[Dixielandjazz] Fwd: [C] Walter Payton, longtime New Orleans jazz bassist and educator, dies at 68

Nita Hemeter nhemeter at gmail.com
Sat Oct 30 07:36:59 PDT 2010


Thought everyone might be interested in this.  Nita Hemeter


Walter Payton, longtime New Orleans jazz bassist and educator, dies at 68
by Keith Spera, The Times-Picayune

See photos and video:
http://www.nola.com/music/index.ssf/2010/10/walter_payton_longtime_new_orl.html

Walter Payton Jr., the genial bassist who anchored the Preservation Hall
Jazz Band and shaped generations of public school students, died Thursday at
Kindred Hospital-New Orleans following a lengthy illness. He was 68.

Mr. Payton, the father of Grammy-winning trumpeter Nicholas Payton, was an
exceptionally versatile musician and an exceptionally engaging personality.
A student of music theory and music history, he could easily switch from
electric bass to upright acoustic bass, from rhythm & blues to traditional
jazz to modern jazz. He was also an accomplished classical musician who, for
many years, kept a grand piano in his parlor. His recording credits include
Aaron Neville's "Tell It Like It Is" and Lee Dorsey's "Working in a Coal
Mine."

He grew up on Annunciation Street. As a boy, he played sousaophone and
dismissed his grandmother's suggestion that he take up the string bass.
"Naw, I don't see nothing but old men playing those things," he said,
recalling the scene in a 2008 interview. "I don't want to do that."

But on Easter 1958, he attended a performance at the Municipal Auditorium by
James Moody and Ellis Marsalis' New Orleans Jazz Quintet. "The bass players
in both groups, they were having so much fun," he said. "More fun than
anyone else in the band. There were literally dancing with their basses."

He was sold on the instrument. Decades later, he described its appeal. The
upright bass is "shaped just like a lady," he said, laughing. "The hips, the
waist. And the best thing is, she don't do nothing you don't tell her to.
She don't talk back. If you press her in the right place, she says just what
you want her to say. And no more."

Other than a brief time spent working in the cafeteria of Xavier University,
he made a living in music. After graduating from Xavier with a degree in
music education, he spent the next 25 years teaching in the New Orleans
public school system. During his years at McDonogh 15 elementary in the
French Quarter, he taught music and organized the school band; in the '70s,
he conducted the young band at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.

He influenced many aspiring musicians, including his future boss,
Preservation Hall creative director Ben Jaffe. ?When I was his student ? and
I still consider myself his student ? Walter was a bit scary,? Jaffe once
recalled. ?But he had a lasting impact on me. He instilled in me a respect
for music.?

Throughout his teaching career, Mr. Payton also worked as a professional
musician in a variety of settings. He marched with various brass bands,
including the Eureka, Olympia. Treme and Apollo. He made his debut at
Preservation Hall in 1965 and worked at the old Dew Drop Inn and the
original Blue Room at the Fairmont Hotel.

After retiring from the school system in 1991, he plunged headlong into the
life of a fulltime musician. With his Snap Bean and Gumbo File combos and
with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, he traveled the globe. ?I love being
on the road,? Mr. Payton said in 2008. ?I love it, love it, love it.?

Along the way he performed at Carnegie Hall, accompanied symphony orchestras
and backed Robert Parker, Nancy Wilson, Harry Connick Jr., Clark Terry, Doc
Paulin, the king of Thailand, and many more. He contributed to his son
Nicholas' 2001 Louis Armstrong tribute "Dear Louis."

Mr. Patyon was a robust man who at one point was an avid kick-boxer and
martial arts practitioner. Married four times, he was quick with a sly smile
and an even slyer line.

?He always used to say to girls, ?When did you leave heaven? You?re so
beautiful,?? recalled Michael Paz, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band's road
manager.

Mr. Payton suffered a stroke in January while in Washington D.C. on tour
with Preservation Hall. He eventually returned to New Orleans, but never
recovered sufficiently to return to the road. He had been in and out of
hospitals for several months.

?I saw him a couple days ago, and he spoke to me a little, which he hadn?t
done the last few times I saw him,? Paz said.

Funeral arrangements are pending.


Keith Spera can be reached at kspera at timespicayune.com or 504.826.3470.


_______________________________________________
To subscribe or unsubscribe from this list or manage your list preferences
(digest vs. single message format), please visit http://PatJolly.com.

To send a message to the list, email info at PatJolly.com.
---------------------------
Community mailing list
Community at patjolly.com
http://patjolly.com/mailman/listinfo/community_patjolly.com

All opinions expressed on this mailing list are those of the individual
posting and are not necessarily the views of any organization, unless
explicitly stated.


More information about the Dixielandjazz mailing list