“Remembering Dizzy Gillespie,” a conversation with Nat Hentoff and James Moody

March 19th, 2004

 

photo © Lee Tanner

 

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Cab Calloway, in whose band Dizzy Gillespie once played, said of Gillespie, “Musically, the most important facet of Dizzy’s playing is not just his rhythm, harmony, chord changes or his technical facility alone.  It’s the whole thing.  Knowing that horn, he can do anything with it.”  He knew his horn so well that the sounds coming from it helped reshape the musical landscape — and the audience for it.

To those who love this music and the fascinating culture associated with it, Dizzy Gillespie was indeed jazz music’s “ambassador.”  He projected creativity, ambition, personality, and, unlike many in his field, sensibility.  His influence on music is well documented, and his style — framed by dark glasses, goatee and beret — set the tone for an entire generation searching for a definition of “hip.”

Saxophonist James Moody, whose significant achievements include employment in a variety of Gillespie’s best groups, and journalist Nat Hentoff, whose chronicles on jazz during Gillespie’s era were the benchmarks of his craft, remember Dizzy and his remarkable life with Jerry Jazz Musician publisher Joe Maita in a March 19, 2004 conversation.

 

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James Moody

Saxophonist James Moody joined Dizzy Gillespie’s big band in 1946, initiating a lifelong association that provided him with worldwide exposure and recognition.  While with Gillespie, he traveled for the State Department, played at the White House, and developed an intimate, personal friendship. His signature song, “Moody’s Mood for Love,” is an improvisation on the chord progressions of “I’m in the Mood for Love,” and is considered a masterpiece of improvisation.   His most recent recording, Homage, is on the Savoy Jazz label.

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Nat Hentoff

Among the country’s most revered journalistic voices, Hentoff has been commenting on American culture, politics and justice since becoming editor of Downbeat magazine in 1953, a post he held for four years.  He has written countless books, including many on jazz.  Among the publications Hentoff has frequentely contributed to include the Village Voice, the New Yorker, the Washington Post, Jazz Times, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic and the New Republic.

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JJM As an introduction to our conversation on the great jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, I would like to read two quotes that help define his creative and spiritual genius. The first is by the saxophonist Illinois Jacquet, who said of Dizzy, “This is what Dizzy has contributed to the world of music – his own style. And that is one of the hardest things to do in music, to be an individual stylist…I saw him developing a style from the early forties until now. And he has not changed, spiritually, from the time I met him up until now. And this is one great thing I admire in him. That he has maintained dignity and discipline as a jazz musician, as a trumpet player, and as a man.”  Nat, you wrote of Dizzy, “He always had a vivid presence. Like they used to say of Fats Waller, whenever Dizzy came into a room, he filled it. He made people feel good, and he was the sound of surprise, even when his horn was in his case.”

NH Well, part of that was because Dizzy was one of the most generous people I have ever known. He had a spirit that enveloped you, and it was such a pleasure just to be in his presence.

JJM When did the two of you first hear Dizzy’s music?

JM  The first time I ever heard Diz was when I was in the Air Force, stationed in Greensboro, North Carolina — I believe it was a recording with him and Charlie Parker. During that era, a billion records didn’t come out like today, there were only a few. There may have been a Dorsey recording, and maybe one from Basie, Charlie Barnet, Artie Shaw, or Benny Goodman. Very few records would be released during the course of a year. Because of that, you could really spend time with a recording and latch on to the artist, and as soon as I heard Charlie Parker on record, I knew that is what I wanted to do with my life.

JJM  Do you remember what the recording was?

JM  Well, it might have been “Now’s the Time,” and it might have been “Salt Peanuts.” I remember the first time I heard “Salt Peanuts,” I said to myself, “How can they play that fast?” When I eventually ended up playing with Diz, we played it even faster.

JJM  Nat, do you remember the first time you heard Dizzy?

