Thanks for the post. Although I played bass in high school, Elvin Jones was always a yardstick by which I would (unfairly) measure anyone I played with. My classmates and I would usually talk about two groups: The Quintet (which was Miles, Cannonbal, Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers, Jimmi Cobb), and THE QUARTET: Trane, McCoy, Jimmy, and Elvin. Oh, those extended listening sessions! We would spin A Love Supreme 3 or 4 times in a row, and Elvin, probably more than even Coltrane, was the unique sound that pulls you into that track. I'm going to miss him a lot. Right now KCSM.org is playing a lot of this music.
R.I.P Elvin Jones
Elvin was a true inovator. Here's the NY Times story.
Elvin Jones, Jazz Drummer With Coltrane, Dies at 76
Elvin Jones, whose explosive drumming powered the John Coltrane
Quartet, the most influential and controversial jazz ensemble of the 1960's,
died yesterday in Manhattan. He was 76 and lived in Manhattan and
Nagasaki, Japan.
Mr. Jones's death, which came after several months of failing health,
was announced by John DeChristopher, director of artist relations for
the Avedis Zildjian Company, maker of Mr. Jones's cymbals. Mr. Jones
continued to perform until a few weeks ago, often taking an oxygen tank
onto the bandstand.
Mr. Jones, a fixture of the Coltrane group from late 1960 to early 1966
and for more than three decades the leader of several noteworthy groups
of his own, was the first great post-bebop percussionist. Building on
the innovations of the jazz modernists Kenny Clarke and Max Roach, who
liberated the drum kit from a purely time-keeping function in the
1940's, he paved the way for a later generation of drummers who dispensed
with a steady rhythmic pulse altogether in the interest of greater
improvisational freedom. But he never lost that pulse: the beat was always
palpable when he played, even as he embellished it with layer upon layer
of interlocking polyrhythms.
The critic and historian Leonard Feather explained Mr. Jones's
significance this way: "His main achievement was the creation of what might be
called a circle of sound, a continuum in which no beat of the bar was
necessarily indicated by any specific accent, yet the overall feeling
became a tremendously dynamic and rhythmically important part of the
whole group."
But if the self-taught Mr. Jones had a profound influence on other
drummers, not many of them directly emulated his style, at least in part
because few had the stamina for it. None of the images that the critics
invoked to describe his playing — volcano, thunderstorm,
perpetual-motion machine — quite did justice to the strength of his attack, the
complexity of his ideas or the originality of his approach.
Elvin Ray Jones was born in Pontiac, Mich., on Sept. 9, 1927. The
youngest of 10 children, he was the third Jones brother to become a
professional musician, following Hank, a respected jazz pianist who is still
active, and Thad, a cornetist, composer, arranger and bandleader, who
died in 1986.
He began teaching himself to play drums at 13, but he had lost his
heart to the instrument long before then. "I never wanted to play anything
else since I was 2," he told one interviewer. "I would get these wooden
spoons from my mother and beat on the pots and pans in the kitchen."
After spending three years in the Army he joined his brothers as a
fixture on the busy Detroit jazz scene of the early 1950's. As the house
drummer at a local nightclub, the Bluebird Inn, he worked with local
musicians like Tommy Flanagan and Kenny Burrell as well as visiting jazz
stars like Charlie Parker and Miles Davis.
In 1956 after briefly touring with the bassist Charles Mingus and the
pianist Bud Powell, Mr. Jones moved to New York, where he was soon in
great demand as an accompanist. He occasionally sat in with Miles Davis,
and he later recalled that Coltrane, who was then Davis's saxophonist,
promised to hire Mr. Jones whenever he formed his own group. In the
fall of 1960 Coltrane made good on that promise.
Working with Coltrane, a relentless musical explorer, emboldened Mr.
Jones to expand the expressive range of his instrument. "My experience
with Coltrane," he told the writer James Isaacs in 1973, "was that John
was a catalyst in my finding the way that drums could be played most
musically." He in turn influenced Coltrane, Mr. Jones's ferocious rhythms
goading Coltrane to ecstatic heights in performance and on recordings like "A Love Supreme" and "Ascension."
Coltrane's quartet helped redefine the concept of the jazz combo. Mr.
