Eric Dolphy (June 20, 1928 – June 29, 1964) was an American jazz multi-instrumentalist, composer, and bandleader. Primarily an alto saxophonist, bass clarinetist, and flautist, Dolphy was one of several multi-instrumentalists to gain prominence during the same era. His use of the bass clarinet helped to establish the unconventional instrument within jazz. Dolphy extended the vocabulary and boundaries of the alto saxophone, and was among the earliest significant jazz flute soloists.
Eric Allan Dolphy Jr. was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. His parents were Sadie and Eric Dolphy, Sr., who immigrated to the United States from Panama. He began music lessons at the age of six, studying clarinet and saxophone privately. While still in junior high, he began to study the oboe, aspiring to a professional symphonic career, and received a two-year scholarship to study at the music school of the University of Southern California while he was just barely into his teens. At this point he had taken up the saxophone as well, and his love of classical music had him working toward a future as a symphonic musician.
His earliest recordings were made in 1949 when he played flute, clarinet, and alto and baritone sax on various sessions with drummer Roy Porter. Dolphy entered the U.S. Army in 1950 and was stationed at Fort Lewis, Washington. Beginning in 1952, he attended the Navy School of Music. After his discharge he returned to Los Angeles in 1953, where he played music in various incarnations throughout the rest of the '50s. His first big break came in 1958 when he joined Chico Hamilton's band. After a year of heavy touring, Dolphy left California for New York City, where he joined Charles Mingus' band and began accelerating the development of his distinctively curious and multifaceted instrumental voice.
Dolphy quickly integrated into the New York scene, playing on multiple important records and live dates with Mingus, but also contributing to landmark albums from Oliver Nelson, Ron Carter, Gunther Schuller, Booker Little, and many more, all between 1960 and 1961. Dolphy played bass clarinet on the collective improvisation that became Ornette Coleman's 1961 album Free Jazz, giving a title to the burgeoning movement. In 1961 he officially joined John Coltrane's band after sitting in on many occasions, contributing to albums like Africa/Brass and Live! At the Village Vanguard, and playing a major influential role in Coltrane's shift from hard bop to more unrestricted sounds.
Dolphy also came into his own as a leader during this time, recording a series of albums for the Prestige label beginning with formative sets such as 1960's Outward Bound and 1961's Out There. On these albums and others where he acted as a leader, Dolphy's innovations were at the fore. In addition to an uncommon fluidity between his various instruments and a playing style that was at times jarringly un-musical for its time, Dolphy was also one of the first to record unaccompanied horn solos on record, pre-dating other notable examples of this by several years. The love of classical music that had inspired him early on showed up as an influence on his compositions as well, setting him even further apart from his more traditionalist contemporaries. After playing with Coltrane for several years, Dolphy returned to working with Mingus, playing on 1963's Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus and joining the band on tour in 1964. The same year, he signed on with Blue Note and recorded his masterwork Out to Lunch! After the completion of a European tour with Mingus in early 1964, Dolphy opted not to return to the United States, hoping to find a better reception for his music, which was often rejected or misunderstood by American audiences. While getting his bearings in Europe, he recorded, wrote, and also performed occasional gigs with friends from the states who were passing through like Donald Byrd. He made plans to join Albert Ayler's band, and to start work with Cecil Taylor and others. In June of 1964, however, Dolphy became severely ill while performing in Berlin. He was hospitalized after collapsing on-stage. Reports vary, but one account posits that when he was admitted to the hospital, doctors assumed Dolphy was suffering a drug overdose, going on the stereotype of the time that jazz musicians were largely addicts. Because of this, he was treated for an overdose and left to ride the experience out. Not only was Dolphy not a drinker, smoker, or drug user of any kind, but he was also diabetic, and he died in the hospital on June 29, 1964, after slipping into a diabetic coma, a potentially avoidable fate brought on by neglect and prejudice.It's impossible to know what Dolphy would have accomplished had he lived into his forties, but what he did leave behind, in just a sort time, comprises multiple lifetimes' worth of monumental creation.
