Friday 16 April 2021

Herbie Mann born 16 April 1930


Herbert Jay Solomon (April 16, 1930 – July 1, 2003), known professionally by his stage name Herbie Mann, was an American jazz flautist and important early practitioner of world music. Early in his career, he also played tenor saxophone and clarinet (including bass clarinet), but Mann was among the first jazz musicians to specialize on the flute. 

Herbie Mann was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Jewish parents who were of Russian and Romanian descent. Both of his parents were dancers and singers, as well as dance instructors later in life. Mann's childhood passion for rhythm found noisy expression on sundry household utensils. This interest would later resurface in his explorations of African and Latin music but, when Mann was nine, his mother redirected his nascent talent by taking him to a Benny Goodman concert near their home.. That experience turned Mann on to playing the clarinet though by the age of 14, when he began his first professional engagements, he had switched to tenor saxophone. 

A four-year stint with the US Army in Trieste, Italy, saw him honing his musical skills with the 98th Army Band. When he left the military, he struggled to find his own voice and felt thwarted by a surfeit of similar-sounding competitors. Prompted by an offer of session work as a flautist with a then unknown Carmen McRae, he took up the flute, eventually becoming the first jazz musician to establish his career performing almost exclusively on this perennially unfashionable instrument. 

His first album, Herbie Mann Plays (1954), was conventional bebop, but he soon developed a tougher sound which would suit his growing interest in other areas such as Afro-Cuban music. By 1957, he had his first hit with "The Evolution of Mann". Two years later he formed the ground-breaking Afro-Jazz Sextet, which toured 15 African countries in 1960 on a quest for connections with the roots of the music they were exploring. Soon after, Mann initiated an enduring on-off love affair with Brazil and its music. He first toured there in 1961 and became enchanted by the bossa nova movement, later describing this period as the seminal musical experience of his life. 

                              

The following year yielded the best-selling album Herbie Mann at the Village Gate and his biggest hit, "Comin' Home Baby". Still hooked on bossa, he returned to Brazil, recording with the likes of Antonio Carlos Jobim, Sergio Mendes and Baden Powell. By the mid 60’s  the bossa craze had subsided in the face of world domination by the Beatles. Mann then turned his attention to Middle Eastern music, and the end of that decade found him toying with rock and even R&B flavours. 

His 1969 album Memphis Underground captures him at the peak of his popularity and is considered a landmark in soul-jazz fusion. It featured such talents as Roy Ayers, Larry Coryell, Sonny Sharrock and the Weather Report bassist Miroslav Vitous and set the tone for his 1970s experiments in rock and funk with his band the Family of Mann. 

Mann's penchant for rock first surfaced on the controversial album Push Push (1971), which included a guest appearance by the Southern rock luminary Duane Allman. In 1974, he called on the services of Stéphane Grappelli and Mick Taylor to play on London Underground, a covers album of songs by the likes of Eric Clapton, Traffic and the Rolling Stones. Mann's mid- and late-Seventies albums showcased subsequent forays into disco and reggae, only reaffirming the populist nature of his work, which often reflected contemporary musical fashions. He recorded three disco albums which brought him the Top Ten hit "High Jack", but further alienated what was left of his jazz following. 

When he turned his back on flirtations with pop and returned to his passion for Brazilian music, his popularity waned, thus bringing to an end in 1979 his 20-year relationship with Atlantic Records. Though he continued to record, Mann spent much of the next decade in obscurity, only rallying with the formation of his group Jasil Brazz, with whom he made a comeback of sorts with the 1990 album Caminho de Casa. 

In 1989, Mann had relocated from his native New York to Pecos, near Santa Fe, and he would spend the autumn of his life in New Mexico.In 1992 he formed his own label Kokopelli Music as an outlet for himself and other disenfranchised jazz artists. In a significant return to form during 1995, Mann recorded the entirely jazz-based Peace Pieces in tribute to the music of Bill Evans, and celebrated his 65th birthday in grand style with a residency at the infamous Blue Note club in New York. 

