Richard Davis photo by John Abbott |
Our conversations discussed our mutual fascination with life of the Ellington bassist Jimmie Blanton, Davis'
career and the people he played with in both the jazz and classical bass worlds, his recollections of some of his predecessors on the bass, his take on the future, his experiences as an educator, his social activism and a lengthy discussion on his perspective on race in this country.
NOJ: First let me say thank you for taking out the time to
speak with me. I have been a fan of your music ever since I listened to your
album “Philosophy of the Spiritual” when I was in my early twenties.
RD: You were in your early twenties when you heard it?
NOJ: Yes. It was very profound for me. I had never heard a
bass being bowed like that in the jazz format. I came to really love jazz after
that and that album dove me into it deeper and deeper. I later came to know
about arco bass playing by people like Blanton and Pettiford and others. I especially was moved by your rendition of
“Dear Old Stockholm,” which you did so heart wrenchingly well. This was my
first exposure to the bass as a solo instrument of such great empathetic power.
It was very moving.
RD: Thank you so much.
NOJ: I guess our communication started with me sending you my essay on the Duke Ellington bassist Jimmie Blanton. You responded kindly and here we are.
RD: Oh Yeah.
NOJ: I was really intrigued by Blanton’s life. I heard you
on an interview with Ben Sidran from 2008 that you had Blanton’s bass at the
University( of Wisconsin, Madison). How did you get it and is it still there
and is it still with you and is it still being used?
RD; See, the bass player who took that bass over after
Blanton, and he also played with Duke Ellington, was his cousin Wendell
Marshall. He had the bass .So when he was no longer playing I asked him if I
could at least take care of it. I didn’t want to buy it, because it had been
handled, but I said, I’d like to take care of it. When he divorced his wife he had left it at
home in his basement and I wanted to protect it and he agreed. I kept it for many, many years, but he
finally took it back. Wendel died but one of the student/ teachers in my
foundation found the bass, found it somewhere and knows where it is.
NOJ: Interesting. When I did research for my Blanton essay,
I found some references to the fact that he may have started out playing in the
Jeter-Pillars Orchestra with a three stringed bass. Do you know anything about
that?
RD: That’s questionable, because some people said that he
recorded with Jeter-Pillars, but it has been found out that he did not. One of my students, who did a lot of
research, found out that he never recorded with that band. I know from his sister, (Gertrude Blanton)
who I interviewed before she died- it was about a four hour recorded interview-
she said that when he got the job with Duke Ellington he had to get a bigger
bass. She didn’t say anything about a three stringed bass, but just that he
needed a bigger bass.
NOJ: When I did my research on Blanton, I found the
information to be pretty sparse. One interview that I found, an oral history
with drummer Lee Young, who was Lester Young’s brother, was particularly interesting. I was very
surprised to find out that as Young recounted, Jimmie and Nat King Cole and
himself were “running” buddies in Los Angeles, California.
Jimmie Blanton |
RD: They were?
NOJ: Yeah, that’s what Lee Young told an interviewer.
RD: Well, see one of his (Blanton’s) good friends was Ben Webster in that band.
Illinois Jacquet told me a story that when he first saw Blanton he was at jam
session and he had heard so much about him that he was nervous to go into it. I
was sitting right next to him when he told me that story. Wendell told me
he (Blanton) was headed toward
developing some new harmonies that were in his head.
There is a guy… from somewhere in Europe who is doing his
thesis on Blanton right now. He called on my former student, Peter Dominguez
who is a bass professor at Oberlin, and he is talking to me through a guy named
Lewis Porter, who wrote the book on Coltrane. So the research is still going on.
I am planning on giving him, if it works out that way, the tapes I have when I
interviewed Gertrude Blanton.
NOJ: I’d love to hear that interview.
RD: I caught up with her in Detroit before she died.
NOJ: What year was that?
RD: I don’t remember but it was a long time ago.
NOJ: I don‘t know what you thought about the conclusions or
speculations in my essay? I was very surprised to find that Blanton had
probably played with Charlie Christian at least one time in his short career. The fact that they both died so young, Blanton
was 23 and Christian was 25 within five months of each other from TB, you have
to wonder if one may have contracted it from the other? It’s a mysterious coincidence considering they
both revolutionized their respective instruments and both died of the same
disease at the same time don’t you think?
Charlie Christian |
TB was running rampant at that time.
NOJ: Let’s get back to you. You were born in Chicago 1930 and you were part of a family singing trio is that right?
RD: That was like when I was a kid.
NOJ: Do you still sing?
RD: I wouldn’t say I sing. It is something we just did around the house. We did try out for an amateur hour show called Major Bowes. We didn’t make it but we did it. My cousin, who influenced me to play the bass, used to coach us in singing. It was just something we did as kids.
