Yusef Abdul Lateef (October 9, 1920 – December 23, 2013) was an American jazz multi-instrumentalist, composer, and prominent figure among the Ahmadiyya Community in the United States.
A man of many talents and a born scholar, Yusef Lateef was born William Emanuel Huddleston in Chattanooga, Tennessee. His mother played the piano in church and he remembered his father as having “a beautiful singing voice”. In 1925 his family moved to Detroit, Michigan, where his father changed the family's name to Evans. Lateef grew up amid the sounds of the burgeoning swing era and made up his mind to be a musician at the age of 12. He finally acquired a saxophone, with his father’s help, at 18.
In his twenties, Lateef played with several well-known bands of the period, including those of Lucky Millinder, Roy Eldridge, Hot Lips Page and Ernie Fields. In 1949 he was touring in California with Dizzy Gillespie’s orchestra when he received news that his wife was ill. Hurrying home to Detroit, he was forced to take a job in the Chrysler factory, there being no regular musical work available. This experience affected him deeply. In a search for spiritual development, he had recently embraced Islam, which stresses the obligation to care for one’s family. The life of a jobbing musician would not provide this. The answer, he concluded, lay in getting himself an education.
He enrolled at Wayne State University to study composition and flute. At the same time his professional fortunes improved, and he was soon leading his own quintet in clubs around the Detroit area. He made his recording debut as a leader in 1956, for the Savoy label. The flute was not widely used in jazz at the time and, together with the growing Eastern influences in Lateef’s music, its novelty proved popular with record buyers. That album, Jazz for the Thinker, did so well that 1957 saw the release of seven Yusef Lateef albums (four on Savoy, one each on Verve, Prestige and New Jazz).
In 1960 Lateef moved to New York, where he worked briefly with Charles Mingus’s band, as well as leading quartets and quintets of his own. He was now playing along with the tenor saxophone and flute, the oboe, bassoon and a range of Eastern wind instruments, including the shanai, the arghul and the algaita, plus a collection of Chinese wooden flutes, bells and gongs. A single from his 1961 album Eastern Sounds, a version of the “Love Theme” from the film Spartacus, reached the top of the jazz charts.
He continued to work occasionally under the leadership of other musicians, notably the saxophonist Cannonball Adderley. He can be seen and heard playing with Adderley’s sextet in a recording from the television show Jazz Scene USA (1962). Lateef resumed his studies at the Manhattan School of Music, gaining his performer’s degree on flute in 1969 and a Master’s degree in Music Education in 1970. He then began teaching at the School, running classes in improvisation, which he called “autophysiopsychic music”.
In 1975 Lateef was awarded a Doctorate in Education by the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, for a dissertation on Western and Islamic education. Between 1981 and 1985 he was a senior research fellow at the University of Ahmadubelo, Nigeria. On his return he took up a teaching post at The University of Massachusetts, to which he remained attached for the rest of his life. Although he continued to perform professionally almost until the end (his last tour was in the summer this year), Lateef gave up playing in nightclubs in 1981, because their atmosphere had become obnoxious to him. In later years his gradual move from hearty blues-flavoured playing to a more meditative, introspective style was not always well received by audiences and critics.
In addition to his musical and academic activities, Lateef published several books of short stories and novellas; towards the end of his life he was a keen painter, specialising in studies of trees. He twice made the Hajj to Mecca. During his career he recorded more than 100 albums. From 1992 these were made for his own label, YAL Records. He received a Grammy Award in 1987, for the album Yusef Lateef’s Little Symphony. His last albums were recorded for Adam Rudolph's Meta Records. To the end of his life, Lateef continued to teach at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Smith College, and Hampshire College in western Massachusetts.
Lateef died of prostate cancer on the morning of December 23, 2013, at the age of 93.
(Edited from The Telegraph & Wikipedia)
For “Yusef Lateef – Four Classic Albums (2014 Avid Jazz) (@192)” go here:
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CD1
Jazz For The Thinker (1957)
1 Happyology 11:09
2 O' Blues 9:03
3 Midday 7:47
4 Polarity 6:59
5 Space 5:48
Eastern Sounds (1962)
6 The Plum Blossom 4:54
7 Blues For The Orient 5:35
8 Ching Miau 3:15
9 Don't Blame Me 4:54
10 Love Theme From Spartacus 4:12
11 Snafu 5:37
12 Purple Flower 4:27
13 Love Theme From The Robe 3:59
CD2
Eastern Sounds (continued from CD 1)
1 The Three Faces Of Balal 2:17
Other Sounds (1959)
2 All Alone 5:03
3 Anastasia 4:13
4 Minor Mood 9:32
5 Taboo 9:11
6 Lambert's Point 4:41
7 Mahaba 3:44
Into Something (1961)
8 Rasheed 5:20
9 When You're Smiling 4:41
10 Water Pistol 5:37
11 You've Changed 4:51
12 I'll Remember April 6:49
13 Koko's Tune 6:27
14 P.Bouk
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