For years I thought it was the United Nations (plural) Orchestra – and I can imagine that there are some who might have thought it was a musical venture of that well-intended organisation that fails to stop wars – but no, and even Wikipedia gets it wrong. It is indeed United Nation singular: searching for a name to call his conglomerate of international musicians, on scanning the diversity of stars Dizzy apparently exclaimed 'Man, this is a United Nation!'
I was intending to forego a video of the orchestra in action till I turned my attention to Latin jazz for a subsequent tome. But hey, it's high time that I turned the spotlight on big band jazz and who knows what the future holds. There's no time like the present, as the maxim teaches us. And anyway, if this ain't jazz, what is? 'Tin Tin Deo' was one of Dizzy's standards, going back to a time in the late '40s when he first experimented with the marriage of big band jazz, bebop and Afro-Cuban rhythms as 'Cubop' in the company of the legendary percussionist and the song's composer, Chano Pozo. Here, a lovely simmering arrangement emphasises its latent drama.
The United Nation Orchestra was arguably the final flowering of a big band c.v. that began in the trumpet sections of Cab Calloway's and Earl Hines' orchestras and then Billy Eckstine's assembly of young proto-boppers, and blossomed in the many permutations of his own big band, which he managed to reassemble periodically during the subsequent decades when he spent most of his time gigging and recording with smaller but economically more viable outfits. When living in Sheffield, I very nearly got to see his mighty big band. They were scheduled to play on the other side of the Pennines, in Manchester. I might have died and gone to heaven had Dizzy not beaten me to it. The great trumpeter, he of the upturned trumpet and the improbable bullfrog neck and cheeks, died in January 1993, a few short months after the intended concert.
I'm still not fully over the disappointment. Few things in life are more exciting than a big band in full swing – except maybe a big band with added Latin percussion. When Dizzy inaugurated his behemoth in 1946 under the musical direction of John Lewis, future founder of the Modern Jazz Quartet, he and Charlie Parker were still joined at the hip in the view of cognoscenti as the two prime bebop revolutionaries. As such, his big band tended to play in his image with the kind of slightly disjointed exuberance that comes with so many new ideas pressing to be heard. It could sound a little ragged and certainly wasn't slick like the Count Basie Band, but the joyful exaltation of numbers like the signature 'Things To Come', compressed into well under the three minutes allowed by the 78rpm format, probably prompted the critic Ralph Gleason to call Dizzy's outfit 'as exciting a musical group as anything I've ever heard.'
By 1990, when this performance was filmed, John Birks 'Dizzy' Gillespie was a father figure and mentor for the younger players who followed in his footsteps. His Afro-Latin jazz orchestra had lost none of its early visceral excitement, but was perhaps a little more drilled and disciplined in its approach. As a trumpeter, Dizzy tended to leave the theatrics latterly to his protégé Jon Faddis and the Cuban high-note maestro, Arturo Sandoval. Here he demonstrates clearly in his three brief, subtle solos that he was still a master musician. The spirit of Cuba still moves his ageing limbs and, as always, he exudes a boyish sense of fun and enthusiasm. His clowning got him fired by Cab Calloway, but he was more often a thinking person's clown – as is evident in the title and content of his memoir, To Be Or Not To Bop.
As you watch this, you can easily spot the Cuban percussionist in the flat cap, Giovanni Hidalgo; beside him (in a green shirt), the great Brazilian percussionist and former Miles Davis sideman, Airto Moreira; the alto-sax soloist in the Panama hat is Paquito d'Rivera, who took over as leader of the orchestra after its founder's death; there's the young Panamanian pianist, Danilo Perez; and a comment suggests that the trombone soloist is the Puerto Rican, William Cepeda, who has played with Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, Donald Byrd and many other notables. The drummer is most likely Ignacio Berrao. And seated to d'Rivera's left is surely Mr. Gillespie's long-term 'worthy constituent', saxophonist and flautist, James Moody, whom I once saw play by candlelight at the Concord Club in Brighton, the day after the hurricane of 1987 shut down the electricity – and what a witty, droll fellow he was: a perfect foil in other words for his boss.
There are innumerable examples of Dizzy in action on YouTube, either in a small-group of big-band context. By way of complete contrast, for example, there's an unusual 1966 duet performance of 'Tin Tin Deo' with bass player Chris White, from the BBC's Jazz 625 series. Further back in time, there's the precious historic footage of Charlie Parker and Dizzy together (with its rather excruciating prelude) performing the bebop classic, 'Hot House'. Of all the big band footage, I'm drawn to Dizzy's 1970 guest appearance with the European big band co-led by the expatriate bebop master drummer, Kenny Clarke, and the Belgian pianist Francy Boland, whose USP in some respects was having two drummers, Kenny Clarke and Kenny Clare. You couldn't make it up! They perform a rousing version of the Afro-Cuban anthem that Dizzy co-wrote with Chano Pozo and Gil Fuller, 'Manteca'. It features Ronnie Scott on tenor sax and this one I am leaving for my Latin Jazz volume.
So how do you sum up Dizzy Gillespie? With difficulty. You could watch the film, A Night in Havana, which reveals more about the trumpeter's long-lasting love affair with the music of Cuba and shows why he was such an endearing and much-loved character. You could point to his role as a jazz ambassador throughout the world and official recognition in the form of gongs from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, the U.S. President and France's Order of Arts and Letters. You could quote innumerable assessments like (Director of the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University) Dan Morgenstern's that he was 'one of the true giants of 20th Century American music'. Or you could fall back on a comment that a CAPITAL LETTER enthusiast who forgot his apostrophe left on YouTube: 'DIZZY! ONE OF GODS GREATEST CREATIONS EVER'. (The full-stop is mine.)
No comments:
Post a Comment