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Article

Simon Adams

(Richard)

(b Wallington, England, May 26, 1937; d Milford, Derbs., England, Feb 23, 2004). English composer. He first played piano and tenor saxophone, and after graduating from Bristol University (1959) he studied arranging and composition with Raymond Premru (1960–61) and Bill Russo (1962). From 1964 to 1968 he directed the New Jazz Orchestra, an ensemble that provided a forum for its members to perform their own compositions; among the musicians in the group were Harry Beckett, Jack Bruce, Ian Carr, Mike Gibbs, Jon Hiseman, Don Rendell, Barbara Thompson, and Norma Winstone. Several of these played in the occasional orchestra that Ardley subsequently led under his own name (1969–81). He wrote music for both orchestras, notably Greek Variations, incorporating small groups led by Carr and Rendell (1969); A Symphony of Amaranths (1971); and the multi-movement work Kaleidoscope of Rainbows (1976). From the 1970s Ardley also pursued a career as a writer; among his publications were ...

Article

Bruce Johnson

revised by Roger T. Dean

(Emerson) [Gay]

(b Melbourne, Australia, Sept 7, 1914; d Sydney, June 13, 2012). Australian bandleader, composer, and pianist, brother of Roger Bell. He began classical piano studies at the age of 11, and was introduced to jazz by his brother. In 1941 he held a pioneering jazz residency at Leonard’s Café in Melbourne and played for the Contemporary Art Society, indicating his radical interests. After working briefly in Queensland (1943) he returned to Melbourne, where he took over the group led by his brother at Heidelberg Town Hall and performed regularly for the Hot Jazz Society of the communist Eureka Youth League. In 1946 he started the Uptown Club in their premises and helped to inaugurate the Australian Jazz Convention. Having established his reputation in Australia with recordings in the dixieland style made in 1947, he toured Europe with his band (1947–8) under the Eureka’s sponsorship. In England his “jazz for dancing” policy was influential in promoting the acceptance of jazz as a major form of youth entertainment. In ...

Article

Bruce Johnson

(Emerson )

(b Melbourne, Australia, Jan 4, 1919; d Melbourne, Australia, June 17, 2008). Australian trumpeter, washboard player, composer, singer, and bandleader, brother of Graeme Bell. He first worked as a drummer, then in 1938 began to play cornet. Having worked in Melbourne with his brother at Leonard’s Café, he briefly led the band at Heidelberg Town Hall (1943), where he recorded with a visiting Max Kaminsky, before Graeme Bell returned from Queensland to take over the group’s leadership. He remained in Graeme’s dixieland groups during their European tours (1947–8, 1950–52), after which he worked with Max Collie (1953) and in the house band at the Melbourne Jazz Club (from 1958). Bell was active as a freelance musician and led his own band, the Pagan Pipers (a name he had used first in 1949), which with various personnel (notably Len Barnard and Ade Monsbourgh) performed and recorded for many years; among its recordings were a number of Bell’s own compositions. His playing may be heard to advantage on ...

Article

John Voigt

(Ramon)

(b Des Moines, IA, May 24, 1928; d San Clemente, CA, Sept 14, 2018). American bass player and composer. In his teens he took up trombone and then guitar. He played double bass with Herbie Fields (1949), Georgie Auld, Terry Gibbs, and Charlie Ventura (all 1951), served in the US Army (September 1951 – September 1953), and worked with Stan Kenton (1954–5). After settling in Los Angeles, in 1957 he accompanied Ella Fitzgerald, with whom he toured as part of the Jazz at the Philharmonic series the following year; he also recorded with Conte Candoli, Stan Levey, Charlie Mariano (all 1954), Frank Rosolino (1955), Jack Montrose (1956), Lou Levy (1956–63), and Mel Tormé and Bob Cooper (both 1957). He then played in Terry Gibbs’s big band, and made several recordings with the group (1959) which were released to great acclaim years later. From ...

Article

Yves Gagnon and Andrew Homzy

[Francis, François]

(b Namur, Belgium, Nov 6, 1929; d Geneva, Aug 12, 2005). Belgian composer, arranger, pianist, and band-leader. Following conservatory training he wrote arrangements for Bobby Jaspar, Bernard Peiffer, Henri Renaud, and Fats Sadi. Later he worked in Paris as a pianist and arranger for Aimé Barelli (1954), toured Europe with Chet Baker (1955), lived in the USA (1957–8), and wrote arrangements for Kurt Edelhagen’s big band in Frankfurt, Germany (1958). From 1959 he was associated with Kenny Clarke, with whom he formed the Clarke–Boland Big Band. Boland wrote all the ensemble’s scores, among them masterful arrangements of American popular songs (All Smiles, 1968) and his own compositions Sabbath Message, Sax No End, and Griff’s Groove. His larger works include the suites All Blues, Fellini 712, Off Limits (which sketches the development of jazz during the 1960s), and the challenging ...

