Jamming ON A FRIDAY NIGHT
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Jennifer K Mahal
Looking around the Tee Room at the Newport Beach Golf Course, you
don’t immediately think of a venue for jazz and blues. But every
Friday night, the Mark Davidson Trio jams on its stage with a view of
the golf course at its back.
Each week, a special guest is invited to join in.
This Friday, though, it will be Davidson who joins in, as noted
jazz, blues and gospel singer Barbara Morrison is bringing members of
her band to back her.
“Mark’s an excellent musician,” Morrison said. “We’ll be fine.”
Davidson has been playing jazz piano around Newport Beach since
1960, when his trio appeared at the Sea Shanty, which is now the
Bluewater Grill. The trio’s music is available at
www.palomarmusic.com.
The California-born musician learned the piano thanks to a mother
who was determined that one of her six boys would be musically
inclined. Davidson was the youngest.
He started playing in church; his father was an Assemblies of God
minister. But his first paying job was playing “Blueberry Hill” for a
stripper named Shirley Lane in East L.A.
“When I got the job, I thought I was playing for dancing,” he
says, going into a version of the Fats Domino song on the Tee Room’s
grand piano. “It was an added bonus.”
Some pianists caress their instruments, some pound, but Davidson
really does tickle the ivories. The twinkle in his playing matches
the twinkle in his eyes and the jovial laugh he lets out in
conversation. He is a man having fun with what he does.
Part of his job, he said, is to highlight other players. In
Morrison’s case, however, Davidson seems to feel honored just to play
with her.
“Most singers put on a show,” he said. “Barbara is the show.”
He’s had to learn a few things to perform with the singer, who has
sung with the likes of Dizzy Gillespie, Etta James, Johnny Otis,
Terence Blanchard and Keb’ Mo. Besides her “wonderfully exotic
blues,” Davidson said she does a few songs that are just a bit
naughty.
“Women and children can still be in the room,” he reassures.
Morrison, who has performed at the Irvine Barclay, said she plans
to do some rhythm and blues, some jazz, some gospel and a bit of pop.
“The repertoire is very, very diverse. I think the audience should
come prepared to not just hear their favorite songs,” she said, “but
to hear a bunch of songs.”
Her latest CD, “Thinking of You, Joe,” is a tribute to singer Joe
Williams, someone she not only knew, but idolized. He sang the blues,
but he also sang other forms of music he was less known for.
“That seems to be my case,” Morrison said. “Most people think of
me as just a blues singer, but I also do ballads and do jazz.”
Actually, the first song she sang in public was not a gospel tune
or a bluesy ballad. It was the Johnny Mercer-Henry Mancini favorite
“Moon River.” Morrison remembers singing it at a hair style show in
Michigan.
“That was a long time ago,” she said.
Performing in a small space like the Tee Room is no different than
a large hall like the Barclay to Morrison, who can be found on the
Web at www.barbaramorrison.com.
“I’m a personable person, so wherever you are, wherever you’re
sitting, in whatever room, I’m going to reach out and touch,”
Morrison said.
That’s what Davidson is counting on for his regular Friday night
crowd. The Costa Mesa resident said that his favorite jazz
performance is the last one that went well.
“Jazz has a certain unpredictable quality,” said the man who also
produces acts in his recording studio. “Sometimes it works well,
sometimes it doesn’t.”
But when it works, it can send chills down the spine. That’s what
Morrison and Davidson are looking forward to.
“I want people to walk out humming the last song I sing,” Morrison
said.”
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