Jimmy Cobb photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Another year has
passed since Notes on Jazz published
its annual Living Legend of Jazz feature. This is the fourth annual compilation;
a yearly reminder and a joyful celebration of the artistry and longevity of jazz
artists that have been living in our midst. With each year we marvel at some familiar
new members who have entered into the ranks of the Living Legends. The criterion
is uncomplicated, simply induct any musician, working or retired who has reached
their seventieth birthday and has contributed to the canon of the music,
keeping the spirit and tradition of the music alive. They could be relatively
obscure or internationally recognized, but in their own way they made a
difference. Many of us grew up with these
artists and have followed their careers through the years. As this is an
organic list, ever-changing, like the music, it’s ranks are added to and
depleted each year. Sadly, since last July 4th, ,we have continued
to lose some of these great artists to the ravages of time. It is only right
that we take a moment to document and recognize their passing. Their spirit
lives on in everyone who has ever had the privilege of hearing them play; either in
live performance or on recordings. Their work will continue to inspire those
who follow in their footsteps.The passing of some truly venerable legends include musicians,
performers, innovators, teachers, producers and mentors who made an indelible mark on
society at large and on the music in particular. Some were famous, some
infamous and all will be missed.
Dave Brubeck photo by John Abbott ©2013 |
Undoubtedly the most recognizable musician we lost from the
fraternity of Jazz Legends since last July was the iconic pianist/composer Dave
Brubeck, who passed one day prior to his ninety-second birthday on December 5,
2012. Brubeck’s music crossed over to
beyond the jazz audience with his ground breaking album from 1959 titled Time
Out and it’s time transcendent song “Take Five.” Another recognizable pianist, more famous in
rock but clearly steeped in jazz influence, was the Doors keyboard player Ray Manzarek who passed in Germany at the age
of seventy-four. His keyboard work on
“Light My Fire” turned many rock listeners onto jazz sensibilities. The jazz
world mourned the untimely passing of the great pianist Mulgrew Miller, on May
29, 2013 from a stroke at the alarmingly young age of fifty-seven. Miller who worked with many famous artists
was the well-respected Director of Jazz Studies at William Patterson College.
Mulgrew Miller Photo by Fran Kaufman©2013 |
Two trumpet players of note were lost this
past year. Donald Byrd who pioneered the use of funk and soul in jazz died at
the age of eighty on February 4, 2013. One time Mingus trumpeter Ted Curson
passed in November at the age of seventy-seven.
Several notable saxophonists were lost last year; they
include Chicago stalwart Earle “Von” Freeman who was playing actively until he
passed in August at the age of eighty-eight.
Tenor saxophonist Dick Hafer, an alumnus of the Charles Mingus, Charlie
Barnet and Woody Herman bands, to name a few, passed in December at the age of eighty-five. Seventy-nine
year old English soprano saxophonist Lol Coxhill passed in July and Danish free
saxophonist John Tchicai passed in October in France at the age of seventy-six.
The sweet sound of Sam Most’s flute will be heard no more; the prolific studio musician
who was on countless albums passed this year at the age of eighty-two.
The drummer Pete LaRoca Sims, who played with saxophone titans
Sonny Rollins, Jackie McClean, Charles Lloyd and John Coltrane passed in
November at the age of seventy-four. Drummer and influential teacher Freddie
Gruber passed in October at the age of eighty-four. Drummer Sonny Igoe who
worked with Woody Herman and Benny Goodman passed at the age of eighty-eight. Ed Shaughnessy, who was the mainstay drummer
of the big band on Johnny Carson’s tonight show left us this year at the age of
eighty-four. Ravi Shankar, the Indian sitar player that introduced the Carnatic
rhythms of his homeland to Western artists, influencing musicians from the Beatles
to John Coltrane, (Coltrane named his son Ravi after Mr. Shankar) was
ninety-two. Just last month we lost the
beautiful baritone of Bobby “Blue” Bland at the age of eighty-three. Melvin
Ryne whose B3 organ sounds accompanied the great Wes Montgomery passed at the
age of seventy-six. Pianist Paul Smith passed on June 29, 2013, he worked with Bing Crosby,Nat Cole and Dizzy Gillispie, he was 91. I was recently informed that pianist BeboValdes passed away a few months ago athe the age of ninety four.
The music has proven time and again that despite losing its
legends to the inevitable vagaries of time, it is a durable art form. As some
pass through, there are always others who enter our world introducing new ideas
and fresh musical concepts. The music continues to expand, organically thriving
with every generation. New musicians create from the infrastructure laid down
by those who have blazed the path before them ensuring that the music, however mutated
it becomes, still is built from the Terra-firma of the tradition.
I continue to believe that Jazz is an art form that has
become the most internationally cooperative means of communication in the world
today. As artists and listeners alike have found out it can be a tremendously
spiritual medium allowing us to transcend everyday life with beauty and
connectivity.
On this fourth of July let our passion for the music
continue with this yearly celebration of these communicators, those who have
been and continue to be so instrumental in bringing us this music we love so
much.