NH  The first time I heard him on record was when he was with Cab Calloway, and he really sparked that band. The first time I heard him live was at the Hi Hat in Boston, which was where the modern jazz players like Parker performed. There was really no one like him. Within the first two bars of a recording, you immediately know it is Dizzy, because he has what David Murray calls a “signature sound,” like Moody himself has. It is one of the signs of a real jazz master.

JJM Nat, in reviewing one of the 1954 Birdland appearances with Gillespie, Hank Mobley, Charlie Persip, Wade Legge and Lou Hackney, you described them as “adequate, but hardly up to Dizzy.” You said Dizzy was “at the peak of his powers as a soloist — his ideas when he’s concentrating on playing are mindful of an exceptionally adventurous firework display.”

NH  Well, I was wrong. He didn’t hit the peak of his powers then, he kept hitting them year after year after year.

JJM  Were either of you in New York during the time Parker and Gillespie were playing together?

NH  Well, I came to New York in 1953, and the buzz was there. It was an interesting time because there was quite a civil war going on among the so-called critics — much more so than among the musicians. The traditionalists, known then as “moldy figs,” thought that jazz had stopped if not with Louis Armstrong, then not too long after. The music of Parker, Dizzy and the young Miles Davis was not even considered jazz at all by many of the writers. But that sort of argument has always gone on. As a critic, you have to listen to whom the musicians are listening to in order to find out what is going on.

JM  Don’t misunderstand, I am not against what critics do, but Phil Woods once told me an interesting story I frequently recall. He was on the bandstand playing one night, and an audience member called out, “Man, you are not playing anything new. You sound like Charlie Parker.” Phil handed him his saxophone and said, “Here, you sound like Charlie Parker.” All I am saying is that I don’t have a license to criticize anyone unless I can do exactly what they do. If I can do it, then I have a license to criticize. You know what I mean?

NH  Exactly.

JM  I won’t go so far as to say that just because they don’t play an instrument they shouldn’t be a critic, but I am saying they should be very careful about what they say.

NH  Sure, you have to be careful because you are dealing not only with the music but how the band makes a living. I don’t always like doing criticism. In one of the Jerry Jazz Musician conversations with the critic Gary Giddins, he referred to me not as a critic, but as a “shrewd chronicler,” and that is probably accurate. I have done many record album liner notes over the years, but I won’t do them without first talking to the musician. I had long talks with the likes of John Coltrane and Dizzy before writing liner notes for their albums. In fact, there was a familiar routine I had with Coltrane, where I would call him up and say that I was hired to write liner notes for his new recording, and he would say, “I wish you wouldn’t, because if the music doesn’t speak for itself, what is the point?” I would respond by saying, “But John, it’s a gig.” Being the generous man that he was, he would say, “Ok, what do you want to know?”

JM  The critics used to knock him big time, saying things like he was playing wrong notes, and now look how it has turned around. Today, critics are saying that the people who don’t play like John Coltrane are the ones out to lunch, primarily because they don’t want to be wrong like their predecessors were with Coltrane.

NH  And Coltrane was really hurt by that criticism. I have rarely known anyone, in any field of expression, who constantly sought to enhance his art, and to have critics put him down the way they did was hard for him. A critic once used the term “sheets of sound” to describe his music, which wasn’t meant to be very complimentary. But after a while, after hearing him with Miles and all those extraordinary groups of his own, it became obvious what an extraordinary talent he was. The bass player Art Davis used to tell me that when he worked with Coltrane, it was not uncommon for people to shout and cheer at the conclusion of one of their forty-five minute numbers as if they were in a church service. He really reached people, as did Dizzy, of course, in his way.

JM Diz never had a hit record, but he worked constantly. He made his mark on the people. No matter where we were in the world, people recognized him. For example, we would be in some obscure little airport anywhere in Europe, and people would stare at him, and after a while, come over and ask for an autograph. Often they would bring a child over to him, and Dizzy would put his finger up to his lips and turn his cheeks into a balloon. They would really get a kick out of that.

