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WSWS : Arts
Review
Jazz vibraphonist Milt Jackson dead at 76
By John Andrews
13 October 1999
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One of the few remaining links to the founding of bebop passed
away Saturday when vibraphone virtuoso Milt Bags Jackson
died in Manhattan of liver cancer at the age of 76.
Jackson is best known as one-fourth of the Modern Jazz Quartet,
which performed its unique and impeccable chamber jazz
from 1952 until its dissolution in 1974, with only one change
in personneldrummer Connie Kay replacing Kenny Clarke in
1955. Jackson's death leaves pianist-musical director John Lewis
and bassist Percy Heath as the MJQ's survivors.
Following the exuberant Lionel Hampton and more subtle Red
Norvo of the swing era, Jackson was indisputably the third great
master of the jazz vibraphone. He was the first to translate the
new, complex harmonies and rhythms of modern jazz to the instrument,
and played always with perfect time and excellent taste. His descendants
are plentiful, and include Bobby Hutcherson and Gary Burton.
Although the MJQ was known for Lewis's embrace of classical
music formats and the so-called third stream school,
which attempted to fuse classical and jazz music, Jackson could
always be counted on for his swinging, bluesy and down-to-earth
improvisations. The tension between the two forms surfaced in
interviews Jackson gave after the dissolution of the MJQ, where
he criticized Lewis for too tightly controlling the music, depriving
it of feeling, as if he were trying to cleanse bebop of its more
earthy elements.
I personally agree with Jackson's criticisms, although one
might wonder why he spent more than 20 years in such a situation
if he really felt that way. I heard the MJQ twice in the early
1970s, once in a nightclub and once in concert. I can still remember
how, on both occasions, the band seemed wound too tightly while
working through the Lewis arrangements. Relief would come only
when Jackson cut loose with one of his patented bebop solos, setting
the audience into subtle foot-tapping, head-bobbing motion.
Jackson was born on New Years Day, 1923, in Detroit. Growing
up, he sang and played a variety of instruments, including drums
and piano (on which he recorded several times) before settling
on a relatively new instrument, the vibraphone, a somewhat unusual
choice given that he had perfect pitch.
In 1945, Dizzy Gillespie heard Jackson playing the vibraphone
in a Detroit bar and immediately hired him for Gillespie's ill-fated
first attempt at a big band. After the band collapsed, Jackson
joined Gillespie and Charlie Parker in a sextet for what became
a legendary two-month engagement at Billy Berg's in Hollywood.
Recordings from this period demonstrate that Jackson had not yet
fully developed the modern style, but working night after night
in a combo with the two great geniuses of the new music obviously
had a profound influence.
While Parker stayed on the West Coast (eventually landing in
Camarillo State Hospital for seven months because of his drug
addiction), Jackson returned to New York with Gillespie and became
a leading member of his new and, this time, highly successful
big band. Recordings from this later period show that Jackson
fully assimilated the new genre. He had become one of its leading
voices, and would remain so right up to his death.
Jackson's mellow and lyrical solos formed the perfect foil
for Gillespie's screaming high-note trumpet playing. The job presented
another opportunity for Jackson. The Gillespie big band arrangements
were so demanding on the embouchures of the reed and brass players
that Gillespie would rest them by having Jackson play solo, backed
only by the rhythm section of John Lewis, piano; Ray Brown, bass
and Kenny Clarke, drums. This band-within-a-band format became
the MJQ, Percy Heath replacing Brown.
Besides his work with the MJQ, which continued with reunion
concerts into the mid-1990s, Jackson performed and recorded frequently
with the best players of postwar jazz. Notable associations included
recording dates with tenor saxophonists John Coltrane and Sonny
Rollins, and even an unusual session with soul singer Ray Charles.
My personal favorite Jackson recording is his appearance on a
1954 Christmas Eve session issued as Miles Davis and the
Modern Jazz Giants. With a private war going on in the background
between Davis and pianist Thelonious Monk, Jackson rips off chorus
after chorus of absolutely perfect bebop improvisation on Gershwin's
The Man I Love, Monk's Bemsha Swing, and
his own blues, Bags' Groove. There are no better examples
of modern jazz at its zenith.
The year 2000 means 55 years have passed since the founding
of bebop, so those who did not succumb prematurely because of
the ravages of drug addiction and alcoholism are now the age for
natural death. Trumpeter and flugelhornist Art Farmer, a somewhat
lesser-known musician from the same era, also passed away last
week in New York City.
Born in Indiana, Farmer first came to prominence along with
his twin brother, bassist Addison, in the burgeoning Los Angeles
jazz scene of the late 1940s. Farmer became quite well known as
the replacement for Chet Baker in the Gerry Mulligan quartet,
and as a member of Benny Golson's group, playing on the original
recordings of such Golson classics as Killer Joe.
Farmer, like Jackson, had superlative skills and taste, and refused
to compromise his aesthetic vision to commercial fashion.
Repelled by the racism and artistic indifference he encountered
in the United States, Farmer moved to Europe, where he made his
home for over 30 years. Perhaps some day, wonderful musicians
like Jackson and Farmer, and the wonderful music they made, will
be appreciated as they should be in the United States as well
as abroad.
See Also:
Book
review:
The Birth of Bebop: A Social and Musical History What
bebop meant to jazz history
[22 May 1998]
Mel
Torme, an appreciation
[10 June 1999]
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