Ep16. What are jazz legends notable accomplishments
Contents
- 1 Discussion
- 2 NEA Jazz Masters
- 3 Ertegun Hall of Fame
- 4 Jazz Resources
- 5 Greatest Jazz Albums
- 6 Jazz: The Smithsonian Anthology
- 7 Jazz Sub-Genres
- 8 Tables of jazz legend's notable achievements 1890-1990
- 8.1 Buddy Bolden
- 8.2 Jelly Roll Morton
- 8.3 Louis Armstrong
- 8.4 Sydney Bechet
- 8.5 Duke Ellington
- 8.6 Coleman Hawkins
- 8.7 Lester Young
- 8.8 Count Basie
- 8.9 Mary Lou Williams
- 8.10 Kenny Clarke
- 8.11 Charlie Christian
- 8.12 Thelonious Monk
- 8.13 Dizzy Gillespie
- 8.14 Charlie Parker
- 8.15 Charles Mingus
- 8.16 Art Blakey
- 8.17 Max Roach
- 8.18 John Coltrane
- 8.19 Miles Davis
- 8.20 Lennie Tristano
- 8.21 Chet Baker
- 8.22 Ornette Coleman
- 8.23 Don Cherry
- 8.24 Lee Morgan
- 8.25 John McLaughlin
- 8.26 Wynton Marsalis
- 8.27 Internet Resources on Jazz's Notable Achievements
- 9 NOTES
Discussion
NOTE: Most images are clickable hyperlinks to more information about that item.
NEA Jazz Masters
2023 NEA Jazz Masters: violinist Regina Carter (b. 1966), alto and tenor saxophonist and flutist Kenny Garrett (b. 1960), drummer and bandleader Louis Hayes (b. 1937), and record producer and band manager Sue Mingus (1930–September 24, 2022).
Read about their 2022 live streaming concert.
Left to right from back (top) row: George Russell, Dave Brubeck; second row: David Baker, Percy Heath, Billy Taylor; third row: Nat Hentoff, Jim Hall, James Moody; fourth row: Jackie McLean, Chico Hamilton, Gerald Wilson, Jimmy Heath; fifth row: Ron Carter, Anita O'Day; sixth row: Randy Weston, Horace Silver; standing next to or in front of balustrade: Benny Golson, Hank Jones, Frank Foster (seated), Cecil Taylor, Roy Haynes, Clark Terry (seated) Louie Bellson and Dana Gioia (chairman of NEA). (Only Ron Carter b. 1937, Benny Golson b. 1929, Roy Haynes b. 1925, and Dana Gioia b. 1950 are still alive as of 2023)
(NEA Jazz Masters)
(January 2012)
(NEA Jazz Masters compiled by the NNDB (Notable Names Database)
Legends in jazz, blues and beyond can be elected into the DownBeat Hall of Fame by way of the annual Critics Poll (designated by “C”), Readers Poll (“R”) or Veterans Committee (“V”). The Readers poll began in 1952 with the Critics in 1961 and the Veterans Committee in 2008.
Ertegun Hall of Fame
To be nominated to the Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame
at Jazz at Lincoln Center's Jazz Academy,
an artist must have:
- Achieved innovation in a style or a concept of playing.
- Created an original concept with a body of music or body of arrangements.
- Spoke/speaks across generations, unbound to his or her generation’s concept of style.
- Originated a definitive style.
- Popularized a style without compromising the aesthetic quality of the music.
- Occupies a significant position within the jazz lineage.
- Influenced musicians across time.
Artists in alphabetical order and year inducted into the hall with vocalists in bold font are:
Julian “Cannonball” Adderley (2019)
Louis Armstrong (2004)
Count Basie (2005)
Sidney Bechet (2004)
Bix Beiderbecke (2004)
Art Blakey (2013)
Jimmie Blanton (2018)
Clifford Brown (2007)
Benny Carter (2007)
Betty Carter (2014)
Charlie Christian (2007)
Nat “King” Cole (2018)
Ornette Coleman (2008)
John Coltrane (2004)
Miles Davis (2004)
Roy Eldridge (2005)
Duke Ellington (2004)
Bill Evans (2010)
Gil Evans (2008)
Ella Fitzgerald (2005)
Dizzy Gillespie (2004)
Benny Goodman (2005)
Dexter Gordon (2015)
Freddie Green (2020)
Lionel Hampton (2013)
Coleman Hawkins (2004)
Fletcher Henderson (2014)
Earl Hines (2005)
Johnny Hodges (2005)
Billie Holiday (2004)
J.J. Johnson (2016)
James P. Johnson (2015)
Elvin Jones (2014)
Jo Jones (2005)
Lee Konitz (2020)
John Lewis (2020)
Charles Mingus (2005)
Wes Montgomery (2014)
Jelly Roll Morton (2004)
Thelonious Monk (2004)
King Oliver (2005)
Bud Powell (2010)
Charlie Parker (2004)
Tito Puente (2017)
Don Redman (2017)
Django Reinhardt (2007)
Max Roach (2005)
Sonny Rollins (2005)
Wayne Shorter (2016)
Nina Simone (2018)
Bessie Smith (2008)
Billy Strayhorn (2010)
Art Tatum (2004)
Clark Terry (2013)
Lennie Tristano (2015)
Frank Trumbauer (2019)
McCoy Tyner (2017)
Sarah Vaughan (2010)
Fats Waller (2005)
Dinah Washington (2019)
Chick Webb (2019)
Ben Webster (2016)
Mary Lou Williams (2008)
Teddy Wilson (2020)
Lester Young (2004)
Jazz Resources
- JazzOnTheTube the biggest annotated and indexed online collection of jazz videos on earth – and it’s free.
- United Kingdom's National Jazz Archive a searchable database related to everything jazz. They describe themselves: “The National Jazz Archive holds the UK’s finest collection of written, printed and visual material on jazz, blues and related music, from the 1920s to the present day. Since the Archive was founded by Digby Fairweather in 1988, its vision has been to ensure that the rich cultural heritage of jazz is safeguarded for future generations of enthusiasts, professionals and researchers.”
Greatest Jazz Albums
NOTE: Click on the page to go to its source. These two pages represent great jazz albums released between 1959 and 1979. At least one album, Louis Armstrong's Hot 5 and 7, was recorded much earlier between 1925 and 1928.
- Vinyl Me, Please's "The 10 Best Albums For A Jazz Beginner" by Andrew Martin and Ryan Kowal
- The Jazz Resource's "15 Jazz Albums for Musicians"
- The Jazz Resource's "Top 25 Jazz Albums of All Time"
- The Jazz Resource's "Best Jazz Pianists" with videos
- UDiscoverMusic's "The 50 Greatest Jazz Albums . . . Ever" Published on December 30, 2014 By Sam Armstrong
- UDiscoverMusic's "The 50 Greatest Live Jazz Albums published on February 27, 2017 by Sam Armstrong
- "Top 10 Jazz Albums for People Who Don't Know Sh*t About Jazz by Sean J. O'Connell, May 15, 2012
- Amazon.com's "100 Greatest Jazz Albums of All Time" 2009 with a lot of critical reaction critiquing this list at NoiseAddicts.com
- RateYourMusic.com's "Best Jazz Albums of All Time - 22 Lists Combined" A list by erikfish who found 22 "top jazz albums of all time" lists in books, magazines and web sites, then combined them into one meta-list. The list here includes all albums contained on three or more of the 22 original source lists. (Last update: October 30, 2011)
- Jazz100's "Top 100 Jazz Albums: The Best Jazz Ever Released Digitally" by Peter Sykes & Jazz 100
- Jazz 100's "Next 100 Jazz Albums: The Best Jazz Ever Released Digitally" by Peter Sykes & Jazz 100
- ESurveysPro's "Top Classic Jazz albums"
- Jazz 100's "New (Contemporary jazz recordings over the past ten years 2004-2014) Jazz Top 100: The Best Jazz Ever Released Digitally" See New Jazz Notes
- Jazz 100's "Basic Collection of Jazz" 20 Basic Jazz Records
- Scott Yanow's—desert 🌵 island 🌴 jazz recommendations with album covers
(Years active 1919–1921)
Jazz: The Smithsonian Anthology
- Jazz: The Smithsonian Anthology (Box Set) 111 tracks of the best of jazz throughout its history from early to the present (release date March 29, 2011)
Disc: 1
1. Maple Leaf Rag (Dick Hyman) 2. In Gloryland (Bunk's Brass Band) 3. Livery Stable Blues (Original Dixieland Jazz Band) 4. Dipper Mouth Blues (King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band) 5. The Stampede (Fletcher Henderson & Orchestra) 6. Black Bottom Stomp (Jelly Roll Morton & His Red Hot Peppers) 7. Singin the Blues [Till My Daddy Comes Home] (Frankie Trumbauer & Orchestra) 8. Back Water Blues (Bessie Smith & James P. Johnson) 9. Black & Tan Fantasy (Duke Ellington & Orchestra) 10. From Monday On (Bix Beiderbecke/Paul Whiteman & Orchestra) 11. West End Blues (Louis Armstrong & His Hot Fives) 12. Weather Bird (Louis Armstrong & Earl Hines) 13. That's a Serious Thing (Eddie Condon's Hot Shots) 14. Handful of Riffs (Eddie Lang & Lonnie Johnson) 15. You've Got to Be Modernistic (James P. Johnson) 16. Moten Swing (Bennie Moten & Kansas City Orchestra) 17. Everybody Loves My Baby (Boswell Sisters) 18. Maple Leaf Rag (Sidney Bechet) 19. Dinah (Fats Waller & His Rhythm) 20. Swing That Music (Louis Armstrong & Orchestra) 21. Honky Tonk Train Blues (Meade Lux Lewis) 22. Mean to Me (Billie Holiday with Teddy Wilson & Orchestra) 23. For Dancers Only (Jimmie Lunceford & Orchestra) 24. 1 O'clock Jump (Count Basie & Orchestra) 25. Harlem Congo (Chick Webb & Orchestra)
Disc: 2
1. Minor Swing (Quartet du Hot Club de France) 2. Mary's Idea (Mary Lou Williams/Andy Kirk & the Clouds of Joy) 3. When Lights Are Low (Lionel Hampton) 4. Body & Soul (Coleman Hawkins & Orchestra) 5. Honeysuckle Rose (Bennie Goodman & Orchestra) 6. Tiger Rag (Art Tatum) 7. Ko-Ko (Duke Ellington & His Famous Orchestra) 8. Hard Times [Topsy Turvy] (Cab Calloway & Orchestra) 9. I Can't Believe That You're in Love with Me (Chocolate Dandies) 10. Stardust (Artie Shaw & Orchestra) 11. Let Me Off Uptown (Gene Krupa & Orchestra) 12. Shaw Nuff (Dizzy Gillespie's Allstar Quintet) 13. Manteca (Dizzy Gillespie & Orchestra) 14. Virgo f/ Zodiac Suite (Mary Lou Williams) 15. Dexter Rides Again (Dexter Gordon) 16. I Want to Be Happy (Lester Young/Buddy Rich Trio) 17. Indiana (Bud Powell) 18. Embraceable You (Charlie Parker Quintet) 19. 4 Brothers (Woody Herman & Orchestra) 20. Misterioso (Thelonious Monk Quartet) 21. Lady Bird (Tadd Dameron Sextet) 22. Tanga (Machito & his Afro-Cuban Orchestra) 23. Sept in the Rain (George Shearing Quintet) 24. WOW (Lennie Tristano Sextet)
Disc: 3
1. Boplicity (Miles Davis Nonet) 2. Golden Bullet (Count Basie Octet) 3. Popo (Shorty Rogers & His Giants) 4. Walkin Shoes (Gerry Mulligan Quartet with Chet Baker) 5. 23 Degrees N. 82 Degrees W. (Stan Kenton) 6. Daahoud (Clifford Brown/Max Roach Quintet) 7. Django (Modern Jazz Quartet) 8. The Preacher (Horace Silver & the Jazz Messengers) 9. I'll Remember April (Erroll Garner Trio) 10. Jonaleh (Chico Hamilton Quintet) 11. Tricrotism (Lucky Thompson Trio) 12. St. Thomas (Sonny Rollins) 13. Call For All Demons (Sun Ra & His Arkestra) 14. When I Grow Too Old to Dream (Nat King Cole & Trio) 15. Stompin t the Savoy (Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald) 16. Blues in the Closet (Stan Getz & J.J. Johnson) 17. Ol Man River (Oscar Peterson Trio) 18. Summertime (Miles Davis orchestrated by Gil Evans)
Disc: 4
1. Moanin' (Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers) 2. Meet BB (Count Basie & Orchestea) 3. So What (Mikes Davis Sextet) 4. Giant Steps (John Coltrane Quartet) 5. Better Git It in Your Soul (Charles Mingus) 6. Blue Rondo à la Turk (Dave Brubeck Quartet) 7. Ramblin (Ornette Coleman Quartet) 8. Work Song (Cannonball Adderley) 9. Wrap your Troubles in Dreams (Sarah Vaughan) 10. My Favorite Things Pt1 [Sngl Ver] (John Coltrane Quartet) 11. Waltz for Debby (Bill Evans) 12. Round Midnight (George Russell Sextet) 13. Cotton Tail (Ella Fitzgerald with the Duke Ellington Orchestra)
Disc: 5
1. 1 by 1 (Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers) 2. The Girl from Ipanema (Stan Getz & Astrud Gilberto) 3. Love Supreme Pt 1: Acknowledgement (John Coltrane Quartet) 4. E.S.P. (Miles Davis Quintet) 5. Haig & Haig (Clark Terry/Bob Brookmeyer Quintet) 6. King of the Road (Jimmy Smith & Wes Montgomery) 7. Isfahan (Duke Ellington & Orchestra) 8. New National Anthem [f/ A Genuine Tong Funeral] (Gary Burton) 9. Matrix (Chick Corea) 10. Miles Runs the Voodoo Down (Miles Davis) 11. Celestial Terrestrial Commuters (Mahavishnu Orchestra) 12. Watermelon Man (Herbie Hancock) 13. Long Yellow Rd (Toshiko Akiyoshi/Lew Tabackin Big Band) 14. Jitney #2 (Cecil Taylor) 15. Bright Size Life (Pat Metheny)
Disc: 6
1. Maple Leaf Rag (Anthony Braxton & Muhal Richard Abrams) 2. Birdland (Weather Report) 3. My Song (Keith Jarrett) 4. Iya (Irakere) 5. Bush Magic (Art Ensemble of Chicago) 6. Steppin (World Sax Quartet) 7. Glide Was in the Ride (Steve Coleman Group) 8. Manenberg [Revisited] (Abdullah Ibrahim) 9. Nothing Personal (Michael Brecker) 10. Airegin (Tito Puente) 11. Down the Ave. (Wynton Marsalis Septet) 12. Ting Ning (Nguyen Le) 13. Kilayim (Masada) 14. Hey-Hee-Hi-Ho (Medeski Martin & Wood) 15. Neutralisme (Martial Sola & Johnny Griffin) 16. Suspended Night Variation VIII (Tomasz Stanko)
(52nd Street, New York City, July, 1948)
(Portrait of William P. Gottlieb)
(possibly at WINX radio studios)
(Washington, D.C., ca. 1940)
(Photographed by Delia Potofsky Gottlieb)
Jazz Sub-Genres
Read more at International JazzDay Inspiring Quotes
Regional scenes:
- Australian jazz
- Azerbaijani jazz
- Bossa nova
- British jazz
- Cuban jazz
- Dutch jazz
- French jazz
- Indo jazz
- Italian jazz
- Japanese jazz
- Jazz in Germany
- Music of Malawi
- Polish jazz
- South African jazz
- Spanish jazz
- Cape jazz
- Kansas City jazz
- Dixieland
- West Coast jazz
(Album cover of "Kitten On the Keys. Popular Music from Pianola Rolls")
(used by permission[4] of Saydisc Records)
(with PoJ.fm logos added)
Tables of jazz legend's notable achievements 1890-1990
NOTE: The majority of images have hyperlinks that are clickable for more information about that item.
