The Great American Love Song with Nicky Campbell, ITV

From 2015. If you’re looking for as many toe-curling moments served up with a coating of misty-eyed nostalgia as insights then this is definitely the show for you. Nicky Campbell as you can see in the clip of the programme broadcast on ITV isn’t …

Published: 11 Nov 2019. Updated: 3 years.

From 2015. If you’re looking for as many toe-curling moments served up with a coating of misty-eyed nostalgia as insights then this is definitely the show for you.

Nicky Campbell as you can see in the clip of the programme broadcast on ITV isn’t just a walking and talking presenter. He sings along and even manages to get to play Cole Porter’s piano at the Waldorf Astoria. But the cheesiest most contrived moment has to be the presenter asking a passer-by to join him on the words of ‘The Way You Look Tonight’ as Campbell talks to David Lahm, the son of Dorothy Fields who wrote the lyrics of the classic song Fred Astaire sang in Swing Time.

Michael Feinstein, looking as if he is embarrassed by Campbell’s questions; Eurythmics singer Annie Lennox, still on a Nostalgia trip of her own; and an energised Michael Mwenso indulging Campbell’s harmless ravings about Fats Waller; are some of the interviewees. Songs catching Campbell’s ear include ‘The Man I Love’ and ‘Night and Day.’ But the presenter gets in the way too much. Reviewer: Stephen Graham

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Jazz Jamaica All-Stars, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London

From 2012. With over 110 people on the stage of the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London the Jazz Jamaica All Stars, Urban Soul Orchestra and Voicelab with special guest Brinsley Forde celebrated 50 years of Jamaican independence in some style with a …

Published: 11 Nov 2019. Updated: 3 years.

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From 2012.

With over 110 people on the stage of the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London the Jazz Jamaica All Stars, Urban Soul Orchestra and Voicelab with special guest Brinsley Forde celebrated 50 years of Jamaican independence in some style with a themed concert based on Bob Marley and the Wailers’ 1973 classic album Catch a Fire.

Forde who with ASWAD had significant chart success with songs such as ‘Don’t Turn Around’ going to number one in the charts in 1988, and ‘Shine’, was the front man of the evening standing wearing a leather jacket and sporting a baseball cap with a guitar loosely slung over his shoulder.

Behind him to his right were the Urban Soul Orchestra an eight-piece strings section led by violinist Stephen Hussey, while immediately behind Forde at the back of the stage Jazz Jamaica’s bandleader Gary Crosby OBE was beefing up his double bass reggae style to suit the occasion. The bass lines were extra fat, extra juicy, the reggae beat of guitarist Robin Banerjee and propulsive drums of Rod Youngs lovingly honed, and percussionist Pete Eckford was clearly raring to go from the start, fine and choppy on congas.

Not all the songs performed were from Catch a Fire but they formed the main strand of the musical programme, including album opener ‘Concrete Jungle’, ‘Slave Driver’, ‘400 Years’, ‘Stop That Train’, ‘Baby We’ve Got a Date’, and ‘Stir It up’, the latter opening the second set with a great string arrangement involving the fiddling duo of violinist Miles Brett and Stephen Hussey. ‘Kinky Reggae’, and the formidable ‘No More Trouble’ were also performed from Catch a Fire (only ‘Midnight Ravers’ was absent), and other Marley classics featured included ‘Redemption Song’ and ‘One Love’ from Exodus for good measure.

All the arrangements were by alto saxophonist Jason Yarde who was part of a strong sax section that included newcomer baritone saxophonist Teresina Morra, whose solo early on acted as a marker for an exciting new name of note to watch out for. Harry Brown in the trombone section was as listenable as ever, and notable trumpet solos were taken by Yazz Ahmed and James McKay.

Forde was uniformly excellent, with great stage presence and a mellifluously persuasive voice, particularly on ‘Stop That Train’, ‘400 Years’ and ‘Redemption Song’, and the South Bank Centre choir Voice Lab directed by Mark De-Lisser went down a storm in the second set with their spirited sense of involvement. The audience got on to their feet and it all felt so natural. Earlier the vocal torch was carried under their own pared down auspices by the All Stars’ backing singers who Crosby dubbed “them three”, Jazz Jamaica’s own I-Threes: MOBO-nominated Zara McFarlane, Valerie Etienne and Rasiyah Jubari, whose harmonies and occasional ensemble-stealing moments were just great. Musical director and conductor Kevin Robinson’s trumpet solo at the end was also a classy touch. Hear this very fine presentation if you can before the tour ends next week, and you’ll lively up yourself for sure. Review: Stephen Graham