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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
Joe Henderson: Another jazz great dies
By Philip Sprake
9 August 2001
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Jazz saxophonist Joe Henderson, who died on June 30 after a
long battle with emphysema, has been described by one music writer
as the supreme melodist. A fellow musician referred
to him as a musical astronaut following the 25-year-olds
impromptu performance in 1962 at New Yorks Birdlanda
concert which also left a deep impression on bebop veteran Dexter
Gordon. Notwithstanding these accolades Henderson was an unassuming
man, a quiet achiever, who in an era dominated by giants of the
saxophone, John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, worked hard to become
one of the great tenor saxophone improvisers of the modern jazz
era.
Born in Lima, Ohio on April 24, 1937, into a family of 15 children,
Henderson was exposed at an early age to a wide variety of musical
influencesfrom classical composers Béla Bartók
and Igor Stravinsky to jazz musicians such as Lester Young and
Illinois Jacquet. But it was as a high school student that Hendersons
first music teacher introduced him to a deeper understanding of
the saxophone and the young musician began composing for the school
band and local jazz groups.
Henderson studied music at Kentucky State College and Wayne
State University and played in local Detroit jazz clubs before
serving in the US Army and playing in an army band from 1960-62.
After being discharged from the army, Henderson made his way to
New York and formed a musical partnership with veteran trumpeter
Kenny Dorham, to co-lead the jazz group that first brought him
into prominence.
Kenny Dorham engineered the signing of Henderson to the famous
jazz recording company Blue Note Records where he recorded a total
of 34 albums both as a bandleader and a sideman, appearing with
artists such as Horace Silver, McCoy Tyner and Lee Morgan. Henderson
co-led the Jazz Communicators with trumpeter Freddie
Hubbard from 1967-68 and played in pianist Herbie Hancocks
sextet from 1969-70.
From 1970 onwards Henderson led his own groups before moving
to California where he became active in music teaching. Such was
his versatility and interest in other musical forms that Henderson
spent four months playing with rock and rhythm-and-blues group
Blood, Sweat and Tears in 1971, enhancing their music
with his solo and backing work and introducing their fans to the
wider musical domain of jazz.
Referring to his broad musical tastes Henderson said: I
heard a lot of country and western music on the radio. .... A
lot of rhythm and blues, a lot of Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley and
all those real deep blues players. ... When I went to college
(Wayne State University), I got just a bit more esotericIndian
music, Balinese music.
While Henderson embraced these differing influences, his music
was rooted in post-bebop jazz and in particular the genre that
became known as hard bop. Emerging in the late 1950s, hard bop
was a more complex rhythmic and harmonic elaboration of the bebop
style pioneered by alto saxophonist Charlie Parker, trumpeter
Dizzy Gillespie, pianist Thelonius Monk and other jazz musicians
in the early 1940s. The best representatives of this jazz genre
were associated with the Blue Note recording label in the late
1950s and 60s.
One of the finest example of Hendersons playing in this
hard bop style is on the McCoy Tyner album The Real McCoy,
which provides several examples of the saxophonists extraordinary
lyrical solos and musical imagination. Another wonderful illustration
of Hendersons improvisational skills can be heard on The
State of the TenorLive at the Village Vanguard,
recorded for Blue Note in 1985. Appearing with Ron Carter on bass
and Al Foster on drums, Henderson is in exceptional form, the
trio format allowing him the space to build long and intricate
solos.
Wider recognition outside US jazz circles came to Henderson
when he was 55-years-old and after he switched to Verve Records
in the early 1990s. He made a clean sweep of the jazz magazine
Down Beat music awards in 1992, winning the international
critics and readers polls, named jazz musician of the year, top
tenor saxophonist and his Lush Life: The Music of Billy Strayhorn,
named album of the year.
This album went on to sell more than 100,000 copies that year
in the United States and 450,000 worldwide. Verve helped launch
his international career and he performed at many festivals and
concert halls throughout the world. The award winning Lush
Life was followed by other Verve albums, including, So
Near So Far: Musings for Miles, his tribute to trumpeter Miles
Davis, which also won a Grammy Award for best jazz performance.
The quiet spoken Henderson was somewhat ambivalent about broader
recognition and fame telling one interviewer before
his death: I havent spent a lot of time regretting
not being (widely) acknowledged all this time, Im just saying
I cant get too excited about finally being acknowledged
... Perhaps if this had happened when I was 40, it would have
been different. So maybe you could say I feel bittersweet, though
more sweet than bitter.
Henderson, who had not played in public for more than a year
after suffering a stroke, had been in poor health since 1998.
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