NOTE: Also see PoJ.fm's Sp7. Women and Jazz.
Buddy Bolden
Charles Joseph “Buddy” Bolden
Notable Achievements[7] known as "King" Bolden.[8] “member of string ensembles that played at dances and parties.”[5] his bands “emphasize the wind instruments over the strings.”[5]
“single biggest contribution to jazz (was) his focus on the blues . . . by incorporating the blues sensibility and structure into his music.”[11] famous for his loud, clear, powerful tones that could be heard far away. “Clarinetist Alphonse Picou (1878–1961) said: “He was the loudest there ever was because you could hear Buddy’s cornet as loud as what Louis Armstrong played through the mike.”[13] (bold not in original) skilled improviser. his band had a large following in and around New Orleans. impressed younger musicians.[14] Donald M. Marquis (1933–2021), In Search of Buddy Bolden: First Man of Jazz (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2006). Danny Barker (1909–1994), Buddy Bolden and the Last Days of Storyville (New York: Continuum, 1998). David C. Perry, Jazz Greats (London: Phaidon Press Limited, 1996). Part of the 20th Century Composers series covering various jazz greats including Buddy Bolden, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Duke Elllington, Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Charles Mingus, John Coltrane, Miles Davis and briefly, Ornette Coleman, Wynton Marsalis, and Keith Jarrett. Listen to "Don't Go Away Nobody," which is alleged to sound like Bolden's opening number. |
Jelly Roll Morton
Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe Notable Achievements:[18] pivotal figure from New Orleans.
“combined ragtime, French quadrilles and the hot Blues played by Buddy Bolden.”[19] (According to jazz historian William (Bill) Russell (1905–1992)
jazz promotion. “a roving snake-oil salesman, card shark, vaudevillian, poolroom hustler, gambler and pimp. He chose a sexual nickname—“Jelly Roll” (which typically refers to the male organ)—and wore a diamond in his gold tooth”[20] wrote over 100 compositions (52 listed at Wikipedia: Jelly Roll Morton) including “Jelly Roll Blues” (written in 1905, but not recorded until 1924), “Frog-I-More Rag” (written in 1908, but not copyrighted until 1918), “King Porter Stomp” (Morton claimed to compose it in 1905, but not recorded until 1923 as a piano solo and not copyrighted until 1924), “Milenburg Joys” (recorded 1923), “Wolverine Blues” (recorded 1923), “The Pearls,” “Grandpa’s Spells” (recorded 1923), “Mr. Jelly Lord,” “Shreveport Stomp,” “Black Bottom Stomp,” “Winin’ Boy Blues,” “The Crave,” “Don’t You Leave Me Here,” “Sweet Substitute,” “Wild Man Blues,” and “I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say.”
played piano in brothels at age 14. recording contract with Victor Talking Machine Company in Chicago recording with his newly named septet, “The Red Hot Peppers,” including “Black Bottom Stomp,” named for an African-American dance step from the deep South and has now been recorded over 190 times.[20] "Jelly Roll Morton & His Red Hot Peppers" recordings are classics of 1920's jazz. first act booked on tours by MCA. “helped lead the transition from ragtime to jazz as a piano wizard of the first rank who could transform all sorts of music into jazz—embellishing, paraphrasing and improvising; smoothing out the rhythms of ragtime; and making everything flow and swing.”[20] Morton's 30 year old composition "King Porter Stomp"[23] became Benny Goodman's first hit and a swing standard (1935). his oral life history recorded by Alan Lomax while Morton talks and demonstrates on his piano for the Library of Congress (1938) “The composer and pianist Jelly Roll Morton envisaged a more sophisticated and coloured sound, and he expanded jazz instrumentation by enriching its textures and harmonies.”[25] DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame, Critic's Poll (1963). U.S. Commemorative stamp (1995).
"Jelly Roll Morton: The Complete Library of Congress Recordings by Alan Lomax" (Rounder Records) won in two categories at the 48th annual Grammy Awards ceremony held on Feb 8, 2006. The opener of Jazz at Lincoln Center’s 30th season (2017–18), its flagship orchestra will debut arrangements of Jelly Roll Morton’s compositions, some of which are a century old.[26] (Jelly Roll Morton is buried at Calvary Cemetery in East Los Angeles, California)
"The Saga of Jelly Roll Morton" at Jazz Rhythm.com. Jelly Roll Morton history at DoctorJazz.co.uk. Stephen Kinzer, "The Man Who Made Jazz Hot; 60 Years After His Death, Jelly Roll Morton Gets Respect," New York Times, November 28, 2000. |
Louis Armstrong
Louis Armstrong (1901–1971)
Notable Achievements:[27]
moved to New York in 1924 to play with the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra, the top Afro-American band of the day, switching from cornet to trumpet. widely recognized as the founding father of jazz. (Photo by William P. Gottlieb July, 1946 — colorized) recording hit songs, many of which have become jazz standards, for five decades. his talent for improvisation helped the trumpet emerge as a solo instrument. a masterful accompanist and ensemble player. known as a tireless performer, averaging over 300 concerts a year. his celebrity extended beyong music, appearing in over 30 motion pictures. promoted extended improvised solos. “Armstrong was jazz's first superstar. Satchmo's explosive creativity defied conventions of early New Orleans jazz; he was a charismatic showman and dazzling trumpet player who was, literally, too good for his band. His performances were largely responsible for shifting the focus from the group to the soloist, and he was also quite an innovator when it came to scat. Perhaps most importantly, his acceptance by the social elite helped popularize jazz across racial and social boundaries.”[29] (bold not in original)
strong vocalist.[30] “recorded with Clarence Williams, Fletcher Henderson, Bessie Smith and others before making his leader debut in late 1925.”[31] "Melancholy Blues," (1927) performed by Louis Armstrong and his Hot Seven included on golden record sent in 1977 on Voyager 1 spacecraft. developed a way of playing jazz, as an instrumentalist and a vocalist, which has had an impact on all musicians to follow. recorded hit songs for five decades, and his music is still heard today on television and radio and in films. Listen to Armstrong's music, including in his own words, at Jazz Rhythms: "Louis Armstrong: A Seminal Voice in Jazz." wrote two autobiographies (click on book titles to read them), and , more than ten magazine articles, hundreds of pages of memoirs, , and thousands of letters. appeared in more than thirty films (over twenty were full-length features) as a gifted actor with superb comic timing and an unabashed joy of life as in "Hello Dolly" (1964/1969) where he co-starred with Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau. He also had many television appearances. composed or performed dozens of songs that have become jazz standards, such as "Dippermouth Blues/"Sugar Foot Stomp," "Heebie Jeebies," "Potato Head Blues," "West End Blues," "Basin Street Blues," and "Ain't Misbehavin'." performed an average of 300 concerts each year, with his frequent tours to all parts of the world earning him the nickname “Ambassador Satch,” and became one of the first great celebrities of the twentieth century. Timemagazine cover (1949). Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1952).
Cover of Life magazine, April 15, 1966. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (1972). inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 1990 (Early Influence). 50 year career See and hear him play and sing (including scatting) in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1933. Krebs, Albin. "Louis Armstrong, Jazz Trumpeter and Singer, Dies." New York Times Obituary, July 7, 1971. Glaser, Matt. "Satchmo: The Philosopher," in Satchmo at 100, Village Voice, June 5, 2001. Morgenstern, Dan. "Satchmo and the Critics." in Satchmo at 100, Village Voice, June 5, 2001. |
Sydney Bechet
Name & Pictures | |
Notable Achievements[33] |
---|---|---|
|
clarinet soprano saxophone tenor saxophone piano double bass drums featured soloist |
“one of the first important soloists in jazz, beating trumpeter Louis Armstrong to the recording studio by several months.”[34] “major figure in early jazz, outstanding clarinetist, only soprano saxophonist of consequence for decades, made melodically rich and emotional music.”[35] master of improvisation (both individual and collective) with wide vibrato.[36] Listen to his music at Jazz Rhythm: "Sidney Bechet: First soprano saxophonist of jazz" “Bechet is far too individual to keep to the strict New Orleans tradition that no one instrument shall dominate the band. Except for (Louis) Armstrong there is no player of sufficient quality to match him in the cut and thrust of counterpoint. While the Réwéliotty players echoed the familiar phrases learned from gramophone records of the great, or subtle innovations mastered by rote, Bechet created each dip and flow of melody according to the instant prompting of imagination.” performed in parades at the age of 8 with Freddie Keppard's brass band, and by the age of 15 with the Olympia Orchestra and in John Robichaux's dance orchestra.[38] performed with Bunk Johnson in the Eagle Band of New Orleans (1911–12). studied clarinet in New Orleans with Lorenzo Tio (1916). traveled to New York City where he joined Will Marion Cook's Southern Syncopated Orchestra (Spring, 1919). played in Louis Mitchell's Jazz Kings in 1919 and 1920, touring Scotland 🏴 and England 🏴. Will Marion Cook's Southern Syncopated Orchestra traveled to Europe touring England 🏴 and Ireland 🇮🇪 (1920–21) and performed at the Royal Philharmonic Hall in London. In summary, promoted jazz internationalization by visiting and playing in London England 🏴 at the Philharmonic Hall (1919–1920) and later (September 15, 1925), toured with members of the La Revue Nègre, including Josephine Baker arriving at Cherbourg, France, on September 22, opening at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris (October 2, 1925), and returning in 1928 to lead his small band at Chez Bricktop in Montmartre, Paris, France 🇫🇷, then on to Germany 🇩🇪 (Berlin), and Russia 🇷🇺 (June 1926). returned to New York City to lead a band with Tommy Ladnier (1932) who performed at the Savoy Ballroom. had a hit recording of "Summertime" (1938). Listen to a terrific version of "Summertime" by Bechet six rows down, 15th video at TheSongSummertime.Wordpress.com: dedicated to the most beautiful song ever, one hundred times. Hugues Panassié (1912–1974) featured Bechet on some records (1938) and soon he was signed to Bluebird Records where he recorded quite a few classics during the next three years. worked regularly in New York, appeared on some of Eddie Condon's Town Hall concerts, and in 1945 tried unsuccessfully to have a band with the veteran trumpeter Bunk Johnson (whose constant drinking killed the project). discouraged by jazz's reception in America moved permanently to France (1950) where “his performance as a soloist at the Paris Jazz Fair caused a surge in his popularity in that country, where he easily found well-paid work.”[40] signed a recording contract with Disques Vogue (1953) lasting for the rest of his life where he recorded many hit tunes, including "Les Oignons", "Promenade aux Champs-Elysees," and the international hit "Petite Fleur" (1952). composed a classical ballet score in the late Romantic style of Tchaikovsky called "La Nuit est Sorcière" ("The Night Is a Witch"). |
Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington (Photo by William P. Gottlieb) (Photo by William P. Gottlieb) (Portrait of Duke Ellington (center), Cat Anderson (left), and Sidney De Paris(?) (right), unknown far right)
Notable Achievements:[41] over 3,000 compositions.[42] loyal to his musicians and only ever personally fired three of them: Bubber Miley (in 1929) for alcoholism, (although it is falsely reported that he only ever personally fired just Miley or just Mingus), Charles Mingus (in 1953) for attacking bandmate Juan Tizol as well as splitting his chair with an axe, and Ben Webster in 1937. Wikipedia: Ben Webster reports in the fourth paragraph that Webster was fired for cutting up Ellington's clothing and Clark Terry reporting that Webster slapped Duke and Webster was then given two weeks notice. There is also possibly a fourth musician personally fired by Ellington named Rudy Jackson, who was co-credited as composing "Creole Love Call" along with Ellington and Buber Miley. Jackson had plagiarized the song from King Oliver's tune "Camp Meeting Blues."[44] often called his music "beyond category." “That Ellington was "beyond category" is indisputable. Following his own dictum of keeping one foot in the academy and one in the street, Ellington evolved a musical language that imposed formal order on the rhythms, timbres, and attitudes of African-American everyday life. He struck a fine balance between organizational discipline and individual expressive freedom; and merged the traditionally distinct roles of composer and bandleader by embedding the writing process in a Deweyian social process of performative experimentation.”[45] tailored music to his soloists.[46] most recorded jazz composer.[47] Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1956) along with Billy Strayhorn composed the film score for “Anatomy of a Murder” (1959). “The late Ellington pieces that will be featured—Such Sweet Thunder (1957), Suite Thursday (1960) and Anatomy of a Murder (1959)—show how well Ellington mastered the integration of rhythm section and band; these extended pieces prove that he is one of the great musical thinkers as well as one of the great masters of musical form.”[48] President Lyndon Johnson presented Duke Ellington the President’s Gold Medal (1966). image on a United States Commemorative stamp[49] (1986) influenced millions of people around the world. 50 year career over 20,000 performances in North America, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and Asia.[42] recorded albums with: Louis Armstrong worked musically with Florenz Ziegfeld, Irving Berlin, Jimmy Durante, Al Jolson, Mary Lou Williams, Will Marion Cook, Lena Horne, Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Mahalia Jackson, Charles Mingus, Frank Sinatra, Maurice Chevalier, and Bing Crosby wrote oratorios, suites, concertos, and even opera, as well as for the Broadway stage, movies, television, and nightclubs. frequently collaborating with writing partner Billy Strayhorn (1915–1967), created over 1,500 pieces of music, and nearly 6,000, if brief musical interludes are included. wrote the shows "Jump for Joy," “Man with Four Sides,” and “My People” (for the Century of Negro Progress Exposition in Chicago) (1963). film scores include "Black and Tan Fantasy," In 1950, Ellington was featured in three film shorts: "Salute to Duke Ellington," "Symphony in Swing," and "Date with Duke" accepted a commission from the American Ballet Theatre to develop "The River," a ballet choreographed by Alvin Ailey, as well as a commission from the New York Public Broadcasting Service station, WNET, to complete a comic opera. received sixteen honorary doctorates from U.S. universities. received the Order of the Star of Ethiopia 🇪🇹 awarded the Order of Lenin from the Soviet Union received the Spingarn medal (1959) from the NAACP for outstanding and unique musical achievements. wrote and performed three Sacred Concerts drawing on classical European and African-American forms and styles, first at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco (1965), second premiered at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York (1968) in front of an audience of 7,500, and the third at Westminster Abbey, London (1973). composed the Uwis Suite (1972). over 12,000 mourners attended his funeral (1974). the United States Mint issued a coin (February 24, 2009) with Duke Ellington on it, making him the first African American to appear by himself on a circulating U.S. coin Listen to: Duke Ellington and his Famous Orchestra Live performances from 1938 to 1963. |
Coleman Hawkins
Name & Pictures | |
Notable Achievements[50] |
---|---|---|
Coleman Hawkins (Photo by William P. Gottlieb) (Hawkins 1967 photo by Roberto Polillo) (Spotlite Club, NYC, 1946) |
tenor saxophone featured soloist |
a star of the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra during the swing era in the 1920s and '30s.[51] influential solo on "Body and Soul." mentor to many, including Thelonious Monk.