NH Before we go any further, I want to say here that Dizzy once said that playing with James Moody is like playing with a continuation of myself. And that was quite a tribute…Now, I have a question for you, Moody. The pianist Hank Jones and other musicians have told me that Dizzy was generous in sharing ideas with them. He played the piano a lot to work out his own ideas about what chords could do and what you could do in terms of changing them, and apparently he volunteered to help people with their own work. Did you have that experience with him too?

JM  Before I answer that, Nat, I want to thank you very kindly for reminding me about how Diz felt about me. I know that he said it, yet I am still overwhelmed hearing it again, because, Diz was something else.

Concerning him assisting other musicians, no matter who it was, he would frequently have suggestions for them. When we went to a gig, while many of the musicians would go backstage and change, the first thing Diz would do was go to the piano and start playing something. He would try to figure out something he was working on or improve on something he had heard. Diz was a teacher from the standpoint that if he played something and you asked him what it was, he would bring you to the piano and explain it. He knew the importance of the piano. Long ago, while pointing to a piano, he told me, “Moody, this is it, right here.” He felt that if a player knows the piano, then he will know what the trombones are doing, what the trumpets are doing, and what the saxophones are doing, because every instrument is right there on the piano. And he was right; it is there. Many of the great musicians know something about the piano, because, as Diz said, that is where everything is.

NH  So he really thought like an orchestra, the way Duke Ellington did.

JM Yes, he knew that everything was there. Cedar Walton recently told me that he loves to write, and that because he is a piano player it is easier for him because all he as to do is just copy the notes.

NH  Dizzy said something to me once that I would be interested in your reaction to. He described Bird as the most fantastic musician he ever heard, and said that he was a “deep blues” player. He went on to say that while he could play the blues, he couldn’t play them the way Bird did. Does that make sense to you?

JM  Oh yes, and that comes out in some of the recordings he did with Jay McShann. I listen to those and I get the chills.

NH We were talking earlier about the generosity and spirit of Dizzy, and one of my favorite stories about him involves one of the tours he made for the State Department, as an “ambassador for democracy.” While his band was in Turkey, they were going to play a concert at the residence of the American ambassador. On the other side of the fence bordering the property, several young fans wanted to get in so they could hear the performance. A couple of them even tried to climb the fence but were thrown back, and upon seeing this, Dizzy told the ambassador that there wouldn’t be any concert unless he allowed them to come in.

JM Yes, that sure sounds like something he would have done.

JJM  Among the many things Dizzy was known for was his sense of humor. According to the writer Gene Lees, Dizzy felt that if he could do anything to “set a sympathetic mood in an audience, for his music, he would do it, and if humor would accomplish that end, he had no intention of giving it up.” Can you share a story involving his wit?

NH  The thing about wit and humor is that you can’t fake it. If you don’t have it, you can’t use it. Dizzy’s sense of humor was natural, and his idea of making the audience feel comfortable by being humorous was just a natural part of his whole personality. Fats Waller was like that. You could talk to him off the stand and he would still break you up.

JM Yes, Diz was a funny cat, period. And he was Dizzy like a fox.

NH  The other thing is that he left a legacy of two kinds. One legacy of course is his music, and passing his love of it to the many musicians who learned from him, as well as the untold numbers of people all over the world whose lives were enriched by him. But another legacy of his must be told. When he was dying of cancer at Englewood Hospital in New Jersey, he told his internist, Dr. Frank Forte, that he wanted to do something for musicians who couldn’t afford the type of care he was receiving. The result is that through the Jazz Foundation of America, in the Dizzy Gillespie Institute at Englewood Hospital, surgeons often operate on jazz musicians for free. Through his vision, even after his passing, he is not only keeping the music alive, but he is keeping musicians alive as well.

JJM  That’s a great legacy, for sure.