Here is my expanded list of veteran players, all at least
seventy years of age, who in some way helped shape the music. I am sure to have
missed some worthy contributors. I apologize in advance for
any inadvertent omissions. This is the fourth year I have complied this list and with each year, with the help of readers like you, it has become more expansive. I welcome comments from readers who may know of
deserving musicians who should be added to this list. Finally a great big thank you to each and every one of this
year’s celebrants.
LIVING JAZZ LEGENDS: July 4, 2013
Frank Wess photo by Fran Kaufman ©2013 |
Saxophonists/ Reed Instruments:
Maceo Parker (70), Eddie Daniels clarinet and saxophone (71);Pharaoh Sanders, Gary Bartz, Peter Brotzmann, Roscoe Mitchell and Bennie Maupin (72), Masabumi Kikuchi,Arthur Bythe, Hamiet Bluiett,Wilton Felder, Joe McPhee,Charles McPherson, Carlos Ward, Paul Winter and Lew Tabakin (73),Odean Pope,Zibigniew Namyslowski,Charles Gayle, Sonny Fortune and George Braith (74)
Lee Konitz photo by John Abbottt ©2013 |
Carlos Garnett, Joseph Jarman (75)
Archie Shepp,Nathan Davis,Frank Strozier
and Jim Galloway (76) Klaus Doldinger, ,
Gary N. Foster, Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre
and Don Menza (77) Giuseppi Logan,Jimmy Woods, Houston Person,George Coleman, Kidd Jordan and Bunky Green (78), Lanny Morgan,and Wayne Shorter (79),Sadao Watanabe, Charlie Davis, Jerry Dodgian,
Gato Barbieri and John Handy III (80) Phil Woods and Plas Johnson Jr.(81) Sonny Rollins (82), Ornette Coleman and Gabe Baltazar (83) Joe Temperley, Harold Ousley,Herb Geller and Benny Golson (84) Carl Janelli, Lee Konitz and Bob Wilber (85), Big Jay McNeeley,Med Flory, Lou Donaldson and Jimmy Heath (86),Marshall Allen (89), Frank Wess (91), Yusef Lateef (92), Harold Joseph “Hal”“Cornbread” Singer (93)
George Coleman photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Fred Staton Photo by Ralph A. Miriello ©2013 |
Chick Corea photo by Fran Kaufman©2013 |
Herbie Hancock photo by Fran Kaufman©2013 |
Cedar Walton photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Mike Longo, Joe Sample, Gap Mangione,Jon Mayer, Joanne Brackeen and Warren Bernhardt (74) Denny Zeitlin,
Steve Kuhn and John Coates Jr. (75),Eddie Palmieri and
Kirk Lightsey (76), Les McCann, Carla Bley and
Harold Mabern (77),Ramsey Lewis ,Pat Rebillot, Ran Blake,
Don Friedman, Oliver Jones, Ellis Marsalis Jr and Abdullah Ibrahim (Dollar Brand), Dave Grusin and Misha Mengelberg (78)Pat Moran (McCoy) and Cedar Walton (79), Paul Bley, and Larry Novak (80), Bengt Hallberg, Jack Reilly, Derek Smith and Michel LeGrand (81),Muhal Richard Abrams and Horace Parlan (82)Amhad Jamal, Frank Strazzeri, Claude Bolling, Barry Harris and Toshiko Akiyoshi (83),Cecil Taylor,
Horace Silver and Junior Mance (84)
Freddie Redd, Martial Solal, Richard Wyands and Mose Allison (85),Dick Hyman
and Claude Williamson (86), Randy Weston and Boyd Lee Dunlop (87), Reynold "Zeke" Mullins and Barbara
Carroll (88), Marty Napoleon (92), Marian
McPartland (95).
McCoy Tyner photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Buster Williams photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Bassists:
Jack Bruce (70); Charles "Buster" Williams (71) Glen Moore and Steve Swallow (72), Ed
“Butch” Warren, Don Thompson and Eberhard Weber (73), Mario Pavone (74), Larry
Ridley, Reggie Workman and Charlie Haden (75), Ron Carter, Chuck Berghofer, and
Chuck Israels (76), Buell Nedlinger and Henry Grimes (77),Gary Peacock and
Cecil McBee (78), Bob Cranshaw, John Ore and Jack Six (80) Ron Crotty and Richard Davis
(84), Bill Crow (85), Jymie Merritt (87) Eugene "The Senator “Wright (90),
Howard Rumsey (95), Coleridge Goode (98).
Jim Hall photo by Fran Kaufman©2013 |
Guitarists:
George Benson, Larry Coryell and Philip Catherine (70) ; James
Blood Ulmer and John McLaughlin (71), Jerry Hahn (72), Ralph Towner (73), Gene
Bertoncini and Joe D’Iorio (76), Sonny Greenwich (77), Ed Bickert (80) Kenny
Burrell (81), Jim Hall, Joao Gilberto and John Pisano (82),Martin “Marty” Grosz
(83) Eddie Duran and, Bucky Pizzarelli (87), Mundell Lowe (91).