|
Lester Young
(Colorized and enhanced photograph of Prez photo #4 at Jazz Rhythm by Paul Nodler) Lester Young (Portrait of Lester Young, Famous Door, New York, N.Y., ca. September, 1946)
Notable Achievements:[54] light airy unforced sound.[55]
(Pete Johnson (1904–1967) at piano on left with trumpeter Red Allen (1908–1967) in middle)
relaxed, cool tone with sophisticated harmonies. lead tenor in Count Basie's orchestra. “As part of Count Basie's soon-to-be-discovered, quintessential swing band, Young made his first recordings. In 1936, on "Lady, Be Good," he plays a wondrous two-chorus solo that sparked a sensation among musicians. His solo on Basie's 1937 "One O'Clock Jump"—Young hits a B-flat 20 times in a row—was memorized by legions of tenor sax players. Young's 1939 showpiece "Lester Leaps In"—rife with rhythmic surprises—spotlights his superior note choices and interlinking melodic ideas. These recordings have much to offer listeners today.”[58] appeared on CBS television special "The Sound of Jazz" (1957). In 1944, shortly after appearing in a celebrated, arty movie short, "Jammin' the Blues," he was drafted into the U.S. Army. As his alcoholism grew worse in the 1950s, his tone grew huskier, his vibrato wider, and his pitch range lower. Dying at age forty-nine in 1959 ended his recording career of twenty-three years. influenced scores of saxophonists—such as Stan Getz (1927–1991) and Dexter Gordon (1923–1990)—as well as bebop, cool jazz, bossa nova and Hollywood soundtracks. beat writers Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997) and Jack Kerouac (1922–1969) hero-worshiped Young. Bertrand Tavernier (1941–2021) would base his 1986 movie "'Round Midnight" on the lives of Young and pianist Bud Powell (1924–1966). Read Matt Fripp's "Lester Young—Ten Defining Moments From The Tenor Sax Legend," JazzFuel.com, last updated Aug 28, 2021. Read Lester Young's biography and discography at Mosaic Records |
Count Basie
Name & Pictures | |
Notable Achievements[61] |
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Count Basie (Detail of Count Basie and Bob Crosby, Howard Theater, Washington, D.C. (ca. 1941) (Photo by William P. Gottlieb) |
piano organist big band conductor combos solo pianist[62] piano accompanist[62] music director for blues singers, dancers, and comedians[62] Big bandswingKansas City style 1924→1984 |
“created innovations such as the use of two "split" tenor saxophones, emphasizing the rhythm section, riffing with a big band, using arrangers to broaden their sound, and others.”[63] “many musicians developed under his direction, including the tenor saxophonists Lester Young and Herschel Evans, guitarist Freddie Green, the trumpeters Buck Clayton and Harry "Sweets" Edison and singers Jimmy Rushing, Helen Humes, Thelma Carpenter, and Joe Williams.”[63] “Basie's sound was characterized by a "jumping" beat and the contrapuntal accents of his own piano[67] Listen to the Basie bands at Jazz Rhythm: "Count Basie and his Orchestra: World's Greatest Swing Orchestra" “favored the blues, and showcased some of the most notable blues singers of the era after he went to New York: Billie Holiday, Jimmy Rushing, Big Joe Turner, Helen Humes, and Joe Williams.”[67] “hired arrangers who knew how to maximize the band's abilities, such as Eddie Durham and Jimmy Mundy.”[67] Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1958) NEA (National Endowment for the Arts) Jazz Master (1983) President Ronald Reagan posthumously awarded Count Basie with the Medal of Freedom (1985) for his contribution in the fields of entertainment and the arts. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (2002) |
Mary Lou Williams
Mary Lou Williams / as can easily be seen by all of the jazz genres Williams performed over her career listed above, she was open and adaptive to new music. Williams took the name "Mary Lou" at the suggestion of Brunswick Record's Jack Kapp as quoted in Max Jones's Jazz Talking: Profiles, Interviews, and Other Riffs on Jazz Musician's, Da Capo Press, 2000, 190. Her last name of Williams came from her husband, saxophonist John Williams, who she married at age 16. musical prodigy who could pick out simple tunes at age two, who taught herself to play the piano at three years old, including playing back a tune she heard her mother play on the family organ at that age, and discovered in high school she had perfect pitch.[68][69] one of the earlier women recognized as highly successful in jazz. “No woman other than the vocalists Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald had so dominated the swing scene or earned the genuine respect of bandleaders and musicians alike.”[71] Twelve Clouds of Joy band until April 1930, at which time she became a regular member. the Kirk band in the 1930s success was largely due to her distinctive arrangements, compositions and solo performances on the piano.[72] Listen to Andy Kirk's Clouds of Joy with arrangements and compositions by Williams. See Andy Kirk and his Clouds of Joy discography. wrote and arranged "Camel Hop" written for Benny Goodman's radio show sponsor, Camel cigarettes, followed by another big hit for Goodman in her "Roll 'Em" (a boogie-woogie piece based on the blues) (1937), "What's Your Story, Morning Glory" for Jimmie Lunceford, arrangements for the biggest act at the time of Cab Calloway, rearranged Irving Berlin's "Blue Skies" as "Trumpets No End" (1943) a big hit for Duke Ellington that Ellington recorded in 1946[74] and the Dizzy Gillespie smash hit, "In the Land of Oo-Bla-Dee" (1949). supplied noteworthy swing-band scores arranging for Louis Armstrong, Tommy Dorsey, and Earl Hines, during the late 1930's.[74] became involved with a younger group of New York musicians including Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, Tadd Dameron, and Dizzy Gillespie (1943), moving from what Encyclopedia Brittanica describes as “an established musician in the swing style, she easily made the transition to bebop. Her apartment became a meeting place, and she wrote several important compositions in the bebop style, including “In the Land of Oo-Blah-Dee,” “Tisherone,” “Knowledge,” “Lonely Moments,” and “Waltz Boogie.” The latter was recorded with Girl-Stars, one of her several women’s bands, in 1946.” quit the Kirk band to form her own small group in New York with her second husband, trumpeter Shorty Baker, (1942).[74] premiered the first of many large compositions including the 12-movement Zodiac Suite whose “Capricorn” movement was created especially for dancer Pearl Primus who also performed at Café Society (1945). moved to Europe performing in both Paris and London (1952). an important figure in Bebop who contributed scores to Dizzy Gillespie’s big band. worked with some of music’s greatest legends, including Ben Webster, Bud Powell, and Thelonious Monk.
resumed her career in 1957 where she remained active throughout the 1960s and 1970s leading her own groups in New York clubs, composing sacred works for jazz orchestra and voices, and devoting much of her time to teaching. long regarded as one of the most significant female musicians in jazz, as an instrumentalist, as a composer, and as an arranger.[75] “easily adapting in the 1940s to the new Bebop idiom and in the 1960s her play attained a level of complexity and dissonance that rivaled avant-garde pianism of the time, but without losing the underlying blues feeling."[76] breadth of her work as a composer and arranger can be seen from her expert swing-band scores for Andy Kirk's Clouds of Joy (Listen to Walkin’ and Swingin’, or Mary’s Idea, etc.) to the large-scale sacred works of the 1960s and 70s. her "Waltz Boogie" (1946) was one of the earliest attempts to adapt jazz to non-duple meters. wrote hundreds of compositions and arrangements recorded in 78, 45, and LP formats. See some of her album covers below and click on any of them to go to her discography.
In the 1960s and ’70s composed a number of her sacred works and liturgical pieces for jazz ensembles, including a cantata, "Black Christ of the Andes" (1962); three masses that included "Black Christ of the Andes" (see track list for "Black Christ of the Andes") (1963)[77], "Mass for the Lenten Season" (1968), "Music for Peace" (1970), popularly known as "Mary Lou’s Mass" which (1970) became well known in a version choreographed by Alvin Ailey. In 1970 as a solo pianist and providing her own commentary, she recorded a comprehensive performance-lecture entitled "The History of Jazz." (FW2860) made an appearance (click on "appearance" to view video) on Guggenheim Fellowships, 1972 and 1977. “Why have jazz historians generally avoided serious consideration of her music and her contributions to jazz, even as she garnered praise and respect from her peers? One obvious answer is that Mary Lou Williams was a woman performing and writing in the male-dominated field of jazz music whose abilities enabled her to defy the conventional gender roles implicit in the jazz narratives of her day. According to this view, women in jazz were rare, women pianists rarer still, and women who, besides their superiority as players, could also compose and arrange first-class music for big band and combo were simply unheard of. Yet Duke Ellington famously described (in his autobiography, Music Is My Mistress) that Williams was "perpetually contemporary," going on to say that "her writing and performing are and have always been just a little ahead throughout her career."[78] nominee Grammy Awards, Best Jazz Performance – Group, for the album "Giants—Dizzy Gillespie, Bobby Hackett, Mary Lou Williams" (1971); also released under the title "Mary Lou Williams and the Trumpet Giants." Duke University established the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture (1983). the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. has an annual Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Festival (annually since 1996). her Pennsylvania State Historic Marker is placed at 328 Lincoln Avenue, Lincoln Elementary School, Pittsburgh, PA, noting her accomplishments and the location of the school she attended. trumpeter Dave Douglas released the album "Soul on Soul" as a tribute to her, featuring original arrangements of her music and new pieces inspired by her work (2000). the album "Impressions of Mary Lou" by pianist John Hicks featured eight of her compositions (2000). had a small cameo in Ken Burns’s documentary "Jazz" on PBS (Public Broadcasting System) (2001). a YA historical novel based on Mary Lou Williams entitled Jazz Girl, by Sarah Bruce Kelly, published in 2010. merited a children's book based on Mary Lou William's early life, entitled The Little Piano Girl by Ann Ingalls and Maryann MacDonald with illustrations by Giselle Potter, (published in 2010). a poetry book by Yona Harvey entitled Hemming the Water published in 2013, inspired by Williams and featuring the poem "Communion with Mary Lou Williams" (2011). the American Musicological Society published Mary Lou Williams's Selected Works for Big Band, a compilation of eleven of her big band scores (2013). Her New York Times obituary reports that “Miss Williams was an important contributor to every aspect of jazz that developed during a career that began in the late 1920's and lasted for more than half a century.”[80] an award-winning documentary film entitled, "Mary Lou Williams: The Lady Who Swings the Band," What'sHerName women's history podcasts aired the episode "THE MUSICIAN: Mary Lou Williams," with guest expert "Mary Lou Williams: The Lady Who Swings the Band," producer and director Carol Bash (2018). Listen to an "Interview with Mary Lou Williams" (recorded live in 1976). Listen to Mary Lou Williams playing, even singing, and being interviewed by Marian McPartland (1918–2013)
Listen to "Mary Lou Williams Centennial On JazzSet," from radio station WBGO, broadcast May 6, 2010. The first concert is from the University of Michigan (1978) where she plays her history of jazz medley first playing solo piano on spirituals (her own composition), Ragtime playing "Fandangle" a rag her mother had taught her, demonstrates Kansas City Swing (a "Blues,") a swinging left hand untitled number, a boogie-woogie on "Baby Bear Boogie." Adding bassist Ronnie Boykins, they perform "On Green Dolphin Street," "Baby Man" (by John Stubblefield), "Jeep Is Jumpin'" (by Johnny Hodges), and "Let's Do the Froggy Bottom." The University of Wisconsin, Madison concert adds drummer Charlie Persip where the trio plays Dizzy Gillespie's "Olinga," followed by "Medi II," then "Bag's Groove" by Milt Jackson. Mary Lou Williams Lane, a street near 10th and Paseo in Kansas City, Missouri, was named after her (2018). Tammy L. Kernodle, (B.M., M.A.), "Anything You are Shows Up in Your Music: Mary Lou Williams and the Sanctification of Jazz," Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, 1997. Tammy L. Kernodle, Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2004). Ayana Contreras, "Mary Lou Williams, Writ Large," DownBeat, December 7, 2020. |
Kenny Clarke
Name & Pictures | |
Notable Achievements[81] |
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drums Bebop Hard Bop 1931→1984 |
developed new musical timekeeping on "ride" cymbal , and not on the hi-hat , freeing up his left hand and using his snare drum or bass drum to play what is called 'dropping bombs' where one plays spontaneous, accented hits. Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Critic's Poll (1988) |
Charlie Christian
Charlie Christian Notable Achievements[82] born in Bonham, Texas on July 29, 1916 and raised in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma where he often jammed along the city's "Deep Deuce" section on N. E. Second Street. from a musical family, he first began playing the trumpet and at age 12 was playing a cigar box guitar he made himself.[84] received his first real guitar as a member of his family's group when his father and brothers formed a quartet.[84] played Oklahoma City clubs, including those in historic Deep Deuce (Northeast Second street), before his reputation spread and he began touring across the United States then moving to California at the age of 23.[84] In the 1930s he played string bass with Alphonso Trent's (1905–1959) band. in 1937 he discovered the instrument that he helped pioneer—the electric guitar.
he helped change the electric guitar from a rhythm instrument to an important solo one where his distinctive stylistic innovations had an undeniable influence on future generations of jazz and popular music guitarists. on the advice of Mary Lou Williams "discovered" by music promoter John Hammond (1910–1987), who in 1939 recommended Christian to Hammond's brother-in-law, Benny Goodman (1909–1986), at that time leading one of the most famous big bands of the swing era, bringing Christian into the public eye in the United States. he mostly played in Goodman's sextet and only occasionally with the full orchestra. Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: Charlie Christian summarizes Christian's achievements: “Though his life was short, his hornlike, single-note style, which capitalized on innovations in amplification technology, revolutionized and redefined the role of the electric guitar in popular music. The reverberations from Christian’s pioneering efforts have echoed down the decades, through Western swing, rockabilly and rock and roll to the present days.” an important early performer on the electric guitar 🎸 where his single-string technique, combined with amplification, helped bring the guitar out of the rhythm section and into the forefront as a solo instrument thereby paving the way for more electric guitars.[85] gained national exposure as a member of the Benny Goodman (1909–1986) Sextet and Orchestra from August 1939 to June 1941. recorded his “Seven Come Eleven” (Listen to it by clicking on title) with the Benny Goodman Sextet showing influences in country music forming an odd hybrid with jazz. twice (1940 & 1941) Metronome All Stars member. DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame,
his single-string technique established a solo style that was carried on by such contemporaries as T-Bone Walker and emulated by later disciples like B. B. King and Chuck Berry. his influence reached beyond jazz and swing as revealed by his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the category Early Influence (1990). inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame (2018).
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Thelonious Monk
Notable Achievements:[91] started playing piano at the age of six and was largely self-taught. made his first studio recordings with the Coleman Hawkins (1904–1969) Quartet (1944) because Hawkins was one of the earliest established jazz musicians to promote Monk, and the pianist later returned the favor by inviting Hawkins to join him on the album "Monk's Music" (1957) with John Coltrane (1926–1967). introduced by Ike Quebec to Lorraine Gordon , (wife of Village Vanguard owner Max Gordon,) in 1947, who championed Monk's music ever after and through the influence of Lorraine Gordon and Ike Quebec Blue Note recorded (1947 & 1948) some of Monk's greatest compositions eventually compiled (first in 1951) into four different compilations each with the title of "Genius of Modern Music: Volume 1." composed numerous jazz standards including "'Round Midnight", "Blue Monk", "Straight, No Chaser", "Ruby, My Dear", "In Walked Bud", and "Well, You Needn't" chosen from only seventy-three compositions.[93] recorded albums for Prestige Records (1952-54) including collaborations with the saxophonist Sonny Rollins (1930–202 ) and the drummers Art Blakey (1919–1990) and Max Roach (1924–2007). Watch Monk perform his composition "'Round Midnight" solo in "Extrait de "Jazz Portrait" de Thelonious Monk par Henri Renaud en 1970: contributed to the development of Bebop. one of only five jazz musicians (others are Louis Armstrong, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington and Wynton Marsalis) featured on the cover of Time magazine[94] (1964).