Mann was diagnosed with inoperable prostate cancer in 1997 and began the long battle that would eventually claim his life. He nevertheless continued writing music for his new group, Sona Terra, which finally reflected his Jewish roots and featured his younger son Geoff on drums. Possessed of a legendary energy, he concluded his working days with them. In a career spanning half a century he had recorded over 100 albums as leader. 

(Edited mainly from a Jon Lusk article @The Independent)

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Herbie Mann: Four Classic Albums (Herbie Mann With The Wessel Ilcken Trio /
Sultry Serenade / Yardbird Suite / Mann In The Morning) (Avid 2012)” go here:

https://krakenfiles.com/view/eaeda4d9bb/file.html

CD1
1-12: ‘Herbie Mann With The Wessel Ilcken Trio’ (1958)
1. Lady Bach
2. Little Girl
3. Imagination
4. Love Is Here To Stay
5. The Lady Is A Tramp
6. Dear Old Stockholm
7. Falling In Love With Love
8. Summertime
9. Blues For Leila
10. Lover Come Back To Me
11. Try A Little Tenderness
12. Afro Blues
13-20: ‘Sultry Serenade’ (1958)
13. Let Me Tell You
14. When The Sun Comes Out
15. Professor
16. Lazy Bones
17. Sultry Serenade
18. Little Man You’ve Had A Busy Day
19. One Morning In May
20. Swing ‘Till The Girls Come Home

CD2
1-6: ‘Yardbird Suite’ (1957)
1. Yardbird Suite
2. Here’s That Mann
3. One For Tubby
4. Squire’s Parlor
5. Who Knew?
6. Opicana
7-16: ‘Mann In The Morning (1958)
7. Cherry Point
8. Hurry Burry
9. Serenada
10. Adam’s Theme
11. Early Morning Blues
12. Nature Boy
13. Ow!
14. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
15. I Can’t Believe That You’re In Love With Me
16. Song For Ruth

AVID Jazz here presents four classic Herbie Mann on a finely re-mastered and low priced double CD. The first album was hard to find and previously unavailable in the UK on CD and was one of Herbie's very early recordings made during a trip to Holland and featuring local musicians. The album finds Herbie joined by the late Wessel Ilcken on drums and two brothers Pim and Roud Jacobs on piano and bass respectively. Herbie himself switches between flute, tenor sax and clarinet.. On the second album “Sultry Serenade' the focus is not just the playing but also the arranging skills of Herbie Mann. As the original liner notes point out 'one of the notable features is the overall unity and internal musical consistency and purpose'. Here this is achieved with some fine musicians, Urbie Green on trombone, Jack Nimitz on baritone sax, Oscar Pettiford on bass, Joe Puma on guitar and Charlie Smith on drums.

On. 'Yardbird Suite' Herbie is joined by Phil Woods on alto sax, Eddie Costa on vibes, Joe Puma on guitar, Wendell Marshall on bass and Bobby Donaldson on drums for an essentially driving, rhythmically dynamic and ultimately very fine jazz album! 'Mann in the Morning' is the second hard to find and previously unavailable in the UK on CD and finds Herbie this time in Sweden where he restricts himself to just the flute and tenor sax duties playing alongside three basic groups of musicians. Recorded in 1957 this fine album is testament to the improvements in his playing that Herbie had made both on flute and sax! (Avid notes)

This week’s artist was suggested by egrog @ Egroj’s World

egroj.jazz said...

Great post Bob, and cool photos.
Regards!

Beemer said...

Thanks for these treats. I was turned on to the delights of Herbie Mann with his Memphis Underground LP -I now have on vinyl, CD and MP3, and frequently listen to. Having been delving into his catalogue I find his music inspiring.
Thanks very much for your informative work: I've learned to appreciate so much varied music through this site.