NOJ: What was the very first concert that you attended that
really had an influence on you.
RD: Well see, you know you would go to the neighborhood
theater and see the bands on stage, that was before television took over. The
Regal (Theater) was about four blocks from my house, (and I would try to go
there) anytime they had a stage show and they had shows there very, very often.
NOJ: Was there any specific concert or performance that blew
you away?
RD: I can’t remember
any specific concert, but the whole scenario blew me away because there you
were listening to these live musicians playing and singing. I was impressed
with the bass player, because he was spinning his bass around. It was quite a
thing to see.
NOJ: It was very showman- like.
RD: Oh yeah, and they all had showman-like qualities.
NOJ: Well it was more than just music it was entertainment,
right?
RD: It sure was. I was very impressed.
NOJ: You have stated in past interviews that your experience
with Walter Dyett your musical director at the famed Dusable
High School music program, was instrumental in both your musical and personal
development. Can you explain how he inspired you?
RD: Well first off he was a highly spiritual person and a
very skillful musician in different venues like jazz and classical. Did you
ever hear of the Erskine-Tate band? He played in that band, he played banjo in
that band. He was spiritual, he was a Rosicrucian and I learned a lot of things
just being around him.
Walter Dyett |
NOJ: Was he religiously spiritual or just secularly
spiritual?
RD: He was a Rosicrucian. I understand George Washington was
too. Have you heard it?
NOJ: I am not that familiar with that following, no. I think they were somehow related to the Masons.
George Washington our Rosicrucian President |
RD: I am not that familiar with it either, but I know he did
(practice) it. He was very inspirational with anybody whom he taught.
NOJ: Did he push you to achieve what you were looking to
achieve because he saw in you something that was a natural talent?
RD: Yes. He had me at his house once a week…studying theory
and harmony. I worked with his professional band. He told me what school to go
to, what college to go to. I went to the same college he went to, VanderCook
College of Music, and when I went there,( I understood) everything they were
saying because I had heard it before… he was a graduate of that school. I was
way ahead.
NOJ: I have read that
you pursued the bass because you were shy as a youngster and it was a bit of a
background instrument that you felt you could hide behind it, and also because
you had a natural affinity for the sound of the bass from a very early age. Can
you elaborate how this developed into such a lifelong passion?
RD: Well I guess you just said it all there. I don’t think I
can elaborate on that. (Laughing)
NOJ: Well I did read some of your previous interviews, but I
wouldn’t want to put words into your mouth.
RD: Yeah, I think you have done a good job with wherever you
have gotten that from.
NOJ: Well some of this material came from several sources,
but I would like to hear it from the horse’s mouth.
RD: That’s a good
idea.
NOJ: And I hear you’re a horseman?
RD: That’s for sure. I been a horseman since I was nine and
I only stopped in 1987.
NOJ: That became a passion too, right?
RD: It was definitely a passion. I did everything imaginable
with horses. I only stopped when I moved into the city here (Madison,
Wisconsin), because I no longer had a place to keep the horses.
NOJ: Getting back to
your musical experiences, who was the very first bass player that you saw
perform live that you were really impressed with, and when was that?
Richard Davis training one of his horses |
RD: That I heard?
Well see, at fifteen years of age, when I started playing the bass,
there was a student in high school with me named Karl Byrom .I was very
impressed when he played. He and I became
friendly and consequently there were all these other (jazz)bass players
he knew about.
NOJ: So he introduced you to them?
RD: Yeah he had their recordings. Oscar Pettiford, Jimmie
Blanton, Slam Stewart, Milt Hinton all these guys.
NOJ: So let me ask you about some of these guys and as one
of the great jazz bass players, I would love to get your impromptu take on them
as bass players.
Let’s start with Walter Page?
RD: Walter Page to me was like the Rock of Gibraltar with
the walking bass line. He was solid, he had a big sound. He was in a rhythm
section that they called the “All American Rhythm Section,” he and Jo Jones,
Freddie Green and Count Basie. I was not impressed with any of his particular
skills. He didn’t solo at all, as far as I know, but he was inspiring.
Bassist Walter Page |
NOJ: I would say maybe Blanton next?
RD: Yes, Blanton next.
NOJ: And how did he change the way the bass was being
played?
RD: First, he was
soloing and he was bowing and he would come out in front of the band and play a
duet with Duke Ellington. I heard him and I said boy I’m impressed. My teacher
who was a European classical teacher from the Chicago Symphony had his record
too, what he did with Duke.
NOJ: Wasn’t Slam Stewart doing stuff like that at the same
time?