"Thelonious Monk biography," Blue Note Records: Thelonious Monk observes:“The most important jazz musicians are the ones who are successful in creating their own original world of music with its own rules, logic, and surprises. Thelonious Monk, who was criticized by observers who failed to listen to his music on its own terms, suffered through a decade of neglect before he was suddenly acclaimed as a genius; his music had not changed one bit in the interim.”[95] (bold and bold italic not in original) Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1963). Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (1993). in his honor, the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz was established (1986) (now the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz since January 2019) by the Monk family and Maria Fisher with a mission to offer public school-based jazz education programs for young people around the globe, helping students develop imaginative thinking, creativity, curiosity, a positive self-image, and a respect for their own and others' cultural heritage. Beginning in 1987 the institute hosts an annual International Jazz Competition and through its partnership with UNESCO since 1987 has promoted International Jazz Day celebrated around the world 🌎 🌍 🌏 on April 30th to “highlight jazz and its diplomatic role of uniting people in all corners of the globe.”[96] Monk star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood, CA at the North side of the 7000 block of Hollywood Boulevard. Thelonious Sphere Monk Circle ⭕️ at West 63rd Street in Manhattan named in Monk's honor. inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame (2009). |
Dizzy Gillespie
Dizzy Gillespie (Portrait of Dizzy Gillespie, 52nd Street, New York, N.Y., between 1946 and 1948) Wikipedia: Dizzy Gillespie notes that he was “a trumpet virtuoso and improviser, building on the virtuoso style of Roy Eldridge but adding layers of harmonic and rhythmic complexity previously unheard in jazz.” at the age of 12 began to teach himself to play trombone and trumpet and later took up the mellower sounding cornet. moved to New York City in 1937 and sat in with many different bands and at many jam sessions eventually earning a job with Teddy Hill's big band mostly because he sounded like Roy Eldridge who had been Hill's trumpet soloist. Immediately after joining the Hill band they toured France 🇫🇷 and Great Britain 🇬🇧 for two months. joined Cab Calloway's big band (1939), one of the highest-paid black bands in New York City. While in this group, he began to develop an interest in the fusion of jazz and Afro-Cuban music, largely because of his friendship with Mario Bauzá, who had helped recruit Gillespie into Calloway's band. with Lucky Millinder, recorded a fully formed Bebop solo within a swing band context on "Little John Special" (Listen to it by clicking on title) (1942). After Gillespie's solo, the band plays a riff which he later develops into the song "Salt Peanuts" (Click here to hear "Salt Peanuts.") joined the orchestra of Ella Fitzgerald (1942), and later the orchestra of Earl Hines (1943). “Early in 1945, Gillespie organized his own short-lived big band. Failing to achieve financial success with this group, he then formed a bop quintet with Parker in November. He later expanded the group to a sextet, but his desire to lead a big band inspired him to try once more, and this time he was able to keep its members together for four years.”[101] During this period, the band made some early attempts to fuse Afro-Cuban rhythms with Afro-American jazz. Gillespie added Chano Pozo to the rhythm section, and the two men recorded "Cubana Be/Cubana Bop" (written by George Russell) and Manteca (by Gillespie and Chano Pozo). By 1947, the band's rhythm section consisted of John Lewis, Milt Jackson, Kenny Clarke, and Ray Brown, who went on to form the Modern Jazz Quartet in 1952. At various times such prominent bop players as J. J. Johnson, Sonny Stitt, James Moody, Jimmy Heath, Paul Gonsalves, and John Coltrane (several are NEA Jazz Masters) were also members of Gillespie's band. Financial problems made Gillespie give up his big band in 1950. Gillespie continued to perform and record extensively with his various small groups into the late 1980s. In addition, he appeared occasionally in all-star groups such as the Giants of Jazz (1971-72), a sextet with Kai Winding (trombone), Sonny Stitt (alto and tenor saxophones), Thelonious Monk (piano), Al McKibbon (bass), and Art Blakey (drums). Also, he regularly performed on Caribbean cruise ships that featured jazz artists. (Bronze Statue of Dizzy at Dizzy's Nightclub in the Viking Crown Lounge on the Explorer of the Seas - Pacific Coastal Cruise 🚢) “Although he was once viewed as a musical iconoclast, his music is no longer considered radical. international jazz promoter. Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1960) awarded the National Medal of Arts (1989) created by the United States Congress in 1984 for the purpose of honoring artists and patrons of the arts, a prestigious American honor, and the highest honor specifically given for achievement in the arts conferred to an individual artist on behalf of the people of the United States selected by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), and ceremoniously presented by the President of the United States. published his autobiography To Be or Not to Bop (1979). |
(Charles Mingus, Roy Haynes, Thelonious Monk, and Charlie Parker (l. to r.) jam at The Open Door in Greenwich Village, September, 1953)
(Photo by Bob Parent (1923–1987) — enhanced and colorized)
Charlie Parker
Charlie "Bird" Parker (First photo in this row is of a photographic detail taken at the Three Deuces club in New York City, ca. August 1947) (Detail of portrait of Charlie Parker and Tommy Potter, Three Deuces Club, New York, N.Y., ca. Aug. 1947) was taught improvisation and mentored by Buster Smith (1904–1991) who inspired the use of double and triple time instilling in Parker a penchant for a fast, free style. enlarged harmonic pallet.[103]
“genius lay primarily in creative improvisations as a soloist.”[104] seemingly effortless improvisations. “one of the three (Louis Armstrong, Ornette Coleman) great revolutionary geniuses in jazz.”[105] “one of the 20th century’s most acclaimed musicians.”[106] “Bird was the real goods, a genius who took the material at hand and transformed it into a personal vision. His place in jazz is roughly similar to Picasso's in art in that he established a school of seemingly infinite variations and a colossal indifference to the dichotomy between what is considered "pretty" and "ugly."[107] U. S. Commemorative stamp (1995). DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1955) Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (1984). Read Charlie Parker interview in DownBeat magazine September 9, 1949. |
Charles Mingus
considered a bass prodigy.[108] “drew inspiration from Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, African-American gospel, and Mexicanfolk music, as well as traditional jazz and 20th-century concert music. Though most of his best work represents close collaborations with improvising musicians such as trumpeter Thad Jones, drummer Dannie Richmond, alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, and woodwind-player Eric Dolphy, he also wrote for larger instrumentations and composed several film scores.”[109] a proponent of collective improvisation. briefly a member of Duke Ellington's band (1953) as a substitute for bassist Wendell Marshall, but his notorious temper led to him being one of only three musicians personally fired by Ellington (Bubber Miley and drummer Bobby Durham are the other two), after an on-stage fight between Mingus and Juan Tizol. played gigs with Charlie Parker, (early 1950's) who Wikipedia: Charles Mingus reports “considered Parker the greatest genius and innovator in jazz history” and “whose compositions and improvisations greatly inspired and influenced him.” collaborated with other jazz legends including Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Dannie Richmond, and Herbie Hancock. joined Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, and drummer Max Roach for a concert recorded as "Jazz at Massey Hall" in Toronto (May 15, 1953), which is the last recorded documentation of Gillespie and Parker playing together. organized a series of jazz workshop concerts at the Putnam Central Club in Brooklyn (1953) with musicians Max Roach, Thelonious Monk, Horace Silver, and Art Blakey. formed a Composer's Workshop (1954) in collaboration with Bill Coss of Metronome, that included Teddy Charles, John LaPorta, and Teo Macero. Much of his oeuvre before and after the coining of the term "Third Stream" parallels Gunther Schuller's Third Stream ideas. The two-part album "Jazzical Moods" (1955) shows a blend of "jazz" and "classical" and Wikipedia: Third Stream reports may have helped inspire Schuller's Third Stream approach. Some early Mingus compositions were later recorded conducted by Gunther Schuller incorporating elements of classical music and released as "Pre-Bird" (1961), then later under the title "Mingus Revisited." (1965) developed the Jazz Workshop using a mid-sized ensemble of 8–10 members of rotating musicians including Pepper Adams, Jaki Byard, Booker Ervin, John Handy, Jimmy Knepper, Charles McPherson and Horace Parlan that Wikipedia: Charles Mingus reports “in many ways anticipated free jazz and some musicians dubbed the workshop a "university" for jazz.” released Pithecanthropus Erectus (1956), his first major work as both a bandleader and composer and the title song is a ten-minute tone poem containing a section with free improvisation lacking standard musical structure or theme. recorded "The Clown" (1957) on Atlantic Records featuring improvised narration by male humorist Jean Shepherd and using drummer Dannie Richmond who remained his preferred drummer until Mingus's death. recorded with his jazz workshop musicians one of his best-known albums, Mingus Ah Um (1959) featuring such classic Mingus compositions as "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat" (an elegy to Lester Young) and the vocal-less version of "Fables of Faubus" (a protest against segregationist Arkansas governor Orval E. Faubus) that features double-time sections. recorded the album Blues & Roots (1959) released in 1960. after seeing Ornette Coleman's quartet at the Five Spot cafe in 1960, formed a quartet with drummer Dannie Richmond, trumpeter Ted Curson and multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy, often thought of as Mingus rising to the challenging new standard established by Coleman. The quartet recorded on both "Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus" (released 1961) and "Mingus" (1960). had a disastrous Town Hall Concert (1962). recorded "The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady" (1963), a sprawling, multi-section masterpiece, described as “one of the greatest achievements in orchestration by any composer in jazz history.”[110] recorded himself on piano as "Mingus Plays Piano" (1963), an unaccompanied album featuring some fully improvised pieces. recorded "Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus" (1963) , an album admired by music critic Nat Hentoff. wrote his autobiography Beneath The Underdog (published 1971). taught for a semester at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York as the Slee Professor of Music (1971). DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1971). formed a quintet with drummer Dannie Richmond, pianist Don Pullen, trumpeter Jack Walrath and saxophonist/flutist/bass clarinetist George Adams who recorded two well-received albums, "Changes One" and "Changes Two" (1975). recorded with Charles McPherson in many of his groups resulting in "Cumbia & Jazz Fusion" (1974). at the time of his death was working with Joni Mitchell on her "Mingus," (1979) with lyrics added by Mitchell to his compositions, including "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat." |
See and hear Mingus announcing this song title: "Cell Block F Tis' Nazi USA 🇺🇸".
Art Blakey
Art Blakey (1919–1990)
went to New York City with Mary Lou Williams's combo as a drummer (1939–1942). worked with Fletcher Henderson's band (1943). joined alto saxophonist Charlie Parker, jazz vocalist Sarah Vaughan, in Billy Eckstine's embryonic bebop band (1944–1947). formed the Jazz Messengers band with pianist Horace Silver (1954) with Kenny Dorham on trumpet and Hank Mobley on tenor saxophone recording the Blue Note LP "At The Café Bohemia." recruited and graduated a veritable who's who of musicians, including trumpeter Kenny Dorham, alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson and double bassist Gene Ramey (1953) as the original Jazz Messengers, then on February 21, 1954, the "Art Blakey Quintet" produced a live set titled "A Night at Birdland" with pianist Horace Silver, trumpeter Clifford Brown, alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson and bassist Curly Russell, later playing at different times with pianists McCoy Tyner, Keith Jarrett, and Chick Corea, and later with saxophonist Donald Harrison (1982–1989). after Horace Silver left the band continued to play with superlative young players in the 1950's including trumpeters Bill Hardman, Lee Morgan, and Donald Byrd (1955), saxophonists Jackie McLean and Benny Golson (who provided the band with the now jazz standards "Blues March" and "Along Comes Betty") and pianist Bobby Timmons who composed the Grammy winning tune "Moanin'." worked with tenor saxophone player Wayne Shorter, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and trombonist Curtis Fuller in the Jazz Messengers for part of the '60s, touring and cutting Blue Note albums "Mosaic" (1961) and "Free For All" (1964). entered the DownBeat Jazz Hall of Fame Reader's Choice Award (1981) . Smithsonian Performing Arts - Certificate of Appreciation (1982). Nomination - National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences/Best Instrumental Performance for "Straight Ahead" album (1982). Grammy Nominee (1990). |
Max Roach
Name & Pictures | |
Notable Achievements[111] |
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Max Roach (1924–2007) (Portrait of Max Roach by William P. Gottlieb) |
drums bandleader composer educator social/political activist Bebop Hard Bop Free jazz 1940→2004 |
began studying piano at a neighbourhood Baptist church when he was eight and took up the drums at ten years old.[112][113] at age 18 filled in for drummer (pictured) Sonny Greer , no slouch in the drum department having played with the Duke Ellington Orchestra for 18 years at this point (total of 27 years), at the Paramount Theater in New York City (1942). pioneered Bebop. attended the Manhattan School of Music.[113]
“I have been blessed to have shared my music with the finest musicians in the business. I began early enough to play with Coleman Hawkins and then Louis Armstrong, then through Duke Ellington, Bird (Charlie Parker) and Dizzy (Gillespie).”[112] played in the "Birth of the Cool" band with Miles Davis, John Lewis, Lee Konitz and Gerry Mulligan. Mulligan tells the Library of Congress that “Another thing that made it worthwhile was Max Roach on the first date. The first set of dates was really wonderful. He was far and away the best drummer for the thing because he could approach the things as a composer and he took the kind of care with playing with the ensemble that showed his compositional awareness.”[114] and Wikipedia: "Birth of the Cool" (8th paragraph) reports that “Drummer Max Roach had been a member of Parker's quintet with Davis and was a natural choice for the group due to his enthusiastic engagement in the ideals of the nonet.” The New York Times reports that “Over the years he challenged both his audiences and himself by working not just with standard jazz instrumentation, and not just in traditional jazz venues, but in a wide variety of contexts, some of them well beyond the confines of jazz as that word is generally understood.”[115]
donated over 100,000 items to the Max Roach papers at the U.S. Library of Congress (2014), Librarian of Congress James H. Billington said. “(Max Roach's) collection will have high research value not just for musicians and jazz scholars, but for anyone exploring the rise of political consciousness among African-Americans in the post-World War II period. His collection will now be preserved in the nation’s library so that his legacy and works might inspire generations to come.”[116] Civil Rights movement composer of "We Insist!".
“The roundness and nobility of sound on the drums and the clarity and precision of the cymbals distinguishes Max Roach as a peerless master of this uniquely American instrument. His stature as a musician, composer and bandleader is the result of his having created a larger and more varied body of work than any other drummer-leader. He has done solo pieces, pieces for drums and voice, for jazz ensembles, percussion ensembles, for choirs, and has performed with video. While working with Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell and Clifford Brown, he developed a unique vocabulary that gave the drums another level of identity. He played the drums in a way that not only kept time and accentuated the beat, but he also developed the call-and-response idea central to the foundations of American music. He has refined his style over the course of the years, and his playing now has the grandeur found only in those who had exceptional talent to begin with, and matched that talent with an ongoing dedication to sustained development.”[118] DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame, Critic's Poll (1980).
the first jazz musician to receive a so-called genius grant from the MacArthur Foundation (1988). |
John Coltrane
John Coltrane (1926–1967) Notable Achievements:[121] first professional gigs were in a cocktail lounge trio in early to mid–1945.[122] “By the time he (Coltrane) got to Hawaii, in late 1945, the Navy was already rapidly downsizing. Coltrane's musical talent was quickly recognized, though, and he became one of the few Navy men to serve as a musician without having been granted musician's rating when he joined the Melody Masters, the base swing band. As the Melody Masters was an all-white band, however, Coltrane was treated merely as a guest performer to avoid alerting superior officers of his participation in the band. He continued to perform other duties when not playing with the band, including kitchen and security details. By the end of his service, he had assumed a leadership role in the band. His first recordings, an informal session in Hawaii with Navy musicians, occurred on July 13, 1946. Coltrane played alto saxophone on a selection of jazz standards and bebop tunes.” in 1947 Coltrane began playing tenor saxophone instead of his original alto saxophone with the Eddie Vinson Band.
toured with King Kolax immediately after getting out of the Navy. Wikipedia: John Coltrane reports that according to tenor saxophonist Odean Pope, Coltrane was “significantly influenced by the obscure Philadelphia pianist, composer, and theorist Hasaan Ibn Ali who took the Muslim name of the grandson of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad. "Hasaan was the clue to . . . the system that Trane uses. Hasaan was the great influence on Trane’s melodic concept” apparently possibly influencing Coltrane's well known sheets of sound approach in the summer of 1955, Coltrane was freelancing in Philadelphia while studying with guitarist Dennis Sandole when he was recruited by Miles Davis that formed Davis's "First Great Quintet" with Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums from October 1955 to April 1957 (with a few absences). promoted spirituality in jazz.[124] easily recognizable idiosyncratic style and tone, especially on soprano saxophone. plaintive expressive passionate energetic sound in his solos. playing has a lot of drive. driven to practice his instrument and did so constantly.
