FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE –
Greg Poppleton and the Bakelite
Broadcasters have released their latest LP record, titled, “Sweet
Sue.” The record is comprised of 15 tracks for an approximate total
listening time of one hour. A return to the popular, early jazz era
of the '10s, Roaring '20s and 1930s, “Sweet Sue” is great music
performed the way it hasn't been done in a hundred years, and it's
creating exclamation points among critics and music fans alike
everywhere it goes.
Australia's Greg Poppleton and the
Bakelite Broadcasters (who take their name from a plastic created in
1907 used largely in radios) are not another latter-day swing-revival
big band. This sound is earlier than Glenn Miller's. This is music F.
Scott Fitzgerald's Jay Gatsby might have listened to, and it is
entirely legitimate. Poppleton and his Bakelite Broadcasters are a
genuine crew of “old souls,” if any performer could ever be
called such.
Poppleton himself cites as main
artistic influences a top-shelf roster: Louis Armstrong, Al Bowlly,
Rudy Vallee, Annette Hanshaw, Bing Crosby, Rudi Schuericke, Alberto
Rabiagliati, Skinnay Ennis, Beniamino Gigli, Tito Schipa, Cab
Calloway, Don Redman, Fletcher Henderson, and Jim Davidson and his
ABC Dance Orchestra.
To those who don't know, the above list
should at least prove that Poppleton isn't coming from the usual
crowd of fanboys familiar with names like Krupa, James, Dorsey, and
Goodman, all of whom are exceptionally popular titans of jazz by any
account. But to those who do know, it's positively clear that
Poppleton is a man of exceptionally good taste who really knows his
records.
When asked what possible message their
new album may have in store for listeners, Poppleton states proudly,
“'Sweet Sue' is a shared acknowledgement between listeners and Greg
Poppleton and the Bakelite Broadcasters as to how we choose to fit in
the contemporary music scene: 'Vive la différence!'”
Ironically, the Broadcasters aren't
finding such differences to be anything but a boon. Their 2012 LP,
“Doin' the Charleston,” has become one of a very elite clutch of
independent jazz records to be played on modern commercial radio. It
has been listed as CD of the Week and Jazz CD of the Week on flagship
metropolitan radio stations. They were Jazz Finalists at the 2013
MusicOz Awards.
Also very much of note is the live
essence of their “Sweet Sue” recording. Every take is entirely
recorded live as a band, all at once as it was done in the 1920s and
for decades afterward. The studio was cramped, forcing Poppleton and
the Bakelite Broadcasters to play barefooted, as their tapping feet
were being picked up by microphones. Alternative takes have been
included on the record as an added treat for their fans, many of whom
may not have ever heard how the performance of a jazz number will
shift from show to show.
“[The alternative takes] show that
Greg Poppleton and the Bakelite Broadcasters never play the same song
the same way twice,” writes a Poppleton representative. “It’s
real improvised jazz and swing – keeping this collection of
classics from the 1910s, 1920s and 1930s energetic, exciting and
fresh. We sincerely trust you’ll enjoy, ‘Sweet Sue.’”
“Sweet Sue” by Greg Poppleton and
the Bakelite Broadcasters is available online worldwide. Get in
early.
-S. McCauley
Staff Press Release Writer
MondoTunes
ARTIST CONTACT INFO:
eMail
-
greg@bakelitejazz.com
Website -
http://www.bakelitejazz.com
greg@bakelitejazz.com
Website -
http://www.bakelitejazz.com
Twitter -
@GregPoppleton
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