Article

André Clergeat

(b Cannes, France, April 10, 1930; d Garches, France, Dec 29, 2020). French pianist, composer, and leader. He was a child prodigy as a pianist and in 1944 won an amateur jazz contest in Paris; the following year he formed a small group that played in a style that was both reminiscent of the small groups of Duke Ellington and influenced by New Orleans jazz. After accompanying Chippie Hill at a jazz festival in 1948 he played swing with such American musicians as Rex Stewart (recording in 1948), Roy Eldridge (1950), Buck Clayton and Don Byas (both 1951), Lionel Hampton (1953, 1956), and Albert Nicholas (1953–5), and (from 1955) with his own orchestra. He also recorded with Paul Gonsalves (1964–5), Cat Anderson (1964–5, 1969), Carmen McRae, and Thad Jones. Following in the tradition of Count Basie’s big band, he led the Show Biz Band and then the Claude Bolling Big Band into the 1990s; among those who performed with him as sidemen are Roger Guérin, Gérard Badini, André Villéger, and Claude Tissendier. With this orchestra Bolling toured the USA (...

Article

John Voigt

revised by Barry Kernfeld

[James Edward, Jr.]

(b Philadelphia, Jan 27, 1933; d Los Angeles, April 26, 2012). American double bass player and composer. He studied double bass and tuba and took private lessons in composition and orchestration. From 1950 to 1955 he attended the Juilliard School while living and working in Philadelphia, where, as the resident double bass player at the Blue Note club, he played with Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker. After graduating from Juilliard he worked with Chet Baker (July 1955 – September 1956), Ella Fitzgerald (October 1956 – January 1957), Sonny Rollins and Buddy DeFranco (both 1957), Don Shirley (1957–8), and Carmen McRae (1958); he also recorded in a group led by Larance Marable and James Clay (1956). He toured with George Shearing from 1958 to 1959, then settled in Los Angeles. While in residence at the Renaissance club (1959–63) he played with Ben Webster, Art Pepper, Jim Hall, and Jimmy Giuffre and performed and recorded with Paul Horn’s quintet (...

Article

Val Wilmer

[Cecil Valentine ]

(b Kingston, Jamaica, March 28, 1926; d Romford, England, Oct 10, 2009). Jamaican trumpeter, flugelhorn player, conductor, arranger, bandleader, journalist, and broadcaster. Self-taught on clarinet, he changed to trumpet to play with the big bands of the drummer Redver Cooke and the saxophonist Eric Deans, then formed the Beboppers with Ernest Ranglin and Dizzy Reece. He performed annually with the Jamaica All-Stars, and in 1950 he formed a septet which included Joe Harriott. From 1954 he promoted concerts and festivals, organizing the annual Big Band, which featured the island’s leading talents, notably Wilton “Bogey” Gaynair, Don Drummond, and the pianist (later politician) Seymour “Foggy” Mullings. Ranglin, Roland Alphonso, and the trombonist Emanuel “Rico” Rodriguez joined this ensemble to accompany such visiting artists as Sarah Vaughan, Donald Byrd, and Jimmy Owens. Bradshaw, who played in a raw, direct style influenced by Dizzy Gillespie, was a tireless promoter of Jamaican music. For 25 years he served as president of the Jamaican Federation of Musicians, and he arranged the island’s national anthem. Although he recorded extensively and toured throughout the Americas playing reggae, jazz was his preferred mode of expression. Among the guests who appeared with his poll-winning small group are Roy Haynes, Reece, Coleridge Goode, and Byard Lancaster. In the 1990s he travelled to England annually, playing in Birmingham with Andy Hamilton’s band....

Article

Jeffrey Holmes

[Randal Edward ]

(b Philadelphia, PA, Nov 27, 1945). American trumpeter, flugelhorn player, composer, arranger, and bandleader, brother of Michael Brecker. After graduating from Indiana University in 1966, he moved to New York, where he played with Clark Terry, Duke Pearson, and the Thad Jones–Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra. A versatile musician, he worked with Blood, Sweat and Tears, performing on their debut album, played hard bop and soul jazz with the Horace Silver Quintet and Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, and helped form the fusion group Dreams, which included his brother Michael, Billy Cobham, and John Abercrombie. During the 1970s he worked with Silver, Larry Coryell, Stevie Wonder, the Plastic Ono Super Band, and Cobham. He and Michael also performed and recorded (six albums) as the Brecker Brothers, garnering much critical acclaim. He continued to lead his own group into the 1980s and also recorded and toured with virtuoso performers Jaco Pastorious and Stanley Clarke. A reunion of the Brecker Brothers in ...