Miles Davis expanded this first quintet with Coltrane into a sextet with the addition of Cannonball Adderley on alto saxophone in 1958 producing one of the definitive hard bop groups recording the Columbia albums Round About Midnight. , Milestones , and the marathon sessions for Prestige Records resulting in five albums (Miles, Cookin', Relaxin', Workin', and Steamin') collected on The Legendary Prestige Quintet Sessions. In mid–1958, Bill Evans replaced Garland on piano and Jimmy Cobb replaced Philly Joe Jones on drums, but Evans only lasted about six months, in turn replaced by Wynton Kelly as 1958 turned into 1959. This group backing Davis, Coltrane, and Adderley, with Evans returning for the recording sessions, recorded Kind of Blue , considered one of the most important, influential and popular albums in jazz. The performance of "Chasin' The Trane" consisting of eighty choruses of Coltrane improvising on the blues was on his tenth album Coltrane "Live" at the Village Vanguard released in 1962 on Impulse Records featuring for the first time the members of the "Classic Quartet" of himself with McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison, and Elvin Jones. Contrasting with the positive reaction to his previous album for Impulse!, “this one generated much turmoil among both critics and audience alike with its challenging music” and began John Coltrane's experiments into avant-garde jazz (1961) in his avant-garde playing used new extended techniques, such squeals, split tones, and multiphonics canonized as a Saint (1982) in the St. John Coltrane African Orthodox Church of San Francisco, CA[127] DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1965) Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (1992).
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Miles Davis
yeah!
Miles Davis (1926–1991)
(Montreux, Switzerland (Photo by Lajos Jardai at Colozine but colorized) (Photo on right by Tom Palumbo)
Notable Achievements:[128] “arguably the most influential jazz musician in the post-World War II period, being at the forefront of changes in the genre for more than 40 years.”[129] (bold and bold italic not in original) cool[130] persona and dresser.[131]“By 1960 Miles was a GQ fashion plate and on Esquire’s best-dressed list. Ever ahead of the pack, he’d already moved on to slim-cut European suits. Press releases for upcoming concerts detailed the sartorial as well as musical program.”[132]“Throughout his four decades in jazz, in which he was at the forefront of every major innovation, Miles Davis always shunned the stale and the hackneyed—what he called “warmed-over turkey.” This artistic integrity, this determination to be unpredictable, to stand for the new and to take risks, is key to understanding Davis’s chameleon-like role as style icon.”[133] (bold not in original) stylist innovator: hard bop, cool, modal, jazz/rock fusion, rap hip-hop jazz on the album "Doo-Bop" with rapper Easy Mo Bee. “formed a nonet with arranger-pianist Gil Evans, saxophonists Gerry Mulligan and Lee Konitz, and pianist John Lewis to record his first major musical statement, "Birth of the Cool," using the standard piano, bass, and drums rhythm section, along with the nonet's horn section of French horn, tuba, trombone, and alto and baritone saxophones, lending the band a unique harmonic 'cool' sound”; (hence birth of the cool).”[134] in a professional career lasting 50 years, he was at the forefront of Bebop, cool, Hard bop, orchestral jazz (Third Stream), Modal jazz, Jazz-rock fusion and Techno-funk.[135] “played the trumpet in a lyrical, introspective, and melodic style, often employing a stemless Harmon mute to make his sound more personal and intimate.”[135] attended for a year the Institute of Musical Art in New York City (renamed Juilliard) in September 1944. joined Benny Carter's band and made his first recordings as a sideman (1945). (Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Allen Eager, and Kai Winding) (Original Photo by Herman Leonard (1923–2010)) recording debut as a leader on a 1947 session that featured Charlie Parker, pianist John Lewis, bassist Nelson Boyd, and drummer Max Roach. recorded three sessions (Jan. 21 & Apr. 22, 1949; March 9, 1950) in New York City that became the "Birth of the Cool" compilation album released on Capitol Records (1957). Wikipedia: Birth of the Cool reports that the music featured “unusual instrumentation and several notable musicians, the music consisted of innovative arrangements influenced by classical music techniques such as polyphony, and marked a major development in post-bebop jazz.” (Detail of Jazz Tree of "Miles Davis Live Bands (1955–1975) by Paul Barber as published in Even More Rock Family Trees Paperback—November 1, 2011 by Pete Frame (b. 1942)) 🔵 "Kind of Blue: How Miles Davis Changed Jazz" recorded the landmark modal jazz album "Kind of Blue" (1959) with his first great sextet formed his "second great quintet" of [reading left to right in photograph below] Herbie Hancock on piano/keyboards, Miles on trumpet, recorded the album ESP (1965) that pointed the way to the fusion of jazz and rock.
together with producer Teo Macero[136] made "the most hated album in jazz" thus having the distinction of making both the best liked album of all time (most sales) in "Kind of Blue" (1959) together with what was once considered the worst jazz album in "On The Corner" (1972). See why people think it was or was not a 'sell out.' was the only major jazz figure to appear with top rock bands in stadiums and theaters around the world.
NEA (National Endowment for the Arts) Jazz Master (1984) has the most immediately recognizable iconic profile silhouette in jazz history: ! What he did, says fellow trumpeter Lester Bowie (1941–1999), is play “completely different from anybody else in his era. The way he plays his intervals, the way he plays through chord changes, that’s what made him really different. Everybody else played sort of the same, up and down, musical passages, chord changes, in intervals of seconds, thirds, fourths, fifths, and sixths. But Miles plays in between all of that. He plays sideways. He runs through whole tunes sideways. It was really different from the way anybody else had ever approached the trumpet. It takes genius to come up with a different idea, a different way of doing something. Considering all the great trumpet players who had come before him, it took quite a bit for Miles to come up with a new and different approach. He was the innovator on the trumpet.”[137] (bold not in original)
inducted into Downbeat magazine's Jazz & Blues Hall of Fame in Reader's Poll, 1962. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (1990). See the list of where Miles Davis is ranked as an artist (currently 16th greatest of all-time) and where his albums rank at AcclaimedMusic.net. Read Gary Giddins's review of Miles's Autobiography "Juilliard Dropout Makes Good," originally published in the New York Times October 15, 1989, Section 7, Page 7.
Miles Davis's Interviews: Listen to Miles Davis's voice in this 1953 "Interview with DJ Harry Frost" on KXLW, East St. Louis radio. prior to his permanently injuring it after removal of nodes from his larynx from shouting making his voice into a rasp. Listen to Miles Davis's voice announcing song title's during The Miles Davis/Tadd Dameron Quintet—In Paris Festival International De Jazz—May, 1949 a few years before he injured it. You can hear him announcing tunes at 4:34–4:37 (Count Basie and Tad Dameron's "Good Bait"), 10:22–10:23 ("Don't Blame Me"), 14:41–14:43 (Tad Dameron's "Lady Bird"), and 29:41–29:44 ("Embraceable You"). Miles also plays a lot of terrific Bebop trumpet on this date. Read one of the best interviews ever on how Miles Davis made music at the end of his career from Marcus Miller being interviewed by Brett Premack, "Marcus Miller Remembers Miles Davis" (aka "Marcus Miller Spills the Tea on Miles Davis"), January 8, 1998. Read Alex Hailey's interview with Miles Davis for Playboy magazine September, 1962. Read "Last Miles: Our 1991 Miles Davis Interview," SPIN magazine, December 1991. Read about Marc Crawford's article in Ebony magazine titled "Miles Davis: Evil Genius of Jazz." Read Mark Crawford's "Miles Davis: Evil Genius of Jazz," Ebony (January 1961), 69–71, 74, 76, 78. and see it with photographs below. |
(Background photos by NASA and the Hubble Space Telescope using false but natural colors in 2012 with PoJ.fm logos added)
Lennie Tristano
Lennie Tristano (Pied Piper jam, New York, N.Y., September, 1947)
(New York, N.Y., ca. Aug. 1947) Notable Achievements:[138] born in Chicago, Illinois, where he lost his eyesight at age 8. graduated from the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago with a B.A. in Music (1941). was influenced by pianists Earl "Fatha" Hines (1903–1983), Teddy Wilson (1912–1986) and Art Tatum (1909–1956). became a jazz fixture in Chicago acquiring a loyal following of students. in 1946 moved to New York City, formed a jazz trio, and began formal teaching of jazz and improvisation. “was the first person on record to persuade players to improvise simultaneously without any pre-set limits as to key or duration, and to do so in public rather than in a studio.”[139]
taught many jazz players over thirty years, including tenor saxophonists Bud Freeman (1906–1991) and Warne Marsh (1927–1987), alto saxophonist Lee Konitz (1927–2020), clarinetist and composer John LaPorta (1920–2004), guitarist Billy Bauer (1915–2005), and bassist Arnold Fishkind (1919–1999). Metronome's musician of the year in 1947. Konitz and Marsh joined his pioneering sextet and recorded for Capitol Records in 1949. From 1955 to 1958, the threesome also recorded together and separately for Nesuhi Ertegun's (1917–1989) newly established Atlantic Records. Read a review of "Charlie Parker & Lennie Tristano: Complete Recordings." elected to DownBeat magazine Hall of Fame, Critic's Poll (1979). inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2013 for "Crosscurrents," an album of recordings from 1949. added to the Ertegun Hall of Fame in 2015. Read Arabella Sprot's "Lennie Tristano: 10 Great Albums from the Jazz Innovator," last updated November 3, 2021. Read Barry Ulanov's "Lennie Tristano: Master in the Making (The remarkable life of Lennie Tristano who wrested order out of chaos and art out of affliction)," Metronome, August 1949, 14–15 & 32–33.
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Chet Baker
Chet Baker (1929–1988) Notable Achievements:[140] born in 1929 in Yale, Oklahoma the son of guitarist Chesney Henry Baker, Sr. with the family moving to Glendale, California in 1940. when a young boy he sang in the church choir as well as in amateur competitions. when a teenager, his father bought him a trombone, which Chet found unwieldy, so later is replaced by a trumpet. first musical training was at Glendale Junior High School in California. dropped out of high school at sixteen and enlisted in the army (1946) where he played in the Army Band of the 298th Army regiment in Berlin, Germany. studied music theory and harmony at El Camino College in Los Angeles, California (1948) while playing in local jazz clubs. He dropped out of college in his sophomore year. enlisted again in the army and became a member of the Sixth Army Band (1949) at the Presidium in San Francisco. continued to perform at numerous clubs around San Francisco, including Bop City and the Black Hawk. in 1952 his first notable performances were with saxophonist Vido Musso’s band and tenor saxophonist Stan Getz. in the summer of 1952, Charlie Parker chose him to play in his new band in a series of concerts on the West Coast. after finishing with Parker, he began playing in Gerry Mulligan’s quartet, where they used only a baritone saxophone, trumpet, bass and drums, but no piano, gaining notoriety performing at the Haig nightclub and coming under contract with the new record label Pacific Jazz Records (later known as World Records Pacific). The band stood out for the interaction between Mulligan's baritone saxophone and Baker's trumpet. Rather than playing melodic lines in unison like bebop giants Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, the two developed musical phrases from contrapuntal techniques. Baker became famous for his unusually effective expressive abilities, especially because of his interpretation of "My Funny Valentine" in the band's first LP, Gerry Mulligan Quartet. because of Mulligan's drug problems (he served time in prison) and economic and character disagreements, Baker formed his own jazz band, where he played trumpet and sang. won the Best Instrumentalist award in DownBeat magazine's poll (1954), beating Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, and rising star Clifford Brown, among others. in 1959 and 1960 Baker toured Italy and recorded records with the orchestra of Maestro Ezio Leoni (an artistic pseudonym for Len Mercer) playing with Italian musicians Franco Cerri, Gianni Basso, Renato Sellani, Glauco Masetti, Franco Mondini, Fausto Papetti, and pianist Luca Flores. began playing the soprano flugelhorn during his performances in the early 1960s. famous for having life long drug problems, especially cocaine and heroin, where his dependence on heroin got him a year in an Italian prison, and subsequent expulsions from West Germany and England. stopped playing in 1966 due to serious problems with his front teeth, which had to be extracted because of their causing severe pain. fellow trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie recognized Baker while working as a gas pump clerk and helped him fix his dentures and encouraged him to play again. Baker moved to New York, where he began recording with renowned jazz guitarist Jim Hall (with whom he recorded the excellent "Concierto"), and then finally returned to living in Europe. collaborated with English musician Elvis Costello in the song "Shipbuilding." Discogs lists a total of 7,848 albums that Baker plays on with 829 exclusively featuring Baker. Click on any of the three-hundred forty-five album covers below to confirm.
collaborated with Italian flutist Nicola Stilo, discovered by Baker. in Rome, Italy he met the Brazilian pianist and singer Jim Porto with whom recorded Rio (1983). invited to perform at the 1985 Free Jazz Festival in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, Brazil.