JM  When thinking about his wit, listening to Nat talk about Englewood Hospital makes me remember a funny line of Dizzy’s. While he was sick, Dizzy told those of us around him, “I am too famous to die.”

NH  I would sometimes call Dizzy up and I would hear Lorraine — his wife of many years — in the background. Overhearing their domestic conversations would often remind me of my own. I have been married more than once, and I remember asking Dizzy how come his marriage has lasted so long, aside from the fact that they so obviously like each other. He said, “Over the years I have learned something very important. Whenever Lorraine has something critical to say, I say, ‘Yes, Dear. Yes, Dear,’ and that keeps her happy for a long time.”

JM Yes, he was a very funny man. I remember being over at their house during a time he was pretty upset about something regarding Lorraine. He told me how sick of all this stuff he was, and that this time he is going to tell her exactly who she is messing with. I called him on it and said you aren’t going to do anything, and he said, “Oh yes I am. Just you watch!” At that moment, Lorraine happened to come around the corner and all he could bring himself to say to her, in a light, sing-song voice was, “Oh. Hi Lorraine.” But, if it wasn’t for Lorraine, boy, he would have been messed up. She took care of all the business and kept everything straight.

NH  That’s right, and he told me that she kept him straight too, because, the scene at that time was full of temptations. Knowing that she was there was good for him. She was like the Rock of Gibraltar.

JJM  There are a variety of explanations about how his trumpet got bent, and none of them seem especially believable. What is the true story about that?

NH  Moody probably knows the true story about that. All I remember was the explanation that somebody sat on it, but you are right, that explanation seems implausible considering how hard it would be to bend that trumpet.

JM The story he told me was that it happened during a birthday party he was having for Lorraine. The comedians Stump and Stumpy were fooling around during intermission when one of them fell on his trumpet, bending it. When Dizzy saw the bent condition of the horn, he was concerned that if he tried to bend it back it would come off completely, so he figured he would play it the way it was. And when he played it, he loved the way it sounded. Consequently, he contacted one of the instrument companies and made them make a horn for him.

JJM  It was said that he even wanted to patent the idea and mass market the design but someone had patented it long before…

JM  I don’t know anything about that.

NH Well, that sounds like Dizzy the fox. At one time, he told me he could hear himself better when playing a bent horn.

JJM  Yes, on this very subject in Downbeat, Nat, you wrote of the four tangible benefits of Dizzy’s upturned horn; “1. Acoustically, the sound is more pleasing in a club. You don’t blow straight at the customers. The sound gets up into the air and spreads; 2. With the bell not in the way, the new horn makes reading much easier for the player; 3. The trumpeter now can really hear himself. Before, when he played fast, Dizzy says, it seemed to him that more notes went by him than he could hear;  4. Tone is improved, he says.”

NH  Oh yes, I remember that. Something else I want to say about Dizzy. It involves a quote of his that I have used a lot, something I feel is quite profound — and not just for musicians. He told me, “It took me all my life to know what notes not to play.” I am indebted to him for this because whenever I write I remember that.

JM  Yes, I remember him saying that as well, that it took him all this time to remember what note to leave out.

NH  Yes, that’s right.

JM  You know what he used to do? I would be in a hotel in Sweden or somewhere like that and I would get a call, and the operator would inform me that I had a long distance call. On the other line was a person with an exaggerated high pitched voice saying, “Hello. Is this Moody? Oh, Moody, I love you so.” And I would say, “Oh Dizzy. How did you know it was me?” He would pull silly stuff like that all the time.

NH  Well, speaking of “Dizzy the fox,” etcetera, I recall walking down Broadway in New York one day, and he came along with a big grin, and I asked him why he was smiling. He told me that he had just come from the offices of Billy Shaw, who was a big booker of jazz talent in those days, and Dizzy said, “I told him that he works for me. I told him I don’t work for you!” And that changed their relationship to Dizzy’s advantage.

