THE first time I saw Andy Park he was bossing people about as captain
of a celebrity five-a-side football team in a charity tournament at the
Kelvin Hall. Ostensibly the team's goalkeeper, his orchestration of both
attack and defence actually led him to cover as much ground as any of
his outfield charges. I swear that night he even managed to out-talk
another celebrity goalkeeper, Bertie Auld.
At that time, in the seventies, Park's non-footy job was as Radio
Clyde's head honcho. The next time I saw him, in 1985, he was behind a
BBC Scotland desk, having returned north from bossing Channel 4 about.
His job as Beeb music and arts mogul was to boss me about during the
creation of Apollo: Countdown to a Legend, a programme about the rockin'
life and times of Glasgow's Apollo Theatre.
I was meant to be providing the screenplay; he certainly provided a
lot of bossing about. The resulting programme was, it was agreed, a
searing and insightful benchmark in narrative television fiction. Sadly,
it was meant to be a documentary.
The next anyone saw of Andy Park was his name as producer on the
credits of John Byrne's Tutti Frutti. While his name will shortly roll
across the small screen again on William McIlvanney's Dreaming and
Antony Sher's Changing Step, at the end of the month he will be doing in
public what he does best (apart from bossing people about). For the
first time since he kick-started his radio and TV career by doing what
he loves best (apart from bossing people about), he will be playing
irreverent hot jazz with his own combo. Take a bow, the Andy Park Octet.
It all began in 1960 in Glasgow, with the Andy Park Tentet and steamy
all-night jazz in a seedy club behind what is now Cafe India and in
steamy basement dives in Woodlands Road and Berkeley Street and the
Papingo coffee bar in University Avenue: it hadn't quite begun two years
earlier when Park had locked himself in his bedroom at his parents' home
in Dalmellington and taught himself to play the piano.
''I wanted to copy the Blue Note sound, and I couldn't. It was never
right. And it was my fault. I had the chords wrong, and the rhythm.''
His resolve to attain authentic excellence strengthened, Park moved to
the big city and fell in with players of the calibre of Sir Bobby
Wishart, Jimmy Mullen, and Jack Bruce. Maggie Bell and Alex Harvey were
in and out of the band; the Average White Band's nascent horn section
were regularly shoo'ed away for being wee laddies. The Tentet opened on
tours by US big-timers such as Woody Herman and the Modern Jazz Quartet.
Park's Tentet played on TV. Some of his music crossed the Atlantic,
vouchsafed by visiting American players. But working all day as an art
teacher in Cumbernauld and jazzing at night was not a proposition,
marriage-wise. So the band went, sporadically resurfacing as a smaller
ensemble. Park became a full-time TV person.
Yet he never ceased writing music. ''There are enormous brown
envelopes all over the house, with scores for non-existent 23-piece
orchestras. In 1990 I felt I had to show my face again. I want to do
something big for the 1990 Jazz Festival.''
What he is starting with is something fair-to-middling sized to
handsel the Scottish Jazz Network, the promotional body replacing the
Platform organisation. The Andy Park Octet is a mix of the mature and
fully-formed (Sir Bobby Wishart) and the young and promising (trumpeter
Kevin Ferris is one of Wishart's Strathclyde Youth Jazz Orchestra
prodigies).
As it is, with Park still to meet two members of the band, they will
be performing a mixture of classics and tried-and-trusted Park
creations. Not that the octet will be treading an easy path.
When they assemble next week for a first rehearsal, a ferociously
difficult Thelonius Monk tune will be thrown their way, while Park has
also used his many and varied musical interests and influences in the
full programme's arrangements. There will be strange echoes of Talking
Heads and Pat Boone, odd hints of driving r & b, quick tips of the
titfer to Latin-American gospel, Martian delta blues, disco samba, and
computerised New York bebop.
And above all there will be ''that dangerous bastard Wishart . . .
I'll be trying to get the band going one way and Wishart, knowing my
intentions, will be leading them off in a charge for the door or up the
bell tower.''
Be led a merry dance by the Andy Park Octet in Edinburgh (Merlin
Lounge) on January 29; at Cumbernauld Theatre, January 30; in Dundee
(Tay Hotel), January 31; and in Glasgow (Henry Wood Hall), February 1.
Aside from the music, part of the fun is sure to consist of watching an
inveterate boss being bossed.
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