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Ornette Coleman
(Randolph Denard) Ornette Coleman (Photo by Tom Beetz, taken July 9, 2010) (Caravan of Dreams, Fort Worth, TX, 1985 (The Roots at the Royal Festival Hall, June 13, 2009) (Photo by Nomo Michael Hoefner) (Photo by Bruno Bollaert, taken July 8, 2010) (Ornette Coleman at Royal Festival Hall in London, England at the Meltdown Festival June 21, 2009) (Photo by Tom Beetz, taken July 9, 2010)
Notable Achievements:[141] Played in barroom rhythm-and-blues bands and traveling in the South with a traveling carnival/minstrel show called Silas Green from New Orleans (1949). recorded debut album "Something Else!!!!: The Music of Ornette Coleman" for Les Koenig's Contemporary Records (1958). followed up by "Tomorrow Is The Question" (1959) invited to a summer concert series by the Modern Jazz Quartet's pianist and musical director John Lewis held at the Lenox School of Jazz in Massachusetts (1959). “Gunther Shuller: 'I remember vividly Ornette Coleman just going out of his mind the first time he heard Jelly Roll Morton’s "Black Bottom Stomp"—he thought it was the best thing he’d ever heard in his life. I played a lot of Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith, God knows what, and a lot of it was a revelation to him about his own heritage.'”[142] (bold not in original) early supporters of Coleman, besides John Lewis, included, the conductor Leonard Bernstein, the jazz critics Nat Hentoff and Martin Williams and the composer Gunther Schuller, the last three all wrote for the magazine The Jazz Review. Coleman and his quartet (Don Cherry 🍒 on pocket trumpet, double bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Billy Higgins) came to New York City for a two-week engagement (stretching to ten weeks) at the Five Spot Cafe in November 1959 with Leonard Bernstein, Gunther Schuller, Neshui and Ahmet Ertegun, John Hammond and almost every musician in town in the audience on the first night.[143] (l. to rt. Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, Ornette Coleman, Ed Blackwell)
“For the players, however, it was something that, according to Haden, they “worked out as we went along. We did it all by ear. At first when we were playing and improvising, we kind of followed the pattern of the song, sometimes. Then, when we got to New York, Ornette wasn’t playing on the song patterns, like the bridge and the interlude and stuff like that. He would just play. And that’s when I started just following him and playing the chord changes that he was playing: on-the-spot new chord structures made up according to how he felt at any given moment. And Cherry was kind of playing like that, too, so Billy [Higgins] and I kind of followed it. “The truth is,” he continues, “that when we had first met, we were kind of all hearing that way already. We just happened to be at the right place at the right time, all together, to make this thing happen. And it just kept getting better and better.”[144] (bold not in original) occasionally used a non-tempered musical scale with notes sounding at a natural rather than a well-tempered pitch, abandonment of chord changes and the conventions of the 32-bar AABA song form and emphasizing group improvisational interplay. From 1959 through the 1960's, viewed as “either a visionary or a charlatan, and there was no middle ground between advocacy and disapproval.”[145] His alto saxophone playing had a “suppleness of phrasing and (a) keening vox-humana quality of his intonation.”[146] “(Colemen's) music looked back through the jazz tradition with its collective improvisations and its personal, speechlike approach to intonation and phrasing, so much like the ensemble and solo styles of the early Southern and Southwestern blues and jazz musicians. . . . In twelve years the style had become classic, distilled into the kind of unique, breathtaking perfection . . . ”[147] (bold not in original) “Despite the nonstandard details of the situation (Coleman playing a white plastic alto saxophone, exploiting modal rather than chordal approaches to improvisation, and so forth), Coleman's early work mobilizes traditional forms and rhythms: Charlie Haden and Billy Higgins provide recognizable, solid foundation for Coleman's and Cherry's improvisational experimentation. This might explain why Coleman was drawn into the pantheon of jazz (despite rancorous controversy) in a way that Albert Ayler was not.”[148] (bold not in original) “One way into Coleman’s music is to think of it as avant-gutbucket. Hailing from Fort Worth . . . , he got his start in rhythm and blues and the blues are, conspicuously, at the forefront of his achievement. . . . The forbidding harmonic intricacy of bebop sparked several responses in the fifties, but Coleman’s was the most radical. He threw out the chord changes, famously excluding pianists from his primordial groups, thus eliminating “comping,” or chord-prompting that kept soloists in line, and played music that often had the furious speed of bop but lacked its tonal anchors. His melodies and solos were filled with catchy bluesy riffs and soul-chilling cries, but he shifted notes (or, rather, from pitches) without regard for traditionally recognizable relations of consonance.” recorded "The Shape of Jazz to Come" (1959) and the first track, Lonely Woman, became a jazz standard. original group signed to Atlantic Records where the essential music was finished within a short time recording his third album "The Shape Of Jazz To Come" (1959), fourth album "Change Of The Century" (1959), fifth album "This Is Our Music" (1961), sixth album "Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation" with Eric Dolphy on bass clarinet and trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, seventh album "Ornette!" (1961), and eighth album "Ornette On Tenor" (1961). released "Free Jazz" (1960), an album containing improvised performances by two quartets often playing simultaneously: toured England 🇬🇧, France 🇫🇷, and Sweden 🇸🇪 (1965), “setting in motion an avant-garde jazz movement in Europe that continued unabated for decades.”[150] Downbeat magazine Hall of Fame, Reader's Poll (1969). twice awarded a Guggenheim scholarship (1967 & 1974 for Music Composition). composed "Skies of America," (1972) a full-length work for soloist and symphony orchestra, performed by the London Philharmonic (1972) with the U.S. premiere at the Newport-in-New York jazz festival at Lincoln Center with the American Symphony Orchestra (July 1972).[151] traveled to Nigeria 🇳🇬 (early 1970's) and Morocco 🇲🇦 and played and recorded "Dancing In Your Head" released (1977) with the Master Musicians of Joujouka. (1973). formed Prime Time double quartet with two guitarists, two drummers, two bassists, and Coleman on sax, violin and trumpet (circa 1975). created arts center, New York City (early 1980s). received the key to his hometown Fort Worth, TX (1983) documented in Shirley Clark’s film “Ornette: Made In America.” “had a huge impact on the early world of Progressive Rock, especially bands such as King Crimson, Henry Cow, Soft Machine and Gentle Giant.[152] National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Jazz Masters Fellowship (1984). recorded "Song X" with guitarist Pat Metheny (1985). Hartford Real Art Ways retrospective, including performance of Coleman's recently composed chamber music; subsequent commissions for the Kronos Quartet (1985). recorded Virgin Beauty featuring the late Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia (1942–1995)
on three tracks (released 1988). named Jazz Artist of the Century, Texas Monthly magazine (1985?). Ornette Coleman Festival at Carnegie Hall, NY (1986). reunited with original quartet for album "In All Languages" (1987). his "Broadway Blues" became a jazz standard and a key work in the free jazz movement.[153] Honorary doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania (1988). composed his classical work, "Freedom Symbol: La Statue (The Country That Gave the Freedom Symbol to America)," (1989), a composition commissioned by the French government and inspired by the Statue of Liberty. premiere of Architecture in Motion, Harmolodic ballet; soundtracks for Naked Lunch and Philadelphia (1990s). Honorary degree from the California Institute of the Arts (1990). featured performer and composer of several of the soundtracks for “Naked Lunch,” a film of the William S. Burroughs's novel by filmmaker David Cronenberg together with music composed by Howard Shore (1991).
awarded a "Genius" (really a creativity)[154] grant by the MacArthur Fellowship (1994). started Harmolodics label (1994–97). named Jazz Artist of the Year, 46th Annual Down Beat International Critics Poll (1996). inducted as Officier (Officer) in France's Order of Arts and Letters (1998). Awarded the Praemium Imperiale Prize for Music, Japan Art Association, Tokyo a prize worth ¥15 million, about $130,000, given under the patronage of Prince Hitachi of Japan, the brother of Emperor Akihito and presented by former French prime minister, Raymond Barre, who is on the board of the Japan Art Association (2001). Gish Prize (2004). started Sound Grammar label in 2006. Pulitzer prize for music for album "Sound Grammar" (2007). over 50 recordings.[155] top of Village Voice jazz critic's poll (2006). Grammy Award nomination for album "Sound Grammar." Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (2007). Honorary Doctor of Music Degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, with 44th President of the United States Barack Obama in attendance (2010). Richard Williams, "The world came to recognise the courage and rightness of Ornette Coleman," The Guardian, June 11, 2015. “His music confronted people so directly that he was once beaten up by concertgoers—but Ornette came to be one of jazz’s torch bearers.” Andrew Purcell, "Free Radical," The Guardian, June 29, 2007. “Ornette Coleman didn't just move jazz on—he took it on a wild journey some will never forgive him for. He talks to Andrew Purcell about liberating sound, his theory of 'harmolodics', and being beaten up for playing his sax out of tune.” John Fordham, "Ornette Coleman Obituary," The Guardian, June 11, 2015. Hank Williams, "Everything is Music: A Riverside Church Farewell to Ornette Coleman," July 6, 2015. |
Don Cherry
Don Cherry 🍒 (1936–1995)
Notable Achievements:[156] one of the pioneering figures in free jazz with Ornette Coleman (1957). closely identified with what almost everyone calls a pocket trumpet, although technically it was a pocket cornet. “Very few “name” players are identified with pocket cornets. Certainly the best known would be the late “free jazz” player Don Cherry, who played a 1930’s vintage Besson MEHA pocket cornet (almost always identified as a “pocket trumpet”). I’ve read that he first played a Pakistani pocket cornet—the first photo shows him playing something other than his Besson. You can see (and hear) several videos of Cherry playing his BessonA at the website YouTubeB.”[157] (bold and bold italic not in original) stayed with Ornette Coleman through the early 1960s, playing on the first twelve (and most influential) of the saxophonist’s albums listed below:
In 1960, recorded "The Avant-Garde" (Atlantic, 1960 / 1966) with John Coltrane (1926–1967). After leaving Coleman’s band, played with Albert Ayler (1936–1970) on "New York Eye and Ear Control" (1964) and Ayler's legendary album "Ghosts" (1965). co-led the New York Contemporary Five with Archie Shepp (b. 1937) and John Tchicai (1963–1964). (Click on any of the three .gif pictures to listen to a special mix of "Don Cherry Around the World." Click on center 2D picture to see the 3D version, then hit back arrow of browser to return to PoJ.fm) led a band in Europe with Argentinian saxophonist Gato Barbieri (1932–2016) from 1964–1966 and recorded two of his most highly regarded albums, "Complete Communion" (1965/1966) and "Symphony for Improvisers."
(1966/1967). appeared on records alongside many other icons of modern jazz, including Archie Shepp, John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Carla Bley, Charlie Haden, Steve Lacy, and Sun Ra. taught music at Dartmouth College (1970). recorded with the Jazz Composer’s Orchestra (1973). starting in early 1970s lived in Sweden with his wife Moki (1943–2009) and their children for four years and used the country as a base for his travels around Europe and the Middle East. became increasingly interested in other, mostly non-Western, styles of music. performed and recorded with Codona with percussionist Naná Vasconcelos (1944–2016) (on right in trio photo below) and multi-instrumentalist Collin Walcott (1945–1984) (in middle of trio below) playing a mixture of African, Asian, and other indigenous musics (late 1970s and early 1980s).
formed the band called Nu with Naná Vasconcelos (1944–2016) and alto saxophonist Carlos Ward (b. 1940). recorded the album "Art Deco" (recorded 1988/released 1989) with bassist Charlie Haden (1937–2014) drummer Billy Higgins (1936–2001), and tenor saxophonist James Clay (1935–1995). learned to play and compose for wood flutes, tambura, gamelan, and various other non-Western instruments. applying his knowledge of non-Western musical elements he recorded "Multikulti"
that celebrated musical diversity (recorded 1988 to 1990/released 1990). inducted into the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame (2011). helped to promote other countries music into a jazz context, so-called world music. Listen to Don Cherry's voice discussing his meeting with saxophonist Albert Ayler (1936–1970). Listen to Don Cherry playing and incorporating world music. “On the occasion of the release of the first book in the history of humanity on this too little-known genius of Great Black Music, we take you on a real world tour thanks to the many cosmopolitan encounters Don Cherry made during his life as a volunteer nomad. On the [musical] program of this unprecedented and certified organic trip: India 🇮🇳, Germany 🇩🇪, Morocco 🇲🇦, Greece 🇬🇷, or Republic of the Gambia 🇬🇲.”[158] (bold not in original) Watch video of "Bemsha Swing" with Don Cherry on pocket cornet, Herbie Hancock (b. 1940) on piano, Ron Carter (b. 1937) on bass, and Billy Higgins (1936–2001) on drums. See Allmusic.com's Don Cherry biography and discography. Read from the Notable Names Database on "Don Cherry." Read the biography entry for "Don Cherry, Jazz Artist Born" at African American Registry. |
Lee Morgan
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Notable Achievements[159] |
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trumpet bandleader |
one of the pioneering figures in hard bop |
John McLaughlin
Name & Pictures | |
Notable Achievements[160] |
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guitar electric guitar (Photo courtesy of Alfred Publishing) bandleader |
played jazz, rock, and blues in his native England with Alexis Korner and also Ginger Baker (1960's). |
Wynton Marsalis
Notable Achievements:[162][163] pivotal figure in the neo-traditionalist movement in jazz Read Playthell Benjamin, "Urgent notes in a dazzling language," The Guardian, June 4, 1992, 25.
See and hear "Wynton Marsalis interview "Music is Life" at the ideafestival. Read Patrick Jarenwattananon's review of "Wynton Marsalis: At 50, At The Vanguard, In History," at A Blog Supreme, NPR Music, October 25, 2011. |
Internet Resources on Jazz's Notable Achievements
"A Flourish of Jazz," Time magazine, July 5, 1976.
"Top Jazz albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top Avant-garde jazz albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top BeBop albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top Hard Bop albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top Big Band albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top Swing albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top Vocal Jazz albums" from acclaimedmusic.net
"Top artists from 1890–1949" from acclaimedmusic.net includes twelve jazz musicians out of the top twenty and six out of the top ten, including first place (Duke Ellington), second place (Louis Armstrong), and third place (Billie Holiday).
(Photo of the South side of 52nd Street between 5th & 6th Avenues looking east from 6th Avenue (c. 1948) by William P. Gottlieb)
• Cannonball Adderley
• Gene Ammons
• Albert Ayler
• Chet Baker
• Art Blakey
• Jimmy Blanton
• Tina Brooks
• Clifford Brown
• Dave Brubeck
• Ray Bryant
• Donald Byrd
• Sonny Clark
• Chick Corea
• Sonny Criss
• Paul Desmond
• Eric Dolphy
• Lou Donaldson
• Kenny Dorham
• Kenny Drew
• Bill Evans
• Ella Fitzgerald
• Tommy Flanagan
• Red Garland
• Stan Getz
• Dexter Gordon
• Grant Green
• Johnny Griffin
• Al Haig
• Hampton Hawes
• Joe Henderson
• Billie Holliday
• Milt Jackson
• Keith Jarrett
• Elvin Jones
• Philly Joe Jones
• Duke Jordan
• Wynton Kelly
• Rahsaan Roland Kirk
• Scott LaFaro
• Booker Little
• Branford Marsalis
• Jackie McLean
• Pat Metheny
• Hank Mobley
• Wes Montgomery
• Lee Morgan
• Fats Navarro
• Phineas Newborn Jr.
• Duke Pearson
• Art Pepper
• Oscar Peterson
• Bud Powell
• Max Roach
• Sonny Rollins
• Pharoah Sanders
• Shirley Scott
• Archie Shepp
• Wayne Shorter
• Horace Silver
• Zoot Sims
• Bobby Timmons
• Stanley Turrentine
• McCoy Tyner
• Mal Waldron
NOTES
- ↑ "The Making of a GREAT DAY FOR JAZZ," Issue 2004, No. 1.
- ↑ “Thank you for contacting the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and for your interest in the NEA Jazz Masters photo. As long as you are not looking to use the photograph for financial gain, rather for informational purposes, you may use it with the following credit: Photo by Tom Pich for the NEA. We wish you the best in all your creative endeavors. Signed: Allison Hill, Staff Assistant in Public Affairs, National Endowment for the Arts, 400 7th Street SW, Washington DC 20506, hilla@arts.gov; 202-682-5037; 202-682-5084.
- ↑ ‘’Wikipedia’’: William P. Gottlieb.
- ↑ May 1, 2020. "We are happy for you to use the picture from the front of the "Kitten on the Keys" with our wording removed. As the picture is our copyright (the original was a greyscale image) we would appreciate a credit to Saydisc Records, if this is possible. I imagine you will be including details of our albums "Kitten on the Keys", “Pianola Jazz” and “Pianola Ragtime” on your website." After having been sent the finished image that was being put on the PoJ.fm website, Gef wrote back via email on May 2, 2020 that "Yes, the picture's fine and we are happy to confirm that we grant permission for use as you describe. A hyperlink to our website is acceptable." With best wishes, Gef Lucena, Saydisc Records, The Barton, Inglestone Common, Badminton, S. Glos. GL9 1BX, England. E-mail: Saydiscrecords@aol.com. Web site: www.saydisc.com.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Ted Gioia, The History of Jazz, 2nd edition (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 33.
- ↑ "The People of Traditional New Orleans Jazz: Buddy Bolden: Calling His Children Home 1877–1931, National Park Service, New Orleans Jazz, National Historical Park Louisiana.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ "Charles "Buddy" Bolden," National Park Service, New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park website, second paragraph, second sentence. Accessed September 7, 2019.
- ↑ Ted Gioia goes so far as to call Bolden “the elusive father of jazz” and “often cited as the first jazz musician” in The History of Jazz, 2nd ed., (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 33–34.
- ↑ The date of 1895 can be heard recited here at Jazz Rhythms. It is also referenced at JazzOnTheTube's "Buddy Bolden".
- ↑ Ted Gioia, The History of Jazz, 2nd edition, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 34.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Ira Steingroot, "Arts: Yoshi’s Honors Memory of Jazz Legend Clifford Brown," The Berkeley Daily Planet, Special to the Planet, October 21, 2005.
- ↑ Matt Micucci, "A Short History of . . . The Legend of Buddy Bolden," Jazziz magazine, March 6, 2019.