RD: Oh I can’t give you a date, but I am sure he was.
NOJ: In that same interview done with Lester Young’s
brother, drummer Lee Young, Lee recalled that Slam Stewart and Jimmie Blanton
once had a cutting session. Lester, who was a big Slam Stewart fan, thought he
was the tops and was rooting for Stewart, but after he heard Blanton at that
session he became a convert.
Bassist LeRoy "Slam" Stewart |
RD: Oh yeah. I’d wish I could have heard Blanton in a jam
session playing with the bow. That was never recorded.
NOJ: What about Milt Hinton?
RD: Well Milt Hinton was an exceptional player playing on
both classical and jazz. He did a solo album. I think it was called Ebony Silhouette, he bowed on it. I wish
I could find that record. He bowed the melody I know I heard it. I think that
was the name of it Ebony Silhouette.
Bassist Milt Hinton |
NOJ: What about Oscar (Pettiford)?
RD: Well now you’re talking about (laughing) some sort of
monster there man. Did you ever hear him play on Swamp Fire with Duke Ellington?
NOJ: Yeah, he used to play cello too right?
RD: Yeah. He was playing a baseball game and fell down and
broke his arm and he picked up the cello as something that put less pressure on it. Oscar Pettiford was a natural and his solos were swinging.
Bassist and Cellist Oscar Pettiford with Duke Ellington |
NOJ: What is the difference in your mind between Blanton and
Pettiford?
RD: Two different people with two different ideas on how to
solo. Pettiford was maybe as good as Blanton, I am not really sure about that,
but Blanton was in the world’s eye before Pettiford. I met Oscar, I talked to
him a lot. Oh yeah, I met him in New York, He was very egotistical. I was on
the (Ellington) bus when they were getting ready to leave, because I knew
somebody (in the band). Pettiford said ”I don’t need him (referring to Duke) ,
he needs me.” (Laughing) I said to
myself wow!
One time, I was hanging out with Wendell (Marshall, Ellington’s
regular bass player at the time) we were
both hanging out with Pettiford and Pettiford said to me and Wendell ”Why don’t you guys come around to this
rehearsal I got so you can learn how to
play the bass.” (Laughing) When he played on that record he did Swamp Fire, I was impressed. That
record, I think I have got it on the old vinyl.
NOJ: That’s got to be great. What about a guy like Tommy
Potter?
RD: Tommy Potter was a good bassist. He was one of the guys
in bebop who could keep those tempos. I never really saw him as a soloist. See
soloists were taking over from the guys that were just walking, and Tommy
Potter and Curley Russell were responsible for doing that (walking) stuff. I
remember all those guys. When I met Curley Russell, someone had taken me
backstage where he was working to meet him and he told the guy “… don’t tell
him to make a career out of music.” (Laughing)He was protecting me.
NOJ: What about Ray
Brown?
Bassist Curley Russell |
RD: Oh yeah he was a monster, man. He was out there with all
of them.
NOJ: How do these guys differ from each other in your mind?
Bassist Ray Brown |
RD: Well they are different
spirits of different times in jazz performance. You might say that Ray Brown
came up during the bebop era. Now the guy that started playing bebop on the
bass was Oscar Pettiford. That is the way I see it. There is another bass player back in those
days… he was with Stan Kenton.
NOJ: How about Israel Crosby was
he around then?
RD: Oh man Israel; he was one of
these young guys that started. Israel Crosby was ooh. I remember him in
Chicago. Yeah, good bassist.
Bassist Israel Crosby |
NOJ: And (George)Duvivier?
RD: There is another one. He was
known for his beat and his precision and intonation.
NOJ: Yeah he has great
intonation.
RD: Yes sir!
RD: Now there was a phenomenal
player too.
NOJ: He played with a different
tuning didn’t he?
RD: I think he did.
NOJ: I loved his work with
Hampton Hawes trio. They just cooked. I really liked the way Red played.
RD: I met him much later.
NOJ: Then of course there was
Mingus, who was in his own world.
RD: Yeah he was in his own world
all right.
NOJ: (Laughing) Brilliant, but sort of difficult.
Bassist and Composer Charles Mingus |
NOJ: (Laughing) Brilliant, but sort of difficult.
RD: He made sure of that.
NOJ: What about a guy like Scott
LaFaro, who everybody says was a pivotal point on the bass?
Bassist Scott LaFaro |
RD: He was definitely a pivotal
point on the bass.
NOJ: And why was that?
RD: He just played high on the
register and played fast and with alternate fingering. He played out of time.
He was basically not just keeping the beat. You know Ray Brown said the first
guy that he heard who was doing that stuff was me.
NOJ: You?
RD: That’s what Ray Brown said.
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