[Dixielandjazz] Bob Brookmeyer obituary
Stan Brager
sbrager at verizon.net
Fri Jan 13 08:14:38 PST 2012
Thanks, as always, for a fascinating obituary. However, I thought that the
first Gerry Mulligan Quartet was with Chet Baker, Carson Smith and Chico
Hamilton and began in 1952. Brookmeyer came later.
Stan
Stan Brager
From: owner-duke-lym at concordia.ca [mailto:owner-duke-lym at concordia.ca] On
Behalf Of Steve Voce
Sent: Friday, January 13, 2012 1:15 AM
To: JazzWestCoast at yahoogroups.com; duke-lym list;
Dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com
Subject: Bob Brookmeyer obituary
This appears in today's The Independent.
Steve Voce
It's hard to think of anyone who gave more to jazz than the valve
trombonist Bob Brookmeyer.
He was the finest player of his instrument, and was regarded as one of the
most
imaginative of trombonists. A brilliant writer and orchestrator, he ran the
venerated Gerry Mulligan Concert Jazz Band to such an extent that it was
really
his band rather than Mulligan's.
He was one of the most potent teachers in jazz and, particularly in his last
20 years, one of its most
creative writers. He knew his own worth, but he was unassuming and frank in
the
conversations that I had with him: "We took Benzedrine to get excited when
we went to work and play. We took alcohol to be sociable," he told me.
Brookmeyer was born in Kansas City, the home of the Count Basie school of
swing, and his father
gave him a clarinet when he was eight. "It became a trombone at 13. But it
led to an infatuation with blank music paper. So, at 14, I became a
professional arranger/copyist, writing for local dance bands."
In 1941 he heard the Count Basie band "with Lester Young, Jo Jones and all
the greats"
at a local theatre. "Many years later I played in a small group at New
York Town Hall with Basie and John Coltrane. I have had some drugs, good
sex,
read good books, seen some great plays, but nothing in my life has prepared
me
for such a visceral complete thrill as playing with Basie engendered. You
cannot imagine in your wildest dreams what it felt like with Basie in a
small
band - the energy peak of all time."
When he was 15 Brookmeyer heard Stravinsky and Debussy for thefirst time and
decided that
composing was the thing to do. He studied at Kansas City Conservatory for
three
yearsand on graduation moved to Chicago to play jazz.
"After a short stint in the army (a six-month mistake on both our parts), I
joined Tex Beneke
as a pianist. Eventually I stopped in New York to become a house musician at
the Stuyvesant Casino. I became a full-time valve trombonist in 1952 when I
joined Claude Thornhill's band."
Leaving Thornhill after a few months, he spent six unhappy weeks in the
Woody Herman band,
leaving to join Stan Getz in early 1953. The Getz Quintet was one of the
classic groups of the period, and its records are reissued to this day. In
January 1954, Brookmeyer and a rhythm section he chose for Mulligan formed
the
Gerry Mulligan Quartet. They toured for six months, winding up at a jazz
festival in Paris. During the stay in Paris Brookmeyer met and played with
Thelonious Monk.
"Monk and I played for kicks in a Paris club. After a couple of nights they
were
advertising it - whilst charging us$8 for a packet of cigarettes. Very good!
Typical French. So Monk and I wentto parties instead and played
theretogether.
We remained friends everafterwards."
Brookmeyer left the Mulligan group and settled in Los Angeles, but toured
Britain with a reformed
Gerry Mulligan Quartet in 1957. Then in 1958, he became part of clarinettist
Jimmy Giuffre's trio with guitarist Jim Hall. After a rewarding year with
them,
Brookmeyer made the great mistake of leaving to become a studio musician in
New
York. He loathed the work.
One night in March 1959 when they were drunk, he and Bill Evans sat down at
a piano and played
duets together. The results were so impressive that a few days later a
studio
was hired and they made an album of remarkable piano duets called The Ivory
Hunters.
"In January 1960 Gerry dropped by one day and the Concert Jazz Band was
born," he
said. "It was a dream come true for me: to have a band that I could
influence, write for and be proud of. We lasted until December 1964, closing
the original Birdland in style - Scotch, cocaine and Santa Claus!"
Clark Terry was in the Mulligan Concert Band and he and Brookmeyer started a
hard-swinging quintet
to play regularly at the Half Note in New York. The quintet lasted until
1968.
"Duke Ellington had hired me to play with his band in 1962. We were friends
and it
had been assumed for some years that I would join him but I was
unfortunately
getting a very difficult divorce, so couldn't go." Late in 1965,
Brookmeyer became a founding member of the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis band; some
of
his finest arrangements were written for them.
In September 1968, Brookmeyer moved to Los Angeles to became a movie and TV
studio player,
"with a little jazz on the side. I'd pretty much given up on life and
stopped writing, getting ready for the downhill ride into total alcoholism.
That lasted until 1976, when I got sober."
He returned to Getz to tour Europe for three months in 1978 and in 1979
played with Jim Hall as a
duo for a year. The partnership with Hall was one of his finest and it was
revived frequently until the last years of his life.
>From 1981, Brookmeyer wrote for and directed the Mel Lewis Orchestra and
commuted to
Europe. Beginning in 1981, he worked with orchestras in Cologne and
Copenhagen,
forming his 18-piece New Arts Orchestra in Cologne.
He and his fourth wife Jan settled in New Hampshire in 1994 when he took
charge of the Jazz
Composition Department at the New England Conservatory in Boston. He
returned
frequently to Europe to work and, in 1995 toured Britain with the
saxophonist
Tony Coe.
In September this year his last album, Standards, was released. It was true
to the high musical
standards he had maintained throughout his life.
Steve Voce
Robert Edward Brookmeyer, musician: born Kansas City 19 December 1929; four
times married;
died Grantham, New Hampshire 15 December 2011.
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