(Edited from AllMusic & Wikipedia)
3 comments:
For “Eric Dolphy – Musical Prophet (The Expanded 1963 New York Studio Sessions) (2018 Resonance)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/oN7kdoQp
1. Jitterbug Waltz 07:16
2. Music Matador 09:38
3. Love Me 03:19
4. Alone Together 13:36
5. Muses for Richard Davis (Previously Unissued 1) 07:34
6. Muses for Richard Davis (Previously Unissued 2) 08:20
7. Iron Man 09:10
8. Mandrake 04:46
9. Come Sunday 06:28
10. Burning Spear 11:59
11. Ode to Charlie Parker 08:04
12. A Personal Statement (Bonus Track) 15:03
13. Music Matador (Alternate Take) 07:56
14. Love Me (Alternate Take 1) 02:21
15. Love Me (Alternate Take 2) 03:39
16. Alone Together (Alternate Take) 12:15
17. Jitterbug Waltz (Alternate Take) 09:22
18. Mandrake (Alternate Take) 06:40
19. Burning Spear (Alternate Take) 10:32
Musical Prophet: The Expanded 1963 New York Studio Sessions is a compilation of both Eric Dolphy LPs recorded for Douglas along with the best alternate takes, all recorded in mono, adding 85 minutes of previously unissued music. The original LPs Conversations and Iron Man were issued in stereo, but those master tapes have been lost. These tapes were left by Eric Dolphy with composer Hale Smith and his wife Juanita prior to his ill-fated tour of Europe in 1964. They were in the possession of flautist James Newton when they were discovered. This set features jazz greats such as saxophonist Sonny Simmons, trumpeter Woody Shaw, bassist Richard Davis and NEA Jazz Master vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson. All tracks recorded July 1 & 3, 1963 in New York City, except 12, which was recorded in Ann Arbor, MIchigan on March 2, 1964.
A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday jazz musician and for the loan of above album.
Here’s my 3 contributions…..
https://pixeldrain.com/u/1KFdKKUX
Eric Dolphy – Out There (1961)
01. Out There (Eric Dolphy)
02. Serene (Eric Dolphy)
03. The Baron (Eric Dolphy)
04. Eclipse (Charles Mingus)
05. 17 West (Dolphy)
06. Sketch Of Melba (Randy Weston)
07. Feathers (Hale Smith)
Eric Dolphy - alto saxophone, bass clarinet, flute
Ron Carter - cello
George Duvivier - bass
Roy Haynes - drums
Recorded August 16, 1960 at New Jersey
Eric Dolphy Quartet - Live In Germany (1961)
1. On Green Dolphin Street
2. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
3. The Way You Look Tonight
4. Oleo
Bass Clarinet – Eric Dolphy
Piano – McCoy Tyner
Bass – Reggie Workman
Drums – Mel Lewis
München, West Germany, December 2, 1961.
Eric Dolphy – Out To Lunch! (1964)
1 Hat And Beard 8:24
2 Something Sweet, Something Tender 6:02
3 Gazzelloni 7:22
4 Out To Lunch 12:06
5 Straight Up And Down 8:19
Alto Saxophone, Flute, Bass Clarinet, Composed By – Eric Dolphy
Bass – Richard Davis
Drums – Tony Williams
Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard
Vibraphone / Vibes – Bobby Hutcherson
Recorded on February 25, 1964
Eric Allan Dolphy Jr. (June 20, 1928 – June 29, 1964)
Wow, acoupla big birthdays in a row! Then again, EVERY birthday is big, isn’t it? That ’63 date is a favorite. Here’s another with a European band:
Eric Dolphy - Last Date*
https://www.mediafire.com/file/4pkvjeup24o8die/rcDlphy-LstDt.zip/file
All compositions by Eric Dolphy except where noted.
Side 1
Epistrophy (Monk) – 11:15
South Street Exit – 7:10
The Madrig Speaks, the Panther Walks – 4:50 (also known as "Mandrake")
Side 2
Hypochristmutreefuzz (Mengelberg) – 5:25
You Don’t Know What Love Is (Raye/De Paul) – 11:20
Miss Ann – 5:25
Eric Dolphy – bass clarinet (on Epistroph and Hypochristmutreefuzz), flute (on South Street Exit and You don't know what Love is, alto saxophone (on The Madrig Speaks, the Panther Walks and Miss Ann)
Misha Mengelberg – piano
Jacques Schols – double bass
Han Bennink – drums
Recorded June 2, 1964, Hilversum, Holland.
* Actually there are some recordings from later in June.
Post a Comment