 

JJM You hear so much about Gillespie’s and Charlie Parker’s affect on music. What did Dizzy and Parker respectively contribute to the creation of bop?

JM  First of all, Dizzy was always looking for something. He knew it was there, he just didn’t know when he would discover it. He told me that when he heard Charlie Parker, he had it, and the two of them got together and broke ground. What they did was not unlike what Coltrane did years later, although Coltrane’s thing was a little deeper mainly because of the harmonic concept. Diz and Charlie Parker provided a new approach, the bebop harmonic concept. In those days — the forties — I don’t think every musician knew changes. Many of the musicians of that era just played by the melody. You had solos like “Da da dee do dee, da da dee do dee,” but Diz was more like “Da da dee dee do di da da di do dee dee,” going through the changes.

NH  And he knew where he came from, because he had a very clear idea of his roots. He once said about Louis Armstrong, “If it hadn’t been for him, I wouldn’t have had my living.”

JM  Yes it was like that. First there was Louis Armstrong, then Roy Eldridge, and then Diz. And while Diz dug both of them, he kept going. Now, just imagine where Armstrong would have been if he had looked for things in music the way Dizzy did, and then imagine what Eldridge would have done had he picked up where Armstrong left off, and then Diz came along.

JJM  Armstrong once called bop, “Jujitsu music,” and recorded a version of the “Wiffenproof Song” in retaliation of a Gillespie parody of Armstrong’s called “Pop’s Confessin.'” Did a feud exist between the two of them?

NH  I think the critics were more responsible for that than the musicians, when there was a big war initiated by writers who thought that what Dizzy, Bird and Thelonious Monk were playing wasn’t real jazz, and in reply, some of the young musicians — not Dizzy, as I recall — said things about Louis that annoyed him. But it didn’t really amount to much because Dizzy and Louis were almost always neighbors in Queens, and certainly as the years went on, they really understood each other.

JM  An interesting and similar situation was occurring in Paris at the time, when two jazz club owners, Charles Delauney and Hugues Panassie`, had a difference of opinion about what constitutes real jazz.

NH  Yes, they were known as the twin popes. Delauney had much better ears, as I recall. He aligned himself with the modernists, while Panassie` was more of a “moldy fig.”

JM  They had a major falling out about that, and that is how Paris wound up having two jazz clubs. Later on, Delauney indicated he was sorry that they didn’t get back together before Panassie` passed away.

NH  I have a quick story about Delauney that shows how universal the language of jazz is. Prior to World War II, Delauney was one of the first jazz discographers. He put together a book about who recorded what, where, on which date, that sort of thing. When the Germans occupied Paris during the war, Delauney was working undercover for the Free French — needless to say very dangerous work. One day, the Germans picked him up and took him to Gestapo headquarters for questioning. The German officer about to interrogate him recognized Delauney and said something to the effect of, “You know, on that Fletcher Henderson recording in 1928, you listed the wrong alto saxophonist…” So, fortunately for Charles, the interrogation did not last very long.

JJM What was the most common introduction for people to his music?

NH  I would think that what he did with Bird and that whole scene, even including the date at Billy Berg’s that did didn’t go off well, but he got a lot of press on that. And because of his personality, I think it is safe to say that many people knew there was a Dizzy Gillespie before they ever heard his music. He was on the cover of major magazines and was prominent in the culture. He was a presence, whether he was playing or not playing.

JM  Yes, I would agree with that. Dizzy was something else. No matter where we went, people congregated around him, and he was always nice about everything.