Dick Griffin photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Trombonists:
Fred Wesley (70):James “Dick” Griffin , Wayne Henderson and
Billy Watrous (73)), Grachan Moncur III, Phillip Elder Wilson and “Big” Bill
Bissonnette (76), Roswell Rudd (77), Julian Priester and Curtis Fuller (78)
Locksley "Slide" Hampton (81); George “Buster” Copper (84), Harold
Betters and Conrad Janis (85), George Masso and Urbie Green (86).
Billy Hart photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Drummers/Percussionists:
Jack DeJohnette, Barry Altschul and Michael Gils (70 ) Han Bennik, Milford Graves and Malcolm Pinson(71), Billy Hart (72),
Andrew Cyrille, Ginger Baker, Pierre
Courbois, Ron Free and Idris Muhammad (73),
Bernard Purdie, Issac “Redd” Holt, Nesbert “Stix” Hooper (74) and Tony Oxley (75),
, Horace Arnold, Paul Ferrara and Daniel Humair (75), Louis Hayes, Pierre Favre, James “Sunny” Murray, Charly Antolini,
Colin Bailey and Roy McCurdy (76), Muhammad Ali (77), Albert “Tootie” Heath and Chuck Flores (78),
Donald “Duck” Bailey, Ben Riley, Colin Bailey and Ray Mosca (79), Mickey Roker
Frank Capp and Grady Tate (81 Ronnie Bedford (82),) John Armatage (83), Hal
Blaine, Jimmy Cobb, Charlie Persip (84);,Frankie Dunlop(85); Joe Harris (86), Roy Haynes and Samuel “Dave”
Bailey (87), Armando Peraza (89), Percy Brice and Al Harewood (90), Foreststorn
“Chico” Hamilton and Candido Camero (91)
Mac “Dr John” Rebennack (72)“ Papa” John De Francesco),
Brian Auger (73), Rhoda Scott (76), Reuben Wilson (78), and Sir Charles
Thompson (95).
Tony Bennett photo by John Abbott©2013 |
Jazz Vocalists:
Joni Mitchell (70); Gilberto Gil (71) ,Janet Lawson (72),
Astrud Gilberto, Al Jarreau and Mary Stallings (73), Andy Bey (74), Ruth Price
and Ellyn Ruker (75), Nancy Wilson, Carol Sloane, Karin Krog and Sathima Bea
Benjamin (76) Marlene Ver Planck and David Frishberg piano/vocals (80), Freddy
Cole and Mark Murphy (81), Gloria Lynne (81), Annie Ross and Helen Merrill (82),
Sheila Jordan and Ernestine Anderson (84), Cleo Laine, Jackie Cain and Ernie
Andrews (85),Tony Bennett (86) Bill Henderson and Jimmy Scott (87) Bob Dorough
(89) Jon Hendricks (91), Herb Jeffries (99).
George Wein photo by Lena Adasheva ©2013 |
Artists on Other Instruments:
Gary Burton, vibraphone and Michal Urbaniak, violinist (70);
Jean Luc Ponty, violinist (71); Bobby Hutcherson and Roy Ayers, vibraphonists
and Lonnie Liston Smith, keyboardist (72) and Hubert Laws, flautist (73) ,
Perry Morris Robinson, clarinetist , Gunter Hampel, multi-instrumentalist,
Charlie Shoemake, vibraphonist , Dave Pike, vibraphonist/marimba and Mike
Maineri, vibraphonist (75) Hermeto Pascoal, accordion & keyboards (77) Reuben
Wilson, organist (77) Joe Licari, clarinetist,(78); Sonny Simmons sax and
English Horn, Warren Chiasson vibraphonist (79), Emil Richards, vibes and
percussion (80) David Baker composer/cellist (81), Frank Marocco, accordion,
Pierre "Pete" Fountain, clarinetist (82), Michael White, violinist, Rolf
Kuhn, clarinetists and Paul Horn, flautist (83), Bernard “ Acker” Bilk,
clarinetist, Peter Appleyard, vibraphonist and Andre Previn conductor/pianist
(84), Terry Gibbs, vibraphonist, George Wein, Pianist/ Concert Promoter and Rudy
Van Gelder, recording engineer (88), Sammy Nestico pianist/arranger and Buddy
DeFranco, clarinetist (89) Lorraine Gordon music producer and Owner of the
Village Vanguard(90), Jean “Toots” Thielmans, harmonica/guitar/whistler (91),
Svend Asmussen, violinist (97).Toots Thielmans photo by John Abbott ©2013 |
I have received many personal e mails responding positively to this article. My friend and the extraordinary multi-reed player Scott Robinson pointed out a few that I missed and have since added. They include Milford Graves (71)and Muhammad Ali (77) both drummers; Saxophonists Kidd Jordan (78) and Jerry Dodgian (80) and Bassist John Ore (80). My apologies to these fine artists and a big thanks to Scott.
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