Saturday, 6 April 2024

Bill Hardman born 6 April 1933


Bill Hardman (April 6, 1933 – December 6, 1990) was an American jazz trumpeter and flugelhornist who chiefly played hard bop. He figures by and large among the top ranks of hardbop titans of the time, although he never managed a commercial breakthrough like many of his colleagues such as Donald Byrd, Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan. 

William Franklin Hardman Jr. was born and grew up in Cleveland, Ohio and studied trombone and trumpet as a youth. Armstrong and Roy Eldridge were early influences, and at the age of 16 he heard Charlie Parker and worked with local players including Bobby Few and Bob Cunningham; while in high school he appeared with Tadd Dameron, and after graduation he joined Tiny Bradshaw's band (1953 – 1955). Hardman's first recording was with Jackie McLean in 1955; he later played with Charles Mingus (1956), Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers (1956 – 1958), Horace Silver (1959), and Lou Donaldson, (on and off during 1959-1966) . He re-joined Blakey twice (1966-1969 and in the late ’70s), was with Mingus again during parts of 1969-1972. 

                           Here's "Angel Eyes" from above album

                                   

Hardman also recorded half a dozen albums as a leader. His first album “Saying Something” on the Savoy label received critical acclaim in jazz circles, but was little known to the general public. Hardman's misfortune was not to be with the Messengers at the time of their popular Blue Note recordings. 

A crackling hard bop player with blazing technique, crisp articulations, and a no-frills sound, Hardman later incorporated into his sound the fuller, more extroverted romantic passion of a Clifford Brown - a direction he would take increasingly throughout the late-1960s and 1970s. When put to the test, few could match and none exceed his pyrotechnical or imaginative gifts - Blakey would occasionally feature him playing several extended choruses unaccompanied. 

Bill with Etta Jones

In the New York jazz scene of the 1970s, it was not uncommon to find him at all-star trumpet sessions on which he would go head to head with heralded trumpet stars and emerge the clear and decisive winner.  From 1972, with Bill Lee and Billy Higgins, he led the Brass Company, a large ensemble including four or five trumpets, two flugelhorns, and a rhythm section, which sought to re-create the thick textures characteristic of the sound produced by Miles Davis’s groups  during the period of his collaboration with Gil Evans. 

In 1973 Hardman won the Down Beat Critic’s Poll. He toured the United States and Europe with tenor saxophone star Junior Cook between 1979 and 1981 before settling in France. 

He died December 6, 1990 in Paris, France, of a brain hemorrhage at the age of 57. 

(Edited from Wikipedia, New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, LA Times & BMan’s Blues Report)

Here’s a clip from Omkring Midnat Denmark TV of Billy Cobham, Horace Silver, Bill Hardman, Bennie Maupin and John Williams playing “Nutville” during 1968.  

6 comments:

  1. A big thank you goes to egroj for suggesting today’s birthday trumpeter. I managed to find four albums with Bill Hardman as leader.

    For ”Bill Hardman Quintet - Saying Something (1961 Savoy)” go here;

    https://www.imagenetz.de/ekwLY

    01. Capers (7:10)
    02. Angel Eyes (5:58)
    03. Jo B. (9:50)
    04. Buckeye Blues (10:44)
    05. Assunta (6:10)
    06. It Ain't Happened Yet (5:18)
    07. With Malice Toward None (3:55)

    Bill Hardman - trumpet
    Sonny Red - alto sax
    Ronnie Mathews - piano
    Bob Cunningham - bass (1,6)
    Doug Watkins - bass
    Jimmy Cobb – drums

    Recorded October 18, 1961
    Studio Medallion Studio, Newark, NJ

    For “Bill Hardman - Home (1978 Muse)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/dpjrM

    1.Samba Do Brilho (7:33)
    2.Once I Loved (8:50)
    3.My Pen Is Hot (5:44)
    4.Rancho Cevarro (6:46)
    5.I Remember Love (6:35)

    Recorded January 10, 1978
    Van Gelder Studio,Englewood Cliffs,NJ.

    Bill Hardman - trumpet & flugelhorn
    Junior Cook - tenor saxophone
    Slide Hampton - trombone
    Mickey Tucker - piano
    Yoshio Suzuki - bass
    Victor Jones - drums
    Lawrence Killian - perc.

    For “Bill Hardman – Politely (1982 Muse)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/eLSdj

    1. Love Letters 6:00
    2. Politely 6:14
    3. Lazybird 6:15
    4. Coral Keys 9:47
    5. Smooch 8:20

    Bill Hardman − trumpet
    Junior Cook − tenor saxophone
    Walter Bishop Jr. − piano
    Paul Brown − bass
    Leroy Williams – drums

    Recorded July 7, 1981
    Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ

    For “Bill Hardman Sextet – What's Up (1989 Steeplechase)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/ibT3G

    1. Fuller Up 5:23
    2. I Should Care 9:20
    3. Whisper Not 8:17
    4. Straight Ahead 10:28
    5. P.B. 7:08
    6. Like Someone In Love 8:54
    7. Yo What's Up 7:40
    8. Room's Blues 10:04

    Recorded July 7, 1981.
    Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you especially for the Savoy recordings.

    BTW, that's not Etta James in that photo. It's Etta Jones.

    https://www.gettyimages.dk/detail/news-photo/portrait-of-etta-jones-sankei-hall-tokyo-japan-30-january-news-photo/1438198138

    ReplyDelete
  3. OOps Thanks Earthbound. Always open for corrections. You can't trust any of the photo sources available on the search engines lately. That's where you wonderful blog readers put me on the right path.

    ReplyDelete