Article

Wim van Eyle

revised by Barry Kernfeld

(b Amsterdam, Nov 4, 1944; d July 23, 2010, Amsterdam). Dutch saxophonist, clarinetist, and composer. His first music lessons were on clarinet, and later he took up bass clarinet and saxophone; he is self-taught as a jazz musician. In 1966 he was a founder of the ICP, a nonprofit organization that sponsors performances and recordings of music by members of the Dutch avant garde. He played with the Globe Unity Orchestra under Alex Schlippenbach (1965–8), and with Gunter Hampel (1966–73), Peter Brötzmann, Misha Mengelberg, Han Bennink (1967–70), various groups associated with the ICP (1968–73), Don Cherry’s New Eternal Rhythm Orchestra at the Free Jazz Meeting in Baden-Baden (1969 and again in 1970), and his own quartet (1969–73) and recorded with Schlippenbach (1966), Brötzmann (1968, 1970), and Hampel (1969–70), and in a duo with Bennink (...

Article

Bruce Johnson

revised by Roger T. Dean

[John Joseph, John Jazza]

(b Adelaide, Australia, Jan 5, 1926; d Sarasota, FL, October 28, 2010). Australian vibraphonist, drummer, arranger, composer, and bandleader. He was playing xylophone by the age of six and later studied piano and drums; he became interested in jazz while serving in an RAAF entertainment unit (1944–6). After the war he led groups in Adelaide and played in coffee lounges and at concerts in Melbourne (1947–8). Among his sidemen at this period was Errol Buddle; Brokensha’s playing is well represented by the recording Buddle’s Bebop Boogie (1948, Jazzart 3–4). Extensive touring established his reputation in Australia, and he worked in Sydney (1949–50), Brisbane (1950), where his group disbanded, and Adelaide (1951). With Bryce Rohde he traveled in 1953 to Canada, where he became a founding member of the Australian Jazz Quartet (December 1954, with Rohde, Buddle, and the reed player Dick Healey). Later expanded to a quintet and occasionally to a sextet, the group was extremely successful in the USA; among its albums were ...

Article

Mark Gilbert

[John Symon Asher ]

(b Bishopbriggs, Scotland, May 14, 1943; d Suffolk, October 25, 2014). Scottish bass player, singer, and composer. Having studied for three months at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow he moved to London, where he played with Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated (late 1962 – early 1963) and then formed a group with Graham Bond, John McLaughlin, and the drummer Ginger Baker; this became known as the Graham Bond Organisation after McLaughlin left and Dick Heckstall-Smith joined. Bruce arrived in London as a jazz purist and had at first played double bass, but after using an electric bass guitar for a recording session with Ernest Ranglin in 1964 he transferred to that instrument and studied the mobile, melodic style of the Motown house bass player James Jamerson. The following year Bruce left Bond’s band because Baker felt that his bass playing was too busy and joined John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers. He is best known as the bass guitarist, singer, and principal composer with the highly successful blues and rock group Cream (...

Article

Steve Larson

revised by Barry Kernfeld

[Raphael Homer]

(b Philadelphia, Dec 24, 1931; d Queens, Jun 2, 2011). American pianist and composer, brother of Tommy Bryant. His mother and sister played piano, which he took up at the age of seven, studying classical music. He learned double bass while in junior high school and began playing jazz piano when he was 14, when he joined the musicians’ union. In 1949 he performed and recorded with Tiny Grimes. As house pianist at the Blue Note, Philadelphia (from 1953), he accompanied Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Lester Young, Sonny Rollins, and others. He recorded with Toots Thielemans (c spring 1955) and then began a period as an occasional house pianist for Prestige; he recorded sessions with Miles Davis and Milt Jackson, and Sonny Rollins (both 1955), Art Taylor (1957), Tiny Grimes and Coleman Hawkins (both 1958–9), Hal Singer, Arnett Cobb, Benny Golson, Lem Winchester, and Oliver Nelson (all ...

Article

Eliot Gattegno

(b Philadelphia, PA, June 8, 1956). American classical and jazz pianist and composer. Born and raised in Philadelphia, Caine began playing piano at the age of seven. At age 12 he commenced studies with French jazz pianist Bernard Peiffer. He later studied composition with ...

