The State INSIDER
Coming Full Circle Long after his Asleep at the Wheel days, Tulsan Dean DeMerritt awakens listeners with a socially conscious jazz album.
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or many people attracted to the arts, their college years are the ďŹnal time theyâre allowed to devote their energies toward what they really love, their last chance to immerse themselves in acting or writing or music before the real world and the business of making a living burst the dream of a life rooted in the joy of creating. But then there are the lucky and talented ones, like veteran bassist Dean DeMerritt, who, some 40 years ago, literally sped from the University of Tulsa to his ďŹrst postcollege employment as a working musician, which has been his job description ever since. âI took my last ďŹnal that morning, hopped in the station wagon, drove as fast as I could to Austin and got there when Asleep at the Wheel was setting up to play at the Broken Spoke,â he says. âThat was my ďŹrst gig with them.â Heâd auditioned for the job a couple of months earlier, when the hard-touring, western-swing group had made a stopover in Tulsa. Its personnel at the time included saxophonist Pat âTacoâ Ryan, a Tulsa musician and contemporary of DeMerritt. âTaco got me the gig,â DeMerritt says. âAsleep at the Wheelâs bass player was quitting, and I went over to the Magicianâs Theatre [the legendary basement club in Tulsa]. Taco was there, and [Wheel leader] Ray Benson, and their drummer, and their ďŹddle player, Danny Levin. They asked me to play the bass line for their version of âRoute 66,â which is kind of a hard line â a boogie-woogie, eighth-note deal, in F, and
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OKLAHOMA MAGAZINE | JANUARY 2019
I had the chops to play it. âRay said, âOK. Your ďŹrst gigâs May 12thâ â or whenever it was â âat the Broken Spoke in Austin. Hereâs our records. Listen to âem. See you then. Bye.â That was basically it. I thought, âWell, OK. Iâll ďŹgure it out.ââ And he did, well enough to stay with the band for the next four years, a period that not only saw DeMerritt and Ryan in the group, but two other Tulsa musicians â keyboardist Falkner Evans and drummer Billy Estes â as well. âIt was Taco, then me, then Falkner, then Billy,â he says. âWe were all in there together for a while.â After leaving Asleep at the Wheel, DeMerritt relocated to Fort Worth and played in that cityâs symphony orchestra and with a number of area jazz and blues groups. By 1996, he was in Atlanta with his own band, the Dean DeMerritt Jazz Tribe. Then, about four years ago, he returned to Tulsa, where â as had happened with Asleep at the Wheel in the late â70s â he linked up again with some of his comrades, who, not coincidentally, happened to be among the top jazz names in the area. âItâs the real deal here,â he says. âThe jazz guys, especially, we all know each other. I know what tunes and arrangements Mike Cameron likes, what Scott McQuade likes, and they know what I like. Itâs a constantly rotating pattern of jazz musicians,
SARAH MAUD, SEAN AL-JIBOURI AND DEAN DEMERRIT RECENTLY RELEASED COMPARED TO NOW. PHOTO COURTESY DEAN DEMERRITT
all playing together, a very close-knit community.â Pianist McQuade and saxophonist Cameron are among the stellar lineup of Tulsa-jazz guests on DeMerrittâs latest disc, Compared to Now, which ďŹnds DeMerritt sharing top billing with vocalist Sarah Maud and guitarist Sean Al-Jibouri. Itâs a fascinating record, with elements of rap, classic rock, pop, reggae and other musical forms stirred into the grooves. Thatâs in keeping with DeMerrittâs mission to make his music as accessible as possible. âI donât want my stuff to be so obtuse that only stone-jazz musicians will listen to it,â he says. âI want people to like the music, man. I want people who donât normally like jazz to listen and say, âHey, I guess jazz is OK after all.ââ While thereâs no doubt that Compared to Now is ďŹrmly rooted in the jazz idiom, with songs composed by the likes of Charles Mingus and Wayne Shorter, those more familiar with other genres will ďŹnd their own entry points. For fans of â60s rock and pop music, for instance, there are a couple of erstwhile Top 40 hits, Buffalo SpringďŹeldâs âFor What Itâs Worthâ and Spiral Staircaseâs âMore Today Than Yesterday,â given jazzy