Jones and the other members of the rhythm section, the pianist McCoy
Tyner and the bassist Jimmy Garrison, did not accompany Coltrane so much
as engage him in an open-ended four-way conversation. Audiences found
the group's intensity galvanizing, and many critics shared their enthusiasm.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/19/obituaries/19JONE.html?ex=1085630400&en=2b057c5a1ad4fee5&ei=5006&partner=ALTAVISTA1
Elvin Jones, Jazz Drummer With Coltrane, Dies at 76
Elvin Jones, whose explosive drumming powered the John Coltrane
Quartet, the most influential and controversial jazz ensemble of the 1960's,
died yesterday in Manhattan. He was 76 and lived in Manhattan and
Nagasaki, Japan.
Mr. Jones's death, which came after several months of failing health,
was announced by John DeChristopher, director of artist relations for
the Avedis Zildjian Company, maker of Mr. Jones's cymbals. Mr. Jones
continued to perform until a few weeks ago, often taking an oxygen tank
onto the bandstand.
Mr. Jones, a fixture of the Coltrane group from late 1960 to early 1966
and for more than three decades the leader of several noteworthy groups
of his own, was the first great post-bebop percussionist. Building on
the innovations of the jazz modernists Kenny Clarke and Max Roach, who
liberated the drum kit from a purely time-keeping function in the
1940's, he paved the way for a later generation of drummers who dispensed
with a steady rhythmic pulse altogether in the interest of greater
improvisational freedom. But he never lost that pulse: the beat was always
palpable when he played, even as he embellished it with layer upon layer
of interlocking polyrhythms.
The critic and historian Leonard Feather explained Mr. Jones's
significance this way: "His main achievement was the creation of what might be
called a circle of sound, a continuum in which no beat of the bar was
necessarily indicated by any specific accent, yet the overall feeling
became a tremendously dynamic and rhythmically important part of the
whole group."
But if the self-taught Mr. Jones had a profound influence on other
drummers, not many of them directly emulated his style, at least in part
because few had the stamina for it. None of the images that the critics
invoked to describe his playing — volcano, thunderstorm,
perpetual-motion machine — quite did justice to the strength of his attack, the
complexity of his ideas or the originality of his approach.
Elvin Ray Jones was born in Pontiac, Mich., on Sept. 9, 1927. The
youngest of 10 children, he was the third Jones brother to become a
professional musician, following Hank, a respected jazz pianist who is still
active, and Thad, a cornetist, composer, arranger and bandleader, who
died in 1986.
He began teaching himself to play drums at 13, but he had lost his
heart to the instrument long before then. "I never wanted to play anything
else since I was 2," he told one interviewer. "I would get these wooden
spoons from my mother and beat on the pots and pans in the kitchen."
After spending three years in the Army he joined his brothers as a
fixture on the busy Detroit jazz scene of the early 1950's. As the house
drummer at a local nightclub, the Bluebird Inn, he worked with local
musicians like Tommy Flanagan and Kenny Burrell as well as visiting jazz
stars like Charlie Parker and Miles Davis.
In 1956 after briefly touring with the bassist Charles Mingus and the
pianist Bud Powell, Mr. Jones moved to New York, where he was soon in
great demand as an accompanist. He occasionally sat in with Miles Davis,
and he later recalled that Coltrane, who was then Davis's saxophonist,
promised to hire Mr. Jones whenever he formed his own group. In the
fall of 1960 Coltrane made good on that promise.
Working with Coltrane, a relentless musical explorer, emboldened Mr.
Jones to expand the expressive range of his instrument. "My experience
with Coltrane," he told the writer James Isaacs in 1973, "was that John
was a catalyst in my finding the way that drums could be played most
musically." He in turn influenced Coltrane, Mr. Jones's ferocious rhythms
goading Coltrane to ecstatic heights in performance and on recordings like "A Love Supreme" and "Ascension."
Coltrane's quartet helped redefine the concept of the jazz combo. Mr.
Jones and the other members of the rhythm section, the pianist McCoy
Tyner and the bassist Jimmy Garrison, did not accompany Coltrane so much
as engage him in an open-ended four-way conversation. Audiences found
the group's intensity galvanizing, and many critics shared their enthusiasm.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/19/obituaries/19JONE.html?ex=1085630400&en=2b057c5a1ad4fee5&ei=5006&partner=ALTAVISTA1
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- 7 posts total
- 7 posts total