Wednesday, 16 April 2025

Boyce Brown born 16 April 1910

Boyce Brown (April 16, 1910 – January 30, 1959) was an American jazz dixieland alto saxophonist born in Chicago, Illinois. He was an eccentric, who preferred to play freewheeling Chicago jazz, an erratic individual with some outlandish opinions and, ultimately, one of the very few monks who doubled (at least briefly) as a jazz musician! 

If ever a soul seemed lost in the raucous, raunchy, rigorous life of jazzmen, it was the gentle, contemplative, ascetic Boyce Brown, whose quiet, unobtrusive nature was made the more so by impaired vision, an odd appearance, and herky-jerky body movements caused by physical deformities.  Yes, for 20 years or more, he was listed among the top alto saxophonists in jazz. 

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Brown nearly died at birth; the midwife saved him by reshaping his unformed skull.  His parents encouraged him to take up the saxophone in hopes that it would strengthen his weak chest. Later, Boyce lived with his mother, wrote poetry and listened to Debussy and Delius.  He became a professional musician when he was 17, playing with drummer Don Carter's band in Chicago. Brown picked up experience working with Benny Meroff, Wingy Manone (1933), Paul Mares (1934-1935), and Johnny's Original Playboys.

His best known recordings are with Paul Mares and his Friars Society Orchestra and a 1939 session with Jimmy McPartland & his Jazz Band.  In both sessions Brown demonstrates a driving, harmonically advanced style. When he played, he had a habit of stretching his neck out like a bird, causing him to be rejected at an audition for the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra.Brown also led his own bands and recorded with Wild Bill Davison onsome obscure titles in 1940. Boyce also worked in the “ideal” band co-led by cornetist Pete Daily and pianist-composer Frank Melrose.  A good deal of their privately recorded music has been released on the Delmark CD Bluesiana.

                                   

Boyce loved marijuana and what it could do, but it didn’t contribute to his death.  He didn’t die of tuberculosis or freeze on a Harlem doorstep, but prejudice and sorrow seem to have shortened his life.  He is certainly underrated and not well-known or well-remembered. He named his alto saxophone Agnes, and thought deeply about her personality and moods; if a recording disappointed him, he blamed himself for not being in harmony with his instrument.  All of this might seem freakish on first perusal, but other musicians like Ben Webster, hardly an introvert, called his saxophone Betsy or Ol’ Betsy. 

Agnes

In 1945, the jazz scholar, collector, recordist John Steiner held a series of concerts at the Uptown Playhouse Theater in Chicago.  His Jimmy Noone Memorial Concert featured Darnell Howard, Boyce Brown, Baby Dodds and many more.  On another occasion, Steiner sponsored a “jamboree” resulting in forty-five minutes of recordings. But in April 1946, a fire destroyed the Playhouse, and Steiner lost most of his unissued sides by Jack Gardner, Boyce and many others. Brown was based in Chicago throughout his playing career, mostly leading his own bands throughout the '40s and early '50s. 

In the fall of 1953 he adopted the name "Brother Matthew" and entered a monastery of the Roman Catholic Servite Order, taking his vows in February 1956. His only date as a leader was cut in Apr. 1956 with Eddie Condon's band and, although he looks a bit strange in his somber outfit while holding a sax (one can only imagine what Wild Bill Davison thought!), Boyce Brown was in brilliant form for what would be his last recording. 

After the session, Boyce went back into the monastery to devote himself to things of the spirit; pictures show him playing music with the other monks and making sandwiches in the kitchen.  He remained there until his death three years later.  Jim Denham believes that the Servites wouldn’t give Boyce final confirmation as a priest and he died of a heart attack on January 30, 1959, shortly after that bitter disappointment in the monastery outside Granville, Wisconsin. Boyce Brown deserves more than partial oblivion. 

(Edited from Jazz Lives, Wikipedia & AllMusic)

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “The Boyce Brown Collection” Containing all three albums below go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/hnZYNGvE

Brother Matthew - With Eddie Condon's Jazz Band (1956 ABC Paramount)

1. Linger Awhile
2. Someday, Sweetheart
3. My Blue Heaven
4. Out Of Nowhere
5. Sweet Georgia Brown
6. Blues For Boyce
7. The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise
8. I Wish That I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate
9. I Never Knew

Alto Saxophone – Brother Matthew
Baritone Saxophone, Clarinet – Ernie Caceres
Bass – Bob Casey
Clarinet – Pee Wee Russell
Conductor – Eddie Condon
Cornet – "Wild Bill" Davison
Drums – George Wettling
Guitar – Paul Smith
Piano – Gene Schroeder
Trombone – Cutty Cutshall

A big thank you goes to egroj for suggesting today’s birthday saxophonist and for the loan of above album.
Here’s my contribution below.

Boyce Brown - Jazz Me Blues 1935 – 1940 In Groups (2025 FromTheVaults)

Paul Mares & His Fiars Society Orchestra (Jan 26,1935)
1) Nagasaki
2) Reincarnation
3) Maple Leaf Rag
4) Land of Dream
Charles LaVerve & His Chicagoans (April5, 1935)
5) I’d Rather Be With You
6) Smiles
7) All Too Well
8) Boogaboo Blues
Jimmy McPartland & His Jazz Band (Oct 11, 1939)
9) Jazz Me Blues
10) China Boy
11) The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise
12) Sugar
Wild Bill Davidson’s Band (Feb 12, 1940)
13 ) On A Blues Kick & I Surrender Dear

All titles in above compilation have been taken from various sources @192 so quality will vary.

Kansas City Frank Melrose – Bluesiana (2006 Delmark)

1 How Come You Do Me Like You Do 3:14
2 Sugarfoot Strut 2:56
3 I Got Rhythm 3:00
4 The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise (trio) 2:38
5 Little Sound On Schiller Street 3:15
6 Bluesiana 3:39
7 Original Stomp 3:14
8 New Orleans Blues 2:49
9 Body And Soul 3:56
10 You Took Advantage Of Me 3:13
11 The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise 2:51
12 Have You Ever Felt That Way 2:59
13 Lady Be Good 3:39
14 Bud's Blues 3:18
15 Boy In The Boat 2:13
16 Corrine Romp 2:29
17 If You're A Viper 2:58
18 Rosetta 3:21

Frank Melrose – Piano, violin
Pete Daily - Cornet
Bill Helgart – Trombone
LeRoy Smith – E-flat clarinet
Boyce Brown (Bro Matthew) – Sax
Jack Dailey – Guitar, banjo
Willie Sherman – Bass
Harold "Sleepy" Kaplan – Drums
June Davis – Vocals (tracks 6, 12, 17)

This album was recorded in 1940 (the year before Frank Melrose died) in Chicago, the city where he mainly worked as pianist and bandleader. He sometimes called himself Kansas City Frank. Most of the tracks have Frank leading a Dixieland band notable for the extrovert cornet of Pete Daily and the serpentine saxophone of Boyce Brown. The recording quality is often quite good for the period, although some tracks sound as if they were recorded at different times under different conditions. However, these previously unknown recordings are of historical as well as musical interest.

Taken from the usual streamers @ 192

Ice Nine said...

Thanks.