NH  I have to say that I never saw him bad mouth anybody. He once spoke to me about the Baha’i faith, and it was clear to see what a spiritual person he was. He pointed out how it made him contemplative and how it helped him understand what he was trying to make of himself. And he had such a spiritual presence. There is a great story about a rehearsal for a Carnegie Hall concert that featured Dizzy’s big band and prominent guest artists. Before Dizzy got into the rehearsal hall, a nasty argument broke out between Max Roach and Gerry Mulligan concerning who was going to have their originals be part of the program. The argument went on and on, and the other players were all embarrassed listening to this. Then, Dizzy walked in, saw what was going on, stood before the band and said, “Ok, now we are going to go to letter ‘C.'” The whole thing calmed down immediately, until one of the guys in the reed section began to play “I Will Always Be in Love With You,” and everybody broke up laughing. But it was amazing, once he came into the room it was as if the air changed.

JM  Yes, he had that impact on situations.

JJM Was he a good business man?

JM  No. He was a wonderful speller, he could count wonderfully, but he was a lousy businessman.

NH  That is why Lorraine was so important.

JM  There you go.

JJM  Yet he was such a great marketer, when you think about it. The Gillespie style that drew people to him beyond his musical appeal enriched people in so many ways, and much of it was the result of the way he marketed himself.

NH  You know, he once ran for President, and I didn’t think it was a joke. I imagine that he would have been a great leader. He was such a quick learner, and because he traveled all the time he knew about other cultures and public affairs. My fantasy during that era was for him to be president, and if he had been, we would have all been a lot better, and I mean it!

JM Yes, I believe that too. Because, actually, he was very fair-minded. I will never forget the time he told me, “Moody, you are a nice guy. You are a wonderful person, and I would trust you anywhere. But I have a little bit of an orphan in my heart.” And I knew what he meant by that, that he wouldn’t take any “stuff” from anyone, and that he would try to grab them before they grabbed him, because he was taken advantage of in his work.

NH  Oh yes, like a lot of people in this business.

JM  Many of the pieces that Diz wrote has someone else’s name on it with his.

“I hear my music all over…and it really doesn’t matter to me, because it will all come out in the wash, baby.  History avenges itself, and this is history, the history of music…Whether I get the recognition now, it will come out.  Because the records are out and the records are…well, a matter of record.”

 

 

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NH Well, some of Ellington’s standards have the name of his manager Irving Mills as co-writer, but I don’t think he could write a note of music. Yet he cut himself in that way. So many others were taken advantage of. Fats Waller, for instance, used to sell his songs for fifty bucks or so. Somebody should write a book on the history of the larceny in the business end of music.

JM  I believe Oliver Nelson sold “Stolen Moments” for less than one hundred dollars, and it was his most famous composition. Regarding Dizzy, I can only imagine how much money he would have made if he had been Caucasian. I am not prejudiced — hell, my wife has blonde hair and green eyes — but if he were Caucasian, he would have made some serious money.

NH  Yes, he would have been a television personality and all kinds of things.

JJM  In the seventies, jazz musicians went electric in an attempt to broaden their appeal and make more money. There must have been temptations for Dizzy to go along the route Miles Davis and Donald Byrd were taking. Was he ever tempted…

JM  Now, wait a minute. Hold it. See when you say the way that Miles went, or the way Donald Byrd went, you can’t put Donald Byrd in there with Miles. The reason Miles played the way he played was because he couldn’t play the way Diz played.

NH  Yes. Miles and I were pretty friendly, but I could never take the fusion and electronic stuff he was doing then. He used to tell me that he was going to show all the white guys who do this — the rockers — that he could do it much better and consequently make a lot of money. But, Dizzy would have never done that sort of thing. He kept expanding and deepening, like the Afro-Cuban strain that he explored. But that was legitimate. That was him searching and finding new ways to communicate musically.

JJM  As part of an essay on Dizzy, the critic Gary Giddins wrote, “As the legend of Bird flourished, Gillespie was relegated to a supporting role in the drama he helped create. He was, after all, a working musician, appearing nightly, ruddy-cheeked and irrepressible, not the stuff of which legends are made.” How did he want to be remembered?

NH  I heard Dizzy a lot during his later years, and I have to say that his legend was certainly not diminished. I never heard him blow anything that wasn’t worth hearing.