- ↑ Wikipedia: Buddy Bolden confirms his notable accomplishments under the sub-heading "Musical career and early decline":
“ . . . known as King Bolden, his band was popular in New Orleans (the city of his birth) from about 1900 until 1907, when he was incapacitated by schizophrenia (then called dementia praecox). Bolden was known for his loud sound and improvisation. He made a big impression on younger musicians.” - ↑ See these further biographies and discographies:
‣ Ferdinand "Jelly Roll Morton" Lamothe
‣ Doctor Jazz's Jelly Roll Morton website
‣ Doctor Jazz's Jelly Roll late news and references - ↑ Morton often gave his birthdate as being 1885 to make it more likely he could have invented jazz. This date was false, as reported at AllMusic.com, Uncle Dave Lewis, "Don't You Leave Me Here: Tributary of a Blues Stream," Aug. 13, 2009: “The discovery in 2005 of a visa Morton had taken out to work in Mexico in 1921 reveals that Jelly Roll Morton really knew that he'd been born in 1890. But by 1938, he was backdating himself to appear five years older—for the longest time "1885" was the accepted birthdate for Morton, only to be undone decades after his death by virtue of a baptismal registry discovered in a New Orleans church.”
- ↑ Robert Walser, ed. Keeping Time: Readings in Jazz History, NY: Oxford, 1999, 16.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ "Jazz Milestones: Noteworthy Dates in the History of Jazz Music (1895–1977), entry under 1902: at APassion4Jazz.com.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 John Edward Hasse, "Plotting His Way Into Jazz History," Wall Street Journal, September 7, 2018.
- ↑ Encyclopedia Brittanica: "Jelly Roll Morton," first paragraph.
- ↑ Howard Reich and William Gaines, Jelly's Blues: The Life, Music, and Redemption of Jelly Roll Morton (Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo Press), 2003, 144.
- ↑ Jeffrey Magee, "'King Porter's Stomp' and the Jazz Tradition," Current Musicology, "Special Issue - Jazz Studies," at Jazz Studies Online.
- ↑ See Katy E. Martin, "The Preoccupations of Mr. Lomax, Inventor of the 'Inventor of Jazz'," M.A. thesis, graduate degree program in English and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas, 2008, 2.
Also available in Popular Music and Society, "The Preoccupations of Mr. Lomax, Inventor of the “Inventor of Jazz”," Volume 36, 2013, Issue 1, April 18, 2012, 30–39. Also found in a thesis imprint by ProQuest, UMI Dissertation Publishing (September 1, 2011), . - ↑ John Fordham, "50 great moments in jazz: The arrival of Duke Ellington," Music blog: Jazz, The Guardian, March 27, 2009.
- ↑ "The Fantastic Mr. Jelly Lord," Jazz at Lincoln Center's 2017–18 Opening Weekend concerts, September 14–16, 2017.
“The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis kicks off the 30th anniversary season with a celebration of New Orleans legend Jelly Roll Morton (1890–1941). Jazz’s first great composer, musical intellect, and piano virtuoso, Morton provided the musical blueprint of an eternal New Orleans and jazz as it is known today. Through both classic and never-before-heard arrangements of essential tunes like “King Porter Stomp,” “Jungle Blues,” “Black Bottom Stomp,” and “The Pearls,” the JLCO (Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra) will showcase the contemporary power and depth of possibility in the earliest jazz. The concepts found in these pieces have been explored by master musicians for the past century and made truly modern through the lens of Jelly Roll.” (bold not in original)
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑
- ↑ "Top 20 Musicians of All Time, in Any Genre: #5: Louis Armstrong," Chris Walker, LA Weekly, January 12, 2012.
- ↑ See Armstrong singing in the only known footage of him in a recording studio at Time magazine's Rare footage of Armstrong in recording studio.
- ↑ DownBeat magazine, "The First Recordings," fourth paragraph.
- ↑ Louis Armstrong purchased this modest house in 1943, built by Robert W. Johnson in 1910, and lived there until his death in 1971 of a heart attack. The house was put on the National Register #76001265 in 1976. In 1983, Armstrong's widow, Lucille, willed the house and its contents to New York City for the creation of a museum and study center devoted to Armstrong's career and the history of jazz. The Louis Armstrong House was designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1988.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ Wikipedia: Sydney Bechet, "Biography," first paragraph, second sentence. The first paragraph of this Wikipedia entry is verbatim from Scott Yanow's artist biography of Bechet from AllMusic.com.
- ↑ AllMusic.com's artist blurb overview.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 “His (Bechet's) playing style was intense and passionate and had a wide vibrato. He was also known to be proficient at playing several instruments and a master of improvisation (both individual and collective). Bechet liked to have his sound dominate in a performance, and trumpeters found it difficult to play alongside him.” found at Wikipedia: Sidney Bechet, "Career," second paragraph.
- ↑ "Sidney Bechet, master of New Orleans jazz – archive, from September 10, 1956," The Guardian, Friday September 10, 2021, third and fourth paragraph.
- ↑ "Sidney Bechet: Profiles in Jazz," Syncopated Times, Scott Yanow, Profiles In Jazz, second paragraph, July 1, 2017.
- ↑ "Artist Biography by Scott Yanow," AllMusic.com, fourth and last paragraph.
- ↑ Wikipedia: Sydney Bechet, "Biography," 14th paragraph.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ 42.0 42.1 His awards, as well as the number of Ellington's performances around the world, and the figure of over 3,000 songs for the number of Ellington's compositions are all stated at "Duke Ellington Biography" at DukeEllington.com, the Official Site of jazz legend Duke Ellington.
- ↑ “I was always awed by Duke Ellington. Everything about him dazzled me--his music, of course, but also his energy, his hipness, his appearance.... handsome, elegant, suave, sophisticated.” William P. Gottlieb in The Golden Age of Jazz.
- ↑ See Terry Teachout's discussion of this situation in his biography of Duke Ellington, Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington, on pp. 66-67 and 399.
- ↑ John Gennari, "But Is It Jazz?," Reviews in American History, Vol. 23, No. 1 (March, 1995), 92.
- ↑ At WyntonMarsalis.com Ellington explains in his own words how and why he tailored specific parts of his compositions for specific members of his orchestra.
“Ellington, for instance, predicated portions of his compositions on what he expected his musicians to invent on the spot: “My aim is and always has been to mold the music around the man,” Ellington wrote in 1942. “I study each man in the orchestra and find out what he can do best, and what he would like to do.” Ellington routinely leaves room for musicians to riff freely, asking them not for specific notes but, instead, for the character of sound, color and rhythm he knows each uniquely can produce.
There’s almost always some open space in most of the Ellington pieces,” says Harbison. “The solo spots are kind of part of the conception, but they’re not specific. Jazz composition includes non-determined elements. And that’s just something that people have to come to terms with, to take a certain stance on. It seems that in the great pieces of Ellington, the building in of the soloist—and even the voice of the soloist—has been a part of the composition.” (quoted from "The Story Behind the First Pulitzer for Jazz") (bold not in original) - ↑ According to Jazz by Gary Giddins and Scott Deveaux, 2009, Ellington compositions are the most recorded in jazz history.
- ↑ Wynton Marsalis, Music: "What jazz is—and isn't," New York Times, 21st paragraph, July 31, 1988.
- ↑ “U.S. #2211 22¢ Duke Ellington Performing Arts Series.
* Issue Date: April 29, 1986
* City: New York, NY
* Quantity: 130,000,000
* Printed By: American Bank Note Co.
* Printing Method: Photogravure
* Perforations: 11
* Color: Multicolored
“This stamp honors popular jazz pianist, composer, and band leader Duke Ellington (1899-1974). Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington wrote more than 6,000 songs during his long career, including "Satin Doll" and "Sophisticated Lady." Ellington was hailed by some as the greatest composer American society has ever produced.” (quoted from Mystic Stamp Company). Click on the stamp image to go to their website. - ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ 51.0 51.1 51.2 "The Evolution of Jazz Saxophone Styles," "Coleman Hawkins," by Michael Verity, Thoughtco.com: Jazz, Updated August 18, 2017.
- ↑ "Biography of Coleman Hawkins," Scott Yanow, at AllMusic.com.
- ↑ Scott Yanow's Coleman Hawkins biography.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ JazzTimes magazine confirms Lester Young's lighter sonic approach to the saxophone contrasting with Coleman Hawkin's that they describe as “intricate, heavy, deadly serious sound that bore down like a dreadnought.” Young's sound contrasts with this because it had an “effervescent tone, seeming as it did to float over the rollicking rhythmic momentum of Count Basie, Freddie Green, Walter Page, and Jo Jones, is impossible to understate. Likewise for a line that, if it wasn’t as complex as Hawk's, was nearly delirious in its bounce. It also sounds spontaneous throughout, even in the obviously prearranged hit on the accents with (Jo) Jones . . . .”
JazzTimes continues by pointing out that when playing with Billie Holiday that “Young’s phrases are cool and sinuous. Even as the track closes, and the other two horn players (trumpeter Buck Clayton and clarinetist Edmond Hall) throw some more juice into the mix, Young is relaxed, detached, and thoroughly beautiful.” - ↑ Loren Schoenberg (b. 1958), "Lester Young," Mosaic Records, liner note excerpts from Mosaic Records: "The Lester Young Count Basie Sessions 1936–1940" and "Classic Columbia, OKeh and Vocalion Lester Young — Lester Young with Count Basie 1936–1940."
- ↑ Joel Dinerstein, "Lester Young and the Birth of the Cool," third paragraph.
- ↑ 58.0 58.1 John Edward Hasse, "How Lester Young Altered the Course of Music," Cultural Commentary, Wall Street Journal, March 13, 2019.
- ↑ Loren Schoenberg (b. 1958), "Lester Young," Mosaic Records, liner note excerpts from Mosaic Records: "The Lester Young Count Basie Sessions 1936–1940" and "Classic Columbia, OKeh and Vocalion Lester Young — Lester Young with Count Basie 1936–1940."
- ↑ Permission granted to use detail of photo by Denise Morrison, Director of Collections & Curatorial Services, Kansas City Museum, kansascitymuseum.org, c/o: Union Station Kansas City, 30 W. Pershing Rd., Kansas City, MO 64108, Email:denise.morrison@kcmo.org, Desk Phone: 816-513-7569 on February 8, 2019.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ 62.0 62.1 62.2 Wikipedia: Count Basie, "Early career," second paragraph.
- ↑ 63.0 63.1 63.2 Wikipedia: Count Basie, second paragraph.
- ↑ William "Count" Basie & Albert Murray, Good Morning Blues: The Autobiography of Count Basie (New York: Da Capo Press, 2002), 127. ISBN 978-0-306-81107-4.
- ↑ Wikipedia: Count Basie, "Kansas City years," first paragraph.
- ↑ Wikipedia: Count Basie, reports that “Right from the start, Basie's band was noted for its rhythm section. Another Basie innovation was the use of two tenor saxophone players; at the time, most bands had just one (tenor saxophonist). When (Lester) Young complained of Herschel Evans' vibrato, Basie placed them on either side of the alto players, and soon had the tenor players engaged in "duels".”
- ↑ 67.0 67.1 67.2 Wikipedia: Count Basie, "John Hammond and first recordings," third and fourth paragraphs.
- ↑ Mary Lou Williams Interview, Melody Maker, April to June, 1954.
- ↑ Cassandra Jensen, "Top 10 Reasons Mary Lou Williams Should Be Your Favorite Jazz Musician," BlackPublicMedia.org, (March 31, 2015), third paragraph.
- ↑ Encyclopedia Brittanica: Mary Lou Williams, first paragraph. Most recently updated on May 25, 2018.
- ↑ Tammy L. Kemodle, "Ch. 5: How Do You Keep the Music Playing?," in Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2020), 81.
- ↑ As claimed in the Encyclopedia Brittanica: Mary Lou Williams, second paragraph:
“In 1927, when her husband, saxophonist and bandleader John Williams, moved to Oklahoma to join the popular Andy Kirk and his Clouds of Joy, Mary Lou Williams took over the leadership of his band. She began a successful arranging career in 1929, when she moved to Oklahoma to join her husband with Kirk. During her time with Kirk, the band became well known for her stunning solo piano and highly original arrangements, including “Froggy Bottom,” “Walkin’ and Swingin’,” “Little Joe from Chicago,” “Roll ’Em,” and “Mary’s Idea.” She is widely credited as a major influence for the Kansas City–Southwest Big Band sound that Twelve Clouds of Joy helped to popularize.” (bold not in original)
- ↑ Barry Kernfeld (editor), "Mary Lou Williams," The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz.
- ↑ 74.0 74.1 74.2 Encyclopedia Brittanica: Mary Lou Williams, fourth paragraph.
- ↑ Alexa Peters, "10 Women Instrumentalists Who Redefine Jazz," Paste magazine, December 1, 2016.
- ↑ "Mary Lou Williams," February 23, 2016, TurtleLearning Blog, 8th paragraph. Accessed September 15, 2019.
- ↑ Williams performed the full piece for the first time at Saint Francis Xavier Church (located at 46 West 16th Street near 6th Avenue in New York) November, 1962, and she recorded it in October 1963.
- ↑ “Tammy L. Kernodle provides a second reason for William's exclusion from most jazz historical narratives: her piano style, composing style, and arranging style defied categorization. Williams mastered each new style from the 1930s into the 1970s, and her arrangements similarly evolved with the passage of time.” in "Mary's Ideas: Big Band Music by Mary Lou Williams," "A Woman's Place in Narratives of Jazz," Theodore E. Buehner, Mary Lou Williams: Selected Works in Big Band, edited by Theodore E. Buehner, (Middleton, Wisconsin: A-R Editions, Inc, 2013), xiii.
- ↑ According to John S. Wilson, "Mary Lou Williams, A Jazz Great, Dies," NYTimes Obituary, May 30, 1981, 5th paragraph.
- ↑ John S. Wilson, "Mary Lou Williams, A Jazz Great, Dies," NYTimes Obituary, May 30, 1981, Section 1, 21.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ This is a colorized photograph of Charlie Christian when he was three years old. .
- ↑ 84.0 84.1 84.2 "Christian, Charlie (inducted 2018)," Oklahoma Hall of Fame.
- ↑ Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: Charlie Christian reports that “Charlie Christian elevated the guitar as a lead instrument on par with the saxophone and trumpet in jazz and popular music.”
- ↑ Gene Lees in his liner notes to "Solo Flight: The Genius of Charlie Christian" (Columbia G 30779, 1972), wrote that "Many critics and musicians consider that Christian was one of the founding fathers of bebop, or if not that, at least a precursor to it."
- ↑ John Hammond and Irving Townsend, John Hammond on Record: An Autobiography (New York: Ridge Press, 1977). ISBN 0-671-40003-7.
- ↑ George T. Simon, The Big Band's, 1971. ISBN 0-02-872430-5.
- ↑ Wikipedia: Thelonious Monk describes Monk's early playing career, “as "hard-swinging," with the addition of runs in the style of Art Tatum. Monk's stated influences included Duke Ellington, James P. Johnson, and other early stride pianists.”
Michael Verity at "What Is Early Jazz Music?," (updated March 08, 2018), provides a description and explanation of how the stride piano style functions:“Directly influenced by ragtime, the stride piano style became popular in New York during World War I. Stride pieces are characterized by a bass line with a half-note pulse played in the left hand while the melody and chords are played in the right hand. The term “stride” comes from the action of the left hand as it strikes a bass note and then moves swiftly up the keyboard to strike chord tones on every other beat. Stride pianists also incorporated improvisation and blues melodies and were keen on technical prowess.” (bold not in original)
- ↑ Wikipedia: Thelonious Monk describes Monk's singular style: “Monk's compositions and improvisations feature dissonances and angular melodic twists and are consistent with his unorthodox approach to the piano, which combined a highly percussive attack with abrupt, dramatic use of switched key releases, silences, and hesitations.” (bold not in original)
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ In From Jazz Novice to Jazz Connoisseur Monk's piano playing style around 1941 as well as some of his influences are stated: “Monk's style at this time was later described as "hard-swinging," with the addition of runs in the style of Art Tatum. Monk's stated influences included Duke Ellington, James P. Johnson, and other early stride pianists.”
