An early inclusion within Lake's peerless
Record Supervision collection of
Denis Preston productions,
Acker rounds up 21 tracks from what connoisseurs rightly regard as the golden age of clarinetist
Bilk, romping through a smorgasbord of trad, pop, classic, and even Caribbean numbers, all recorded within a ten-month spell between October 1959 and August 1960. That, of course, was the peak of the British trad boom, and
Mr. Acker Bilk & His Paramount Jazz Band were second only to the perennial
Chris Barber Band in terms of both popularity and versatility -- indeed, when it came to transferring his audience's affections across the musical spectrum,
Bilk and company might even have had the edge, and this dramatic selection of material is ready evidence of that. In common with a lot of
Bilk's work, hindsight does render portions of this disc little more than hip easy listening -- his renditions of "White Cliffs of Dover" and "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" (retitled here "Coming for to Carry Me Home") certainly fall into that category. But there's a beauty to them regardless, one that is then picked up by harder-hitting renditions of "Tiger Rag," "Snake Rag," and
Ron McKay's vocal showcase, "Good Woman Blues," and the end result is an album that utterly recaptures the sheer exuberance of the trad movement in all its colors.