JM  He used to tell me, “I want to be remembered for what I have done.” He knew he contributed a lot to this music, and he felt that if people were fair, he would indeed be remembered.

NH  And the thing is, there are some people who accomplish so much — people like Louis and Roy and Diz, for example — there is really not point in saying that they declined. What lasts is the music, and people will be listening to and talking about Dizzy as long as there is this music.

JM  Oh yes, that is for sure. And if one person doesn’t mention his name, someone else will, and say, “Well, how about Diz?”

NH  That’s right, or, “Where do you think this came from?”

JJM  As a fan, my impression of Gillespie is that he was probably the most complete bop musician in terms of possessing creative genius as well as having his act together, if you know what I mean…

NH  Yes, and as a leader he was able to search, expand and grow his career. It kept taking on different forms, like Ellington’s. He didn’t get stuck in any one category.

JM  I agree with that.

JJM  Do you have anything else to say before we close?

NH  I have to say that it feels good just to think about him.

JM  It really does. A day doesn’t go by that I don’t think about Diz. I have pictures of him plastered all over my house. He touched me very deeply, to the point of saying this — I am now seventy-nine years old, and often I will be doing something and then stop, and say to myself, “Ahh, that’s what he meant!” And I guess as long as I live, I will be saying that to myself because that is how deep the man touched me.

NH  Whenever I think of him — which is often — I not only feel good, but I can feel what this music has always done for me. You can feel its life force. By listening to him, you are provided with a great sense of what a human being can accomplish. Through him, you can continue to learn and to teach other people what it means to be fully alive, because that is what Dizzy was.

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photo © William Gottlieb

“The first thing we must keep in mind about a musician is that the music he plays is a reflection of his true self.  His music might not be what you, the listener, thinks he is, but truly, he can no more escape himself through his playing than we can escape the contingent world in which we are placed, except through death.  You are what you are; that is reality, you can’t escape it.  And the reality of the musician — especially the jazz musician — is that the music is a continuance of himself.”

– Dizzy Gillespie, 1976

 

 

 

 

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Dizzy Gillespie products at Amazon.com

James Moody products at Amazon.com

Nat Hentoff products at Amazon.com

 

 

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This conversation took place on March 19, 2004

 

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If you enjoyed this conversation, you may want to read our conversation with Gary Giddins on Thelonious Monk. You may also enjoy our November, 2001 interview with Nat Hentoff.

 

 

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On the Turntable— The “Best Of the ‘Best Of’” in 2023 jazz recordings...A year-end compilation of jazz albums oft mentioned by a wide range of critics as being the best of 2023 - including the late trumpeter Jamie Branch's Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((world war))

Poetry

Ali Yahya ayahya09, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons
“Black Coffee Blues” – a poem by Mary O’Melveny

Essay

"Lester Leaps In" by Tad Richards
"Jazz and American Poetry," an essay by Tad Richards...In an essay that first appeared in the Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Poetry in 2005, Tad Richards - a prolific visual artist, poet, novelist, and nonfiction writer who has been active for over four decades – writes about the history of the connection of jazz and American poetry.

Interview

photo of Pepper Adams/courtesy of Pepper Adams Estate
Interview with Gary Carner, author of Pepper Adams: Saxophone Trailblazer...The author speaks with Bob Hecht about his book and his decades-long dedication to the genius of Pepper Adams, the stellar baritone saxophonist whose hard-swinging bebop style inspired many of the top-tier modern baritone players.

Poetry

Three poets and Sketches of Spain

Interview

IISG, CC BY-SA 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
Interview with Judith Tick, author of Becoming Ella Fitzgerald: The Jazz Singer Who Transformed American Song...The author discusses her book, a rich, emotionally stirring, exceptional work that explores every element of Ella’s legacy in great depth, reminding readers that she was not only a great singing artist, but also a musical visionary and social activist.

