The West Coast Get Downâs month-long recording session in 2012 is already the stuff of jazz legend. Inspired by their packed-house jam sessions at the Piano Bar in West Hollywood, Californiaâs premiere jazz ensemble pooled their money together and rented out a Los Angeles studio for 30 days. Some of the results became iconic jazz records (Kamasi Washingtonâs The Epic), others more modest, still exhilarating additions to the canon (bassist Miles Mosleyâs Uprising). The latest album from Ryan Porter, trombonist in the West Coast Get Down, is also a result of that fruitful month. But when it came time for his contribution to the Get Down canon, Porter had something different in mind. Ryan Porter wanted to make a childrenâs record.


âI have two daughters. Theyâre eight and nine,â Porter says, speaking by phone from his home in Los Angeles. âWhen they were growing up, weâd sit at home and watch TV togetherâSesame Street, Yo Gabba Gabba, all that stuff. I could hear my own interpretation in the songs we were listening to.â And thus the seed was planted for Porterâs second album as arranger, Spangle-Lang Lane. Making a childrenâs record in the middle of the healthiest resurrection of jazz music this century is a tricky proposition; but Porter and his bandmates didnât treat Spangle as an album for a new audience. Instead, Porter adapted his jazz background to fit classic childrenâs nursery rhymes. The result is an album thatâs bewitching in its innocence, electric in its re-evaluation of jazz methods.
âI remember Ryanâs songs being easier to record and easier to play because they sort of played themselves. You could only play those songs that certain way,â West Coast Get Down drummer and engineer Tony Austin recalls. âIt was a breath of fresh air. We didnât have to reinvent the wheel when it came to recording Ryanâs album. The stuff was already there. We didnât have to think about it much. We just had to go into a room and play it.â Part of this readiness comes from Porterâs immersion in the world of childrenâs music. Spangle-Lang Lane isnât a record, itâs a fully realized universe, complete with videos, puppets, and an accompanying stage show.
âOnce we finished recording at KSL [recording studio], the music came out way beyond my expectations,â Porter remembers. âWhile I was at home listening to it, I could almost visually see how the videos were gonna lay out. I could see a lot of the characters. I got into making puppets. I looked online and checked out a few guys on there just making different thingsâheads, eyes, stuff like that.â From there Porter surrounded himself in a world of felt and wires, becoming Jim Henson with world-class jazz chops. âI went out and got all of the tools, took some more classes and, many puppets later, I evolved as far as character-making. I started making videos to go with the record. I got a lot of help, a lot of guys who were actors and puppeteers. Through trial and error and my experiences with being an artist, I created a whole world of my own.â
That world, to be slowly unveiled around the release of Spangle-Lang Lane, is a far cry from anything else Porter produced during the West Coast Get Down sessions. But as Tony Austin said, this left-turn wasnât frowned upon. Instead, Spangle-Lang Lane succeeds because the band approached Porterâs compositions with the same level of seriousness as any project pitched during these sessions.
âI had a song I had written that had no words. Ryan took it and he put the âABC songâ to that. And so, slowly, he started formulating what would be the beginnings of that TV show,â says West Coast Get Down pianist Cameron Graves. âEventually, he got around to making his own pilot. He showed it to me on his iPad one day at the Piano Bar. It was such a slow process that it wasnât any shock or any surprise that he came with a kidsâ TV show, because I saw it inch by inch the whole time,â he continues. That deliberate approach is part of whatâs made the West Coast Get Down crew so successful: They take on every project, every iteration of the genreâs history, with clarity and innovation. Theyâre not setting out to change the landscape of jazz. Their albums do this naturally, because the group bends the genre toward their own will. Spangle-Lang Lane is the most imaginative example yet.
Sure, the initial shock of a ripping jazz version of the âABC Songâ takes some getting used to; the rapping is immediately awkward, clearly meant for children. But the albumâs compositions eventually transcend their source material, and Spangle-Lang Lane offers rich moments aplenty, from the subtle vocoder on âItsy Bitsy Spiderâ to the rich horn layers of âRow Row Row Your Boat.â Once you can blot out the kindergarten flashbacks, the recordâs rich originality takes over. Kamasiâs horn sings, Austinâs sharp, tight drum sound floods through the speakers. And while there is some concern that the listener might write the idea off as a gimmick, Porter uses the strength of his compositional skill and the West Coast Get Downâs reputation to push past that.
âWith things that are educational, a lot of times those are products that parents want to get for their kids. I feel like if you make it appealing to the parents, and they can relate to a lot of the feelings they grew up with, itâs like theyâre giving their kids a piece of their childhood,â Porter explains. âAt the same time, weâre the musicians of their generation, so theyâre getting the best of both worlds.â Itâs that earnestness that pushes Spangle-Lang Lane past novelty, to a place where it can hold its own against many of the West Coast Get Downâs stronger releases.
Porter approaches a childrenâs record from the perspective of an â80s baby, when soundtracks were outsourced to world-class composers and TV shows were scored by jazz heroes. âA lot of the music that I listened to as a child came from classic movies, like Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, The Wizard of Oz, The Wiz. The Wiz had a big influence on me, because of Quincy Jones,â Porter says. âI grew up at a time when there were a lot of really good jazz composers working on TV. Thatâs what helped me conceptualize this album, being able to reference those TV shows and movie soundtracks,â he adds.
Spangle-Lang Lane fuses those classic scores with heavy doses of funk, soul, and R&B. In that sense, itâs the least jazzy record this collection of players has made. Porter will return with an âadult jazzâ record in 2018, but for now, heâs more than content making one for the kids. âThis was my attempt to do what Iâm sure thousands of other parents want to do, give their kids a little musical upgradeâa facelift.â Childrenâs music will never be the same again.
âWill Schube