- ↑ Wikipedia: "List of compositions by Thelonious Monk."
- ↑ "Jazz: The Loneliest Monk," Time magazine, Friday, Feb. 28, 1964.
- ↑ "Thelonious Monk biography," Blue Note Records website, opening sentences.
- ↑ International Jazz Day website: "About", first sentence.
- ↑ “Set of conga drums that belonged to Dizzy Gillespie before he gifted them to a fellow musician on May 4, 1987. Dizzy Gillespie used these conga drums when he performed with J.C. Heard and his Orchestra, at the 1987 Montreux-Detroit Jazz Festival. Dizzy and J.C. Heard, were commissioned by Detroit Renaissance to write and perform a song together to commemorate the event. That night Dizzy took a break from his horn and played the conga to ignite the audience by performing a percussion duet with J.C. Heard on drums and Dizzy Gillespie on the congas.” (Dizzy performed with conga drum as described in Guernsey's Auction Catalog, Guernsey’s Jazz Auction Catalogue Addendum, p. 12 of 14.)
- ↑ As reported at Wikipedia: Dizzy Gillespie.
- ↑ "In Love With the Trumpet; Dizzy Author's Query," Claude Brown, New York Times, February 3, 1980, p. 4. “At 16, the future father of bebop entered Laurinburg Institute . . . . In 1935 he left Laurinburg Institute and joined his family at their new home in Philadelphia.”
- ↑ Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame.
- ↑ "Dizzy Gillespie Biography," 6th paragraph, Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame.
- ↑ "Dizzy Gillespie," 8th and last paragraph, Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame.
- ↑ As said at Mark Warner's FERMENTATION: The Daily Wine Blog: “(Parker) gave to the emerging Be-Bop artists a new harmonic paradigm that filled in the sound that progressive jazz artists were exploring as they moved away from the swing genre. Parker's great innovation was his discovery, out of his own imagination, of how to play any note and resolve it in the chord so that it would sound harmonically right.”
- ↑ Music in a New Found Land, Wilfred Mellers, Ch. VII: "From jazz back to art," New York: Hiilstone Publishing, 1964/1975, 353.
- ↑ "Charlie Parker: American Musician," written by the Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, last updated Aug 25, 2018.
- ↑ "Charlie Parker," Helen Dickson, Kansapedia, created April, 2015 and modified January, 2016.
- ↑ "Miles Davis: Winner Take All," Lionel Olay, originally published in Cavalier, Vol. 21, August, 1954, reproduced in Miles on Miles: Interviews and Encounters with Miles Davis, edited by Paul Maher Jr. and Michael K. Dorr, Chicago: Illinois, Lawrence Hill Books, 2009, 24. ISBN: 978-1-55652-706-7.
- ↑ See "Mingus: Bass Prodigy."
- ↑ "Charles Mingus: American musician," Encyclopedia Brittanica, 3rd paragraph.
- ↑ AllMusic Review by Steve Huey.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ 112.0 112.1 "Max Roach: Speak Brother Speak," Martin Smith, Socialist Review, September 2007, p. 317.
- ↑ 113.0 113.1 113.2 113.3 113.4 113.5 113.6 113.7 MacArthur Foundation profile.
- ↑ Jeru: In the Words of Gerry Mulligan, "Miles Davis," third paragraph, from "The Gerry Mulligan Collection."
- ↑ 115.0 115.1 115.2 115.3 115.4 115.5 "Max Roach, a Founder of Modern Jazz, Dies at 83" Peter Keepnews, New York Times, August 16, 2007.
- ↑ "All That Jazz," Erin Allen, 4th paragraph, January 31, 2014.
- ↑ “Roach led his own groups, notably a pioneering quintet co-led with trumpeter Clifford Brown as well as his percussion ensemble M'Boom.”
Wikipedia: Max Roach, second paragraph. - ↑ Music: "What jazz is—and isn't," Wynton Marsalis, New York Times, 17th and 18th paragraphs, July 31, 01988.
- ↑ "Jazz Luminaries to Honor Life of Drummer Max Roach at UMass Amherst March 25," UMass Amherst News & Media Relations webpage, March 19, 2008.
- ↑ NPR'S "Max Roach on Piano Jazz."
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ Lewis Porter, Chris DeVito, David Wild, Yasuhiro Fujioka, Wolf Schmale, The John Coltrane Reference, February 16, 2013.
Personnel: John Coltrane, alto saxophone, possibly clarinet; unknown piano, guitar. Ca. early to mid-1945 (dates unknown). Unknown venues, Philadelphia, PA. François Postif (1962, p. 13): "My first real 'job,' I took down in Philadelphia in 1945 where I played with a pianist and a guitarist. A sort of cocktail music, but it offered me a living!"
From John Coltrane's completed questionnaire (undated, ca. 1956) for Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz (reprinted in Thomas, 1975, photo section following p. 88; and Woideck, 1998, p. 84): HOW DID YOU GET INTO THE MUSIC BUSINESS? "In Philadelphia with a cocktail trio. This job was in 1945. I also joined the musician's union at that same time." - ↑ Wikipedia: John Coltrane Seventh paragraph, first sentence.
- ↑ Wikipedia: John Coltrane affirms Coltrane's music took on an increasingly spiritual aspect up to his death in 1967 from liver cancer at the age of 40. “As his career progressed, Coltrane and his music took on an increasingly spiritual dimension.” (second paragraph, first sentence)
Don't just take Wikipedia's word for it. Consider the liner notes from the collaborative Bob Thiele produced album, "John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman," and the 'effusive' liner notes by poet and author, A. B. Spellman:“The quartet [John Coltrane/tenor saxophone, McCoy Tyner/piano, Jimmy Garrison/double bass, Elvin Jones/drums] has been, till now [up to 1963] , concerned with other things, with the development of a kinetic vernacular which facilitated the release of a kind of group energy that was deeper in content and fuller in emotional color than any music I have experienced, anywhere.” (bold not in original) (quoted in “A Look Back at John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman,” Rusty Aceves, September 19, 2016).
Coltrane was not the first jazz person to promote spirituality in jazz because Duke Ellington and company had already done so in Ellington's "Black, Brown, and Tan Fantasy." See the article by David Metzer, "Shadow Play: The Spiritual in Duke Ellington's "Black and Tan Fantasy," Black Music Research Journal, Vol. 17, No. 2 (Autumn, 1997), 137–158. Additionally, the jazz pianist Mary Lou Williams, a convert to Roman Catholicism in 1956, wrote and performed spiritually oriented music, including especially "Mary Lou's Mass." Here is the relevant section from Wikipedia: Mary Lou Williams:
“One of the masses, "Music for Peace," was choreographed by the Alvin Ailey and performed by the Alvin Ailey Dance Theater as Mary Lou's Mass in 1971. About the work, Ailey commented, "If there can be a Bernstein Mass, a Mozart Mass, a Bach Mass, why can't there be Mary Lou's Mass?" Williams performed the revision of "Mary Lou's Mass," her most acclaimed work, on The Dick Cavett Show in 1971.
She wrote and performed religious jazz music such as "Black Christ of the Andes" (1963), a hymn in honor of the St. Martin de Porres; two short works, "Anima Christi" and "Praise the Lord." In this period, Williams put much effort into working with youth choirs to perform her works, including mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City before a gathering of over three thousand. . . . As a February 21, 1964 Time article explained, "Mary Lou thinks of herself as a 'soul' player — a way of saying that she never strays far from melody and the blues, but deals sparingly in gospel harmony and rhythm. 'I am praying through my fingers when I play,' she says.'I get that good "soul sound", and I try to touch people's spirits.'"
. . . . In April 1975, she played her highly regarded jazz spiritual, "Mary Lou's Mass" at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York. It marked the first time a jazz musician had played at the church. (bold not in original)
See Franya J. Berkman (1972-2012), "Appropriating Universality: The Coltranes and 1960s Spirituality," American Studies, Vol. 48, No. 1 (Spring 2007), 41–62. Published by Mid-America American Studies Association.
- ↑ Coltrane himself, when discussing his sheets of sound technique in an interview, said the following in DownBeat magazine, Sept 29, 1960:
“About this time, I was trying for a sweeping sound. I started experimenting because I was striving for more individual development. I even tried long, rapid lines that Ira Gitler termed “sheets of sound” at that time. But actually, I was beginning to apply the three-on-one chord approach, and at that time the tendency was to play the entire scale of each chord. Therefore, they were usually played fast and sometimes sounded like glisses.”
“I found there were a certain number of chord progressions to play in a given time, and sometimes what I played didn’t work out in eighth notes, 16th notes, or triplets. I had to put the notes in uneven groups like fives and sevens in order to get them all in.”
“I could stack up chords, say on a C7, I sometimes superimposed an Eb7 up to an F#7, down to an F. That way I could play three chords on one. But on the other hand, if I wanted to, I could play melodically . . . .” (Quoted at "Sheets Of Sound Explained (John Coltrane)" at thejazzpianosite.com) - ↑ Wikipedia: John Coltrane, second paragraph, second sentence.
- ↑ See the New York Times article about the formation of the church "Sunday Religion, Inspired by Saturday Nights," by Samuel G. Freedman, December 1, 2007, then read the moving descriptions of Coltrane's musically spiritual impact in Carvell Wallace's "A Place For The Soul To Sing: The Church of St. John Coltrane.”
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ NEA Jazz Masters Bio, opening sentence.
- ↑ 'Wikipedia: Cool aesthetic.
- ↑ Click on word "dresser" and see first definition in Wiktionary: dresser under "Etymology 2". The Guardian newspaper reports that “Davis was the best-dressed man of the 20th century. Starting out, he'd customise his pawnshop Brooks Brothers suits, cutting notches in the lapels in imitation of the Duke of Windsor. After 1949's Birth of the Cool, he favoured the Ivy League look of European tailoring. In the 60s he went for slim-cut Italian suits and handmade doeskin loafers. He was always the coolest-looking man in the room.” (bold not in original)
- ↑ Christian Chensvold, "Miles Ahead: Not just a jazz genius, Miles Davis was also a sartorial chameleon, easily carrying off the Ivy League Look and slim-cut European suits with ass-kicking charm," The Rake, originally published in Issue 6 of The Rake, May 2020.
- ↑ Christian Chensvold, "Miles Ahead: Not just a jazz genius, Miles Davis was also a sartorial chameleon, easily carrying off the Ivy League Look and slim-cut European suits with ass-kicking charm," The Rake: The Modern Voice of Classic Elegance, May, 2020.
- ↑ NEA Jazz Master bio, third paragraph.
- ↑ 135.0 135.1 “Throughout a professional career lasting 50 years, Miles Davis played the trumpet in a lyrical, introspective, and melodic style, often employing a stemless Harmon mute to make his sound more personal and intimate. But if his approach to his instrument was constant, his approach to jazz was dazzlingly protean. To examine his career is to examine the history of jazz from the mid-'40s to the early '90s, since he was in the thick of almost every important innovation and stylistic development in the music during that period, and he often led the way in those changes, both with his own performances and recordings and by choosing sidemen and collaborators who forged new directions. It can even be argued that jazz stopped evolving when Davis wasn't there to push it forward. (AllMusic: "Miles Davis biography," William Ruhlmann, first paragraph)
- ↑ See the documentary on Teo Macero's accomplishments at "Play That, Teo."
- ↑ Quincy Troupe, "Miles Davis: Our 1985 Interview, Part One originally appeared in the November 1985 issue of SPIN magazine, reproduced September 28, 2019.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ 139.0 139.1 Jazz: Marking Time in American Culture is designed to complement MUSI 212, the University of Virginia's introductory course in the history of jazz, Lennie Tristano.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ Read Gunther Schuller's 1959 quotation about Ornette Coleman at [1] and also read about the story behind "The Lenox School of Jazz 1959."
- ↑ Robert Palmer, "Ornette Coleman and the Circle with a Hole in the Middle," The Atlantic Monthly, December, 1972, 6th paragraph.
- ↑ Don Heckman, "Charlie Haden: Everything Man: Don Heckman profiles noted bassist and bandleader," JazzTimes, updated April 26, 2019.
- ↑ Francis Davis, "Ornette's Permanent Revolution: A jazzman breaks all the boundaries, The Atlantic, September, 1985, fourth paragraph.
- ↑ Fifth paragraph, first sentence from the Francis Davis article below.
“Jazz musicians have always respected instrumentalists whose inflections echo the natural cadences of speech, and they have always sworn by the blues (although as jazz has increased in sophistication, "the blues" has come to signify a feeling or a tonal coloring, in addition to a specific form). Coleman's blues authenticity—the legacy of the juke joints in his native Fort Worth, Texas, where he had played as a teenager—should have scored him points instantly. Instead, his ragged, down-home sound seems to have cast him in the role of country cousin to slicker, more urbanized musicians—as embarrassing a reminder of the past to them as a Yiddish speaking relative might have been to a newly assimilated Jew. In 1959 the "old country" for most black musicians was the American South, and few of them wanted any part of it.”(Francis Davis,"Ornette's Permanent Revolution: A jazzman breaks all the boundaries, The Atlantic, (September, 1985), fifth paragraph). - ↑ Robert Palmer, "Ornette Coleman and the Circle with a Hole in the Middle," The Atlantic Monthly, (December, 1972), 6th paragraph.
- ↑ Robert Kraut, "Why Does Jazz Matter to Aesthetic Theory," The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Vol. 63, No. 1 (Winter, 2005), 7.
- ↑ Richard Brody, "Ornette Coleman’s Big Adventure," The New Yorker, August 29, 2012.
- ↑ Encyclopedia.com: Ornette Coleman, "Was an Outsider in the World of Jazz," seventh paragraph.
- ↑ Writer Bill Milkowski, in "Ornette Coleman: Skies of America," published September 1, 2000, describes Coleman's "Skies of America."
“Coleman’s third symphonic work, the 167-page epic score "Skies of America," is to “Turnaround” or “Ramblin'” what Zappa’s Orchestral Works is to “Valley Girl” or “Don’t Eat the Yellow Snow.” Both symphonic pieces are imposing works that present quite a challenge to listeners and die-hard fans alike. There are more rewards for Ornette devotees on "Skies of America," namely the inclusion of his instantly recognizable alto-sax voice. Recorded in September 1972 with the London Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of David Meacham, the densely textured, cinematic "Skies" is comprised of 21 distinct movements that run the gamut of emotions from giddy to poignant to turbulent. From the polytonal, polyrhythmic opener, “Skies of America,” to the gorgeous, Ivesian closer, “Sunday in America,” this rich symphonic work stands as Coleman’s harmolodic manifesto.”
- ↑ Progarchives.com, "Ornette Coleman & Prime Time biography," second paragraph.
- ↑ Jeffrey Hellmer and Richard Lawn, Jazz Theory and Practice: For Performers, Arrangers and Composers , Alfred Music, (May 3, 2005), 234. ISBN 978-1-4574-1068-0.
- ↑ Jim Collins, "It Isn't Easy Being a Genius," NYTimes, (September 19, 2005).
- ↑ JazzShelf.com's Reviews many of Ornette Coleman's albums.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ Nick DeCarlis, "Pocket Players," Pocket Cornets website, accessed November 5, 2021.
- ↑ "Mix Special: Don Cherry Around the World."
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ "John McLaughlin Returns to New York's Town Hall with the 4th Dimension," November 1, 2010, World Music Central News Department, second paragraph.
- ↑ For musical examples see:
‣ "Essential Solos: 40 Great Improvisations: (100) Jazz artists and critics pick their favorite solos from the music's past and present," Jazz Times, November 2, 2017.
‣ "Perfect Jazz Recordings," Richard Brody, The New Yorker, September 23, 2014.
‣ Also see the Jazz Discography Project. - ↑ Michael Rydzynski, "Wynton Marsalis and Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra to interpret the music of Duke Ellington at Barclay," Los Angeles Times, September 27, 2018.