated to Stephane Grappelli, and an 8-piece group 'Zappatistas' (performing the music of Frank Zappa), also leading a trio with the legendary drummer John Marshall. His collaboration - 'The Magic Box' with a group led by the great classical guitarist John Williams, was released in 2000 and the group has toured Europe, Australia and the USA.
His most recent CD release is 'Chasing Shadows' by 'Sweet Chorus' and is the second of his tributes to Stephan Grappelli. The group has now been performing throughout the UK for the last six years with sell out concerts in 2003 at the 900 seater venue of Snape Maltings, Aldeburgh, and the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield.
SWEET CHORUS
John Etheridge's Sweet Chorus - Tiger Rag, Sweet Chorus, Swing 39 - Christian Garrick (v) - Dave Kelbie (g) - Andy Crowdy (b)
Internationally acclaimed guitarist John Etheridge formed the group 'Sweet Chorus' in 1998 as a personal tribute to the great violinist Stephane Grappelli, with whom he was associated for many years. Since then they have played over hundreds of concerts in major venues, both in the UK and abroad, to outstanding acclaim from press and public alike.
PROMOTERS' QUOTES
"Absolute sell-out, great concert" Alan Hibbs, Waterman's Arts Centre, London
"Sold Out, and wonderful music" Muriel Fairbairn, Huddersfield Jazz
CD REVIEWS
"Sweet Chorus, John Etheridge's first CD since the mainly-electric
1993 'Ash', is dedicated to Stephane Grappelli and features
the acoustic side of his musical persona. If John had to assume
Django's chair in Stephane's group, then it is Christian Garrick
who is cast in the Grappelli role on this CD. In the opening
track, a Grappelli composition 'La Chanson de Rue' performed here
as a guitar-violin duet, it is apparent that the casting department
got it right. Garrick plays with maturity and confidence, sensitiv-
ity and wit - a stimulating partner for Etheridge who lays down a
beautiful harmonic framework. There are two further duets and a
couple of superb solo guitar interpretations (including a spell-bind-
ing The Nearness of You) but the duo expands to a quartet for the
remainder of the tracks with the judicious addition of bassist Malcolm
Creese and guitarist Dave Kelbie. The repertoire is drawn
largely from the classic Hot Club repertoire such as 'Nuages', 'Shine'
and 'I Wonder Where My Baby is Tonight', but freshly interpreted
with strong, improvisations from two great players."
Musician Magazine
"Etheridge was one of Stephane Grappelli's accompanists in the
violinist's autumnal years, a period evoked in this lyrical collection inspired by memories of the dapper Frenchman. Just as guitarist Martin Taylor's Spirit of Django band is no carbon copy of the Hot Club quintet, so Etheridge's partners - violinist Christian Garrick, rhythm guitarist Dave Kelbie and bassist Malcolm Creese -
follow their own muse. Etheridge makes inventive use of the various permutations too, reducing 'The Folks Who Live on the Hill' for instance, to a duet with Garrick and using 'The Nearness of You' and 'Isn't It Romantic' as vehicles for solo improvisation. The playing is admirably relaxed throughout. The musicians continue their voyage of discovery on their current tour."
Clive Davis - The Sunday Times
"Delightful tribute to Stephane Grappelli from his long-time guitarist. Like the late master himself it refuses to dwell on well-worn early hits, but draws material from half a century of popular song. Violinist Christian Garrick brings off the difficult task of suggesting Grappelli's style without slavishly imitating it."
The Observer
GIG REVIEWS
Landmark Theatre, Ilfracombe
Silver-tongued and golden-fingered, John Etheridge is a veritable musical alchemist. With his deliciously casual banter and brilliantly inventive playing, a rapt audience lapped up his tribute to Stephane Grappelli (with whom he toured in the 70's) right down to the last note of the band's very generous encore.
And just as last year, we were left wondering whether it's anatomically possible for those fingers to do what they did... The short answer is "no."
But the truth is this guitarist simultaneously plays a fast-moving bass line with a melody that flies from his strings faster still. And at the end of one exhausting piece, where sizzling solos ripped along the guitar neck over the top of his own thumping chords and picked lower range, even John himself conceded "you feel like you're accompanying yourself."
Making a gentle gibe at journalists who described him as being "ably supported" by Sweet Chorus's rhythm guitarist, Dave Kelbie, we say instead John was marvellously maintained, unerringly uplifted and brilliantly boosted by the whole quartet in a gripping and colourful musical conversation.
Exchanges between the musicians spanned romantic and raunchy episodes, through to humorous and down right silly moments - well, what else can you call the Flintstones theme tune creeping in to one number? And there were virtuoso performances from all the band members - even a spell-binding and oh-too-short solo from Dave.
Christian Garrick (heralded as today's most accomplished and expressive jazz violinist,) gave us a mesmerising performance, with riveting solos teasing audience members to the edge of their seats, while double bass player Pete Kubryk-Townsend's solo-spot shook as many solar plexus as it did heads - these shook in astonishment at the complex diversity of sounds he drew from his instrument.
What breathtaking texture, what staggering variety, what pace and spontaneity - and what fun!
More singing next time, please - we loved it!
Andrea Charters. North Devon Journal.
"It is music that demands that you close your eyes and listen, for only then can the ethereal nature of what is being played stand separate from the physical reality of darting fingers and
blurred plectrums."
James Griffiths, The Guardian
"Earlier that evening at the Pizza Express Jazz Club, the interplay in John Etheridge's acoustic quartet, Sweet Chorus, proved even more subtle. Gorgeous stuff."
Clive Davis, The Times
BAND BIOGRAPHIES
JOHN ETHERIDGE (guitar) see Biography
CHRISTIAN GARRICK - (violin)
Despite his youth the brilliant Christian Garrick has already made a mark with his superb playing on this most demanding of instruments. In 1989 at age 16 he won first prize in the Daily
Telegraph Young Jazz Competition. In 1993, while at the Royal Academy, he won the coveted Cleo Johnston Composition Prize. Although professional for only a short time he has
already collaborated with John Dankworth, Julian Joseph and John Etheridge.
'The best young violinist in jazz today". Dave Gelly, The Observer
DAVE KELBIE - (rhythm guitar)
Well known as a rock-solid (or should it be jazz-solid?) rhythm guitarist, Dave Kelbie is first call to accompany such luminaries as gypsy guitarist Fapy Lapertin, Bob Wilber and
Portuguese diva Anabela Da Silva. He is a leading light in the group Szapora (formerly the Budapest Café Orchestra) and founder member of 'Le Jazz".
PETE TOWNSEND - (bass)
Top bass player in world music and acoustic jazz circles. Pete spent eight years with 'Spirit Level' , and has appeared with Hassan Erraji, Otis Grand, Robin Jones's King Salsa, as well as
beat poet Ken Nordine and harmonica virtuoso Howard Levy.