Tuesday 24 September 2024

Fats Navarro born 24 September 1923

Theodore "Fats" Navarro (September 24, 1923 – July 6, 1950) was an American jazz trumpet player and a pioneer of the bebop style of jazz improvisation in the 1940s. Widely acknowledged as one of the greatest trumpeters of all time, he  had a brief life but his influence cannot be overstated. 

Navarro was born in Key West, Florida and was of Cuban, African, and Chinese descent. He was bilingual, speaking Spanish as his second language, and he was a childhood friend of drummer Al Dreares. Navarro's father, a barber by trade, had some musical knowledge and hired a piano teacher to give Navarro private lessons in his early childhood. Hence, the younger Navarro began to play piano at age six, although he did not become serious about music until he began playing trumpet at the age of thirteen. Additionally, he mastered the tenor saxophone and played both trumpet and tenor saxophone professionally during the earliest years of his career. 

By the time Navarro graduated from Frederick Douglass School in 1941, he wanted to be away from Key West and moved north to Orlando to join Sol Allbright's band. As a member, Navarro was able to tour the Midwest, reaching Cincinnati before he left to take lessons. Now living permanently in the Midwest, Navarro joined Snookum Russell's territory band. He gained valuable experience touring in bands, including Russell's band, where he met and influenced a young J.J. Johnson. Navarro also played in the Andy Kirk, Benny Goodman, and Lionel Hampton big bands. 

Vocalist Billy Eckstine invited the young trumpet player to join his band, which included several prominent musicians in the emerging bebop genre. Although Eckstine's group and other big bands yielded few opportunities for Navarro to demonstrate his improvisational skills, he used the opportunity to gain experience. He befriended other trumpet players including Howard McGhee and his third cousin Charlie Shavers. Navarro made his last recordings with Kirk and Eckstine in January and March 1946, respectively. Regarding Navarro's presence in the big bands of the day, Carmen McRae noted in her book that Navarro "was a big, lovable character, playing the most beautiful horn, forever practicing and forever striving. He and I used to discuss the way the cats were using the stuff [narcotics], and he said he’d never do it.” 

                                                                        

Tiring of life on the road, Navarro settled in New York City in 1946, where his career took off. Navarro participated in small group recording sessions with Kenny Clarke, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Coleman Hawkins, Illinois Jacquet, and Howard McGhee. Clarke's 52nd Street Boys, also known as the Be Bop Boys, recorded at the studio in September 1946 and 1947 and included another young bebop trumpet player, Kenny Dorham, and were joined by Sonny Stitt on alto saxophone and Bud Powell on piano. The September sessions, in which Navarro participated, were among his first opportunities to play bebop in a studio session and the group's work later formed part of the album Fats Bud-Klook-Sonny-Kinney. 

Navarro met and played with Charlie Parker. However, he was in a position to demand a high salary and did not join one of Parker's regular groups. He instead joined pianist Tadd Dameron's group based at the Royal Roost jazz club in New York. Dameron went to great lengths to accommodate Navarro's position in the band, but the trumpeter's continued demands for higher pay ultimately led him to form his own group for studio sessions. Navarro preferred the financial security of being a band member over being a bandleader. 

Navarro won the Metronome Jazz Poll in 1948, enabling him to join the Metronome Jazz All-Stars for a studio session. In addition to regular studio recording, in the late 1940s Navarro began to compose, and many of his tunes were dedicated to Dameron's band, in which he continued to play on occasion. By the late forties, many jazz musicians refused to play in bands with Navarro for fear of being overshadowed by the trumpeter. Although Dizzy Gillespie described Navarro's personality as "sweet," at jam sessions he feuded often with Bud Powell and on one occasion attacked the pianist with his trumpet, but missed. 

L-R Charlie Rouse, Ernie Henry, Tadd Dameron
and Fats 
He once again began touring in 1948, this time with Lionel Hampton's band. While on the group's tour bus on route to Chicago, Navarro fell ill and decided to return to New York. His illness proved to be tuberculosis, but he continued to play despite declining health. His continued narcotics use hastened the progression of the disease. Navarro toured with Jazz at the Philharmonic in early 1949. Navarro died of tuberculosis in New York City on July 6, 1950, and was buried in an unmarked grave, number 414, at the Rose Hill Cemetery in Linden, New Jersey. 

In September 2002, friends and family members dedicated a headstone for Fats Navarro's grave. The event of dedication was sponsored by the Jazz Alliance International while the day of it was proclaimed as Fats Navarro Day by the mayor of Linden. (Edited from Wikipedia)

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For “Fats Navarro – The Fats Navarro Collection 1943-50 (2015 Acrobat) (@192)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/jRtQ4

1-1 Avalon
1-2 New Orleans Jump
1-3 Air Mail Special
1-4 Opus X
1-5 Doggin' Man Blues
1-6 Epistrophy
1-7 Ooh Bop Sh'bam
1-8 Boppin In A Riff
1-9 Fat Boy Parts 1&2
1-10 Bean And The Boys
1-11 Spinal
1-12 Big Dog
1-13 Fat Girl
1-14 Goin' To Minton's
1-15 Dameronia
1-16 The Chase
1-17 The Tadd Walk
1-18 Ko-Ko
1-19 Index
1-20 Nostalgia
1-21 Barry's Bop
1-22 Half Step Down, Please
2-1 Good Bait
2-2 Anthropology
2-3 Stealin' Apples
2-4 Lady Bird
2-5 Jahbero
2-6 Boperation
2-7 The Skunk
2-8 Our Delight
2-9 Move
2-10 Overtime
2-11 Victory Ball
2-12 The Things We Did Last Summer
2-13 Bouncing With Bud
2-14 Wail
2-15 Street Beat
2-16 Ornithology
2-17 52nd Street Theme

This 39-track 2-CD collection, which includes some extended live performances towards the end, begins with examples of his early recordings, and includes sessions and performances with a host of luminaries, including Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman Hawkins, Bud Powell, Milt Jackson, Kenny Clarke, Illinois Jacquet, Tadd Dameron, Dexter Gordon, Wardell Gray, Sonny Rollins and Benny Goodman. The final live recordings were made just a week before his death in 1950. It’s a hugely entertaining snapshot of his all-too-brief, but stellar career.