Saturday, 11 October 2025

Billy Higgins born 11 October 1936

Billy Higgins (October 11, 1936 – May 3, 2001) was reportedly the most recorded American jazz drummer in history, and certainly one of the most beloved. He played mainly free jazz and hard bop and remains one of the most important and controversial drummers in music history. Known among musicians and fans as "Smiling Billy," he was an uncommonly versatile and intuitive player, his nimble rhythmic patterns achieved a perfect balance between function and form. 

Born in Los Angeles, Higgins he began playing drums at the age of 12. Early in his career he began playing R&B, supporting headliners including Bo Diddley, Amos Milburn, and Jimmy Witherspoon. In 1953 he joined high school friend and trumpeter Don Cherry in the Jazz Messiahs, a group also featuring saxophonist James Clay; three years later, he began his session career, in the months to follow appearing on recording dates led by saxophonist Lucky Thompson and bassist Red Mitchell. Around this time, Higgins and Cherry met Coleman through mutual friend Clay. 

Both Higgins and Cherry soon joined Coleman's rehearsal group, which spent years woodshedding before finally securing its first live gigs in 1958, opening for Paul Bley at L.A.'s Hilcrest Club. Audiences were either angered or simply baffled by Coleman's radical sensibility, which he later dubbed "harmolodics," and with the 1958 release of his debut LP, Something Else!!!! The Music of Ornette Coleman, the controversy spread throughout the jazz populace, dividing musicians, critics, and fans alike. 

Higgins followed Coleman when he relocated the group to New York City in 1959 to begin a residency at the Five Spot Café. Love it or hate it, their music was the talk of the town, and with the addition of new bassist Charlie Haden, Coleman finally began to make concrete the sounds and structures he'd pursued for years. His 1959 Atlantic Records debut, The Shape of Jazz to Come, remains a watershed album by any definition and a schism-creating turning point in the history of the avant-garde. The accolades now heaped on Coleman also launched his collaborators to prominence, and Higgins soon emerged as one of the most sought-after drummers in contemporary jazz, proving a master of both the hard bop sensibility still dominant throughout the jazz community as well as the more fluid and abstract approach of the new generation. 


                                   

When a 1961 drug bust stripped Higgins of his cabaret card, prompting his exit from Coleman's band, he focused on studio work, becoming the unofficial house drummer at Blue Note Records during the label's creative zenith. In the decade to come, Higgins appeared on seminal dates including Dexter Gordon's Go!, Jackie McLean's A Fickle Sonance, and Lee Morgan's The Sidewinder, proving time and again his consummate skill and flexibility. 

Even after Liberty Records acquired Blue Note in 1967, he remained much in-demand, maintaining his position as the premier drummer of the avant-garde with contributions to landmark efforts including Archie Shepp's 1971 LP Attica Blues and Coleman's comeback effort, Science Fiction. Higgins was also a frequent collaborator of pianist Cedar Walton, and with bassist Bill Lee and trumpeter Bill Hardman led the big-band ensemble the Brass Company for several years during the early '70s. 

After close to two decades on tour and in New York, Higgins settled back in Los Angeles in 1978. The following year he recorded his first-ever session as a leader, the Red label LP Soweto. Higgins recorded a few more headlining sessions in the years to follow but seemed to value most his role as a sideman, supporting saxophonist Joe Henderson and trombonist Slide Hampton during the first half of the 1980s. After appearing behind star and longtime collaborator Dexter Gordon in filmmaker Bertrand Tavernier's 1986 love letter to jazz, 'Round Midnight, Higgins reunited with Coleman, Cherry, and Haden for a 1987 tour that culminated in a new studio album, In All Languages. 

In 1988 Higgins teamed with poet Kamau Daaood to found the World Stage, a storefront enclave that hosted creative workshops, community activities, and live performances. He regularly tapped his extensive professional network to lure many of the biggest names in jazz to the World Stage site both as performers and as tutors, and ultimately Higgins turned his attention to teaching in a formal setting as well, serving on the jazz faculty at UCLA. 

Higgins spent much of the remainder of his life battling liver disease, a manifestation of the hepatitis he contracted decades earlier. In March 1996, he underwent a liver transplant and when his body rejected the new organ, he was forced to submit to a second procedure just 24 hours later. Higgins nevertheless returned to music a few months later, traveling to New York to renew his collaboration with Coleman. However his new liver began to fail, and while waiting to find a donor, he died on May 3, 2001 at a hospital in Inglewood, California from liver and kidney failure. Higgins was just 64 years old at the time of his death.

(Edited mainly from AllMusic) 

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For “Billy Higgins- Essential Classics Remastered (2025 Digital album)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/78d3VaFz

101) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - Softly As A Morning Sunrise (Remastered).mp3"
102) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - Autumn Leaves (Remastered).mp3"
103) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - There Is No Greater Love (Remastered).mp3"
104) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - Easy Walker (Remastered).mp3"
105) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - Summertime (Remastered).mp3"
106) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - Afternoon In Paris (Remastered).mp3"
107) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - Body And Soul (Remastered).mp3"
108) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - It Might As Well Be Spring (Remastered).mp3"
109) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - When Love Is New (Remastered).mp3"
110) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - The Shadow Of Your Smile (Remastered).mp3"

201) Billy Higgins - Cindy's Main Mood (Remastered).mp3"
202) Billy Higgins - Things Ain't What They Used To Be (Remastered).mp3"
203) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - Early Autumn (Remastered).mp3"