Poetry

Trading Fours with Douglas Cole is an occasional series of the writer’s poetic interpretations of jazz recordings and film. This edition is influenced by Stillpoint, the 2021 album by Zen practitioner Barrett Martin

Review

Jason Innocent, on “3”, Abdullah Ibrahim’s latest album... Album reviews are rarely published on Jerry Jazz Musician, but Jason Innocent’s experience with the pianist Abdullah Ibrahim’s new recording captures the essence of this artist’s creative brilliance.

Short Fiction

Christerajet, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Short Fiction Contest-winning story #64 — “The Old Casino” by J.B. Marlow...The author's award-winning story takes place over the course of a young man's life, looking at all the women he's loved and how the presence of a derelict building informs those relationships.

Feature

George Shearing/Associated Booking Corporation/James Kriegsmann, New York, via Wikimedia Commons
True Jazz Stories: “An Evening With George,” by Terry Sanville...The writer tells his story of playing guitar with a symphony orchestra, backing up jazz legend George Shearing.

Short Fiction

photo via PxHere/CC0 Public Domain
“An Un-played Instrument” – a story by Terry Sanville

Poetry

The poet Connie Johnson in 1981
In a Place of Dreams: Connie Johnson’s album of jazz poetry, music, and life stories...A collection of the remarkable poet's work is woven among her audio readings, a personal narrative of her journey and music she considers significant to it, providing readers the chance to experience the full value of her gifts.

Short Fiction

“Sayir” – a short story by Ron Perovich

Poetry

"Jazz Trio" by Samuel Dixon
A collection of jazz haiku, Vol. 2...The 19 poets included in this collection effectively share their reverence for jazz music and its culture with passion and brevity.

Poetry

“Remembering Mose,” a poem by John Kendall Hawkins

Jazz History Quiz #170

photo of Dexter Gordon by Brian McMillen
This bassist played with (among others) Charlie Parker, Erroll Garner, Nat King Cole and Dexter Gordon (pictured), was one of the earliest modern jazz tuba soloists, and was the only player to turn down offers to join both Duke Ellington’s Orchestra and the Louis Armstrong All-Stars. Who is he?

Community

FOTO:FORTEPAN / Kölcsey Ferenc Dunakeszi Városi Könyvtár / Petanovics fényképek, CC BY-SA 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
.“Community Bookshelf, #1"...a twice-yearly space where writers who have been published on Jerry Jazz Musician can share news about their recently authored books. This edition includes information about books published within the last six months or so…

Contributing Writers

Click the image to view the writers, poets and artists whose work has been published on Jerry Jazz Musician, and find links to their work

Coming Soon

An interview with Tad Richards, author of Jazz With a Beat: Small Group Swing, 1940 - 1960;  an interview with Laura Flam and Emily Sieu Liebowitz, authors of But Will You Love Me Tomorrow? An Oral History of the 60's Girl Groups;  a new collection of jazz poetry; a collection of jazz haiku; a new Jazz History Quiz; short fiction; poetry; photography; interviews; playlists; and lots more in the works...

Interview Archive

Eubie Blake
Click to view the complete 22 year archive of Jerry Jazz Musician interviews, including those recently published with Richard Carlin and Ken Bloom on Eubie Blake (pictured); Richard Brent Turner on jazz and Islam; Alyn Shipton on the art of jazz; Shawn Levy on the original queens of standup comedy; Travis Atria on the expatriate trumpeter Arthur Briggs; Kitt Shapiro on her life with her mother, Eartha Kitt; Will Friedwald on Nat King Cole; Wayne Enstice on the drummer Dottie Dodgion; the drummer Joe La Barbera on Bill Evans; Philip Clark on Dave Brubeck; Nicholas Buccola on James Baldwin and William F. Buckley; Ricky Riccardi on Louis Armstrong; Dan Morgenstern and Christian Sands on Erroll Garner; Maria Golia on Ornette Coleman.

Site Archive