Article

Stan Britt

revised by Barry Kernfeld

(b Dumfries, Scotland, April 21, 1933; d London, Feb 25, 2009). English trumpeter, flugelhorn player, bandleader, composer, writer, and teacher, brother of Mike Carr. His mother played ukulele and banjo. Carr grew up in northeast England, where he took piano lessons from the age of 12 and taught himself trumpet from 1950. After studying at King’s College, Newcastle upon Tyne (1952–60, degree, English literature, diploma, education) he served in the army (1956–8), then played with his brother in a band, the Emcee Five (1960 – August 1962). He briefly joined Don Rendell in November 1962 and, after recovering from illness, formed a long-lived quintet with Rendell from 1963 to July 1969; during this period he also worked with Joe Harriott (recording in 1969), Don Byas, and John McLaughlin. In September 1969 he formed his own band, Nucleus, which rapidly became recognized internationally for its experiments with jazz-rock. As a result of its performance at the Montreux International Jazz Festival in ...

Article

Max Harrison

revised by Barry Kernfeld

[Cohen, Theodore Charles ]

(b Chicopee Falls, MA, April 13, 1928; d Riverhead, NY, April 16, 2012). Vibraphonist, composer, and arranger . He studied percussion at the Juilliard School in 1946, but taught himself to play vibraphone; later, in the mid-1950s, he studied composition with Hall Overton. He was very briefly with Benny Goodman during the clarinetist’s flirtation with the bop style (November 1948) and then joined the big band of Chubby Jackson (February 1949), with whom he made his first recordings. He was a member of Buddy DeFranco’s sextet in 1949 and in the following year toured with Artie Shaw’s big band and was co-leader of a quintet with Jackie Paris. In 1951–2 he worked variously with Anita O’Day, Oscar Pettiford, DeFranco’s big band, Roy Eldridge, and Slim Gaillard, and then began leading experimental jazz groups of his own, members of which included Ed Shaughnessy (from 1952), Overton and Art Farmer (both from ...

Article

Erik Wiedemann

(b Copenhagen, March 9, 1906; d Copenhagen, March 20, 2004). Danish composer and arranger . He was trained as an organist and spent his working life as a church musician, though he also played an important role in Danish jazz from about 1930. Besides classical music, he wrote several jazz oratorios (among them ...

Article

(b Fort Worth, TX, March 9, 1930; d New York, NY, June 11, 2015). American jazz alto saxophonist and composer.

He began playing alto saxophone at the age of 14, and developed a style influenced predominantly by Charlie Parker. His early professional work with a variety of South-western rhythm and blues and carnival bands, however, seems to have been in a more traditional idiom. In 1948 he moved to New Orleans and worked mostly at non-musical jobs. By 1950 he had returned to Fort Worth, after which he went to Los Angeles with Pee Wee Crayton’s rhythm and blues band. Wherever he tried to introduce some of his more personal and innovative ideas, he met with hostility, both from audiences and from musicians. While working as a lift operator in Los Angeles, he studied (on his own) harmony and theory textbooks, and gradually evolved a radically new concept and style, seemingly from a combination of musical intuition, born of South-western country blues and folk forms, and his misreadings – or highly personal interpretations – of the theoretical texts....

Article

Mark Miller

(b Coleman, Canada, July 3, 1930; d Toronto, October 22, 2003). Canadian composer, arranger, and trombonist . He studied with Gordon Delamont in Toronto (1951–4) and with George Russell and Hall Overton in New York (1961–2). In turn, he taught composition and arrangement at Humber College in Toronto from 1974 to 1994. With Delamont and fellow composer Norman Symonds, Collier was a leading figure both as a player and a composer in the third-stream movement in Canada during the late 1950s. His major compositions, in a variety of styles, include The City, Hear Me Talkin’ to Ya, Aurora Borealis, and Humber Suite; Aurora Borealis is included on Duke Ellington: North of the Border (1967, Decca 75069), recorded by Ellington with a studio orchestra led by Collier. Collier later collaborated with Ellington on the ballet The River (1970) and the symphonic work Celebration...

Article

Stefano Zenni

(b Rome, Dec 10, 1953). Italian saxophonist, flutist, and composer. Self-taught, he played with Mario Schiano and Giorgio Gaslini in the early 1970s, and in 1974 founded a saxophone quartet, I Virtuosi di Cave. Between 1976 and 1979 he worked with Paolo Damiani, the drummer Andrea Centazzo, and the arranger and composer Tommaso Vittorini, and in 1978 he played in the trio SIC with Giancarlo Schiaffini and the percussionist Michele Iannaccone. At the conservatory in Frosinone he studied saxophone from 1979 (gaining his degree in 1982) and composition from 1983. After working with the composer Giovanna Marini he played in several orchestras, as an unaccompanied soloist, and with the saxophone quartet Fratelli Sax (1983–8). He then joined the quartet Fortuna, led by the guitarist Massimo Nardi and inspired by Italian folk music, and performed in a duo alongside Luca Spagnoletti, who operated various electronic devices. In the late 1980s Colombo composed works for chamber groups and a piece for brass band and jazz group, ...