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PAUL VERNON CHESTER

Manouche Maestro


QHCF - The 1948 English String Quintette

The quintet arrived in England. they have their 'material' (instruments or Luggage) stolen so the rhythm section of the band returns to France leaving Django and Grapelli to form the Quintette with English players.  Or was it a Post War Musicians Union ruling.

March, 1948: Django & Stephane arrive in the UK to tour with the English String Quintet and as always organised by Lew Grade.

The English Quintet L-R: Django, Alan Mindel (gtr), Teddy Wadmore (bs), Malcolm Mitchell (gtr) and Steph. There are two other photos of Django & Steph taken in the same dressing room and two photos of this group playing on stage. They toured the UK and Sweden in 1948. - Roger S Baxter

In 1948 Mitchell was called on to play with Stephane Grappelli and Django Reinhardt for an eight-week tour of Sweden.
All other references to this tour indicate the group was Malcolm Mitchell, Alan Mindel (gtrs) and Teddy Wadmore (bass). In fact, Mitchell wrote an article confirming that particular combination for Scandinavia.


On Stage - L/R: Stephane Grappelli, Alan Mindell, Django, Teddy Wadmore, Malcolm Mitchell

Alan Mindell was essentially a dance band Rhythm Guitarist and Teddy Wadmore went on to play in various odd groups including one of Alexis Korner's.

The Malcolm Mitchell Trio's first professional engagement was to open a new night-club in Nice, only to find the premises boarded up and the promoter nowhere to be seen. Virtually penniless, they took to busking, and found a restaurant where they could play for meals and tips. After a few weeks they were heard by an official of the Monte Carlo Casino and played there for the rest of the winter season, even doing a session for Prince Rainier at his palace.

Pete Chilver and Dave Goldberg also met Django and Stephane on a jam on an earlier trip.
 


Malcolm Mitchell - Guitarist

In 1948 Malcolm Mitchell became the first British musician to play with Duke Ellington and earn money for doing so. In 1933 the Duke of Windsor had insisted on sitting in on drums with the Ellington band when it visited Britain but he didn't get paid for it.  Mitchell's debut with Ellington was equally eccentric in its way. Throughout the Forties and into the Fifties the Musicians' Union, then a brutish and, in tandem with the Ministry of Works, all-powerful fraternity, had a rule which banned American musicians from playing in England. In 1948 the Dizzy Gillespie and Spike Jones orchestras had had to cancel projected tours and the only way Ellington was able to work there was as a variety act without his band. He played piano at the London Palladium and Music Halls in nine other cities with his Trumpeter and Violinist  Ray Nance, allowed in as a dancer and thus "showbiz", and his singer Kay Davis (girl singers weren't banned - the union presumably didn't regard them as musicians).  A trio consisting of Mitchell on guitar, Jack Fallon, bass, and Tony Crombie, drums, completed the group and the American Variety reported that the visit was "an outstanding success".

While the Union ban was in place the Mitchell Trio, now with Johnnie Pearson on piano and Teddy Broughton on bass, accompanied other bewildered American "variety artists" including Hoagy Carmichael and the singer Maxine Sullivan when they toured in England. The trio's first engagement was to open a new night-club in Nice, only to find the premises boarded up and the promoter nowhere to be seen. Virtually penniless, they took to busking, and found a restaurant where they could play for meals and tips. After a few weeks they were heard by an official of the Monte Carlo Casino and played there for the rest of the winter season, even doing a session for Prince Rainier at his palace. 
In 1948 Mitchell was called on to play with Stephane Grappelli and Django Reinhardt for an eight-week tour of Sweden. .

Mitchell was called on again by Ellington in October 1958 for an ATV broadcast. The programme, Atlantic Showboat, was produced by a company owned by the television presenter Hughie Green, and jazz enthusiasts were outraged when he insisted on presenting it himself. The trio reassembled to play at last year's Ellington '97 Conference in Leeds, and Mitchell took part in panel discussions where he gave a graphic account of his experiences with Ellington

Although dedicated to jazz, Mitchell moved into more commercial music to earn his living, arranging the music for the famous Hovis television commercials. He fought against the tide when he formed a jazz- oriented big band in January 1955. He lost a lot of money and broke the band up in 1956 when his health deteriorated as a result of the strain. He reformed the trio in 1957, working often as accompanist to visiting stars and as a solo act in cabaret. The trio appeared in Royal Variety shows and provided the musical content for a long series of Kenneth Horne's Round the Horne radio show.

Mitchell had his own television series on BBC and Southern television and wrote the music for Bob Monkhouse's Golden Silents television series. He eventually formed a group, Mitchell Monkhouse Associates (MMA), for the production of music and jingles, with Monkhouse and Henry Howard. MMA was a pioneer in the prestige business conference field, and as the publicity firm HP:ICM designed the massive figures for the Millennium Dome. 

Originally taught by the guitar virtuoso Ivor Mairaints, Mitchell had during the middle Forties played in many respected bands including those led by Felix Mendelssohn, Don Barrigo, Johnny Franks, George Evans and Dick Katz.  Malcolm Mitchell, guitarist, bandleader, composer and vocalist: born London 9 November 1926; three times married (three sons, one daughter, one stepson, one stepdaughter); died Bognor Regis, Sussex 9 March 1998.



1946 English Quintette

The post-war Belleville from the Quintet Of The Hot Club Of France so called, features only the principals from the pre-war aggregation - Stephane Grappelli and Django Reinhardt.

It says much for the London based musicians present on this session; Jack Llewellyn and Alan Hodgkins (or Hodgkiss), rhythm guitars and Jamaican Coleridge Goode on bass, that they were able to blend in so well.

This was almost the last QHCF recording in 'the great tradition' - the following year saw Django Reinhardt favouring the use of electric guitar and (very competently) absorbing the bop idiom along the way

 


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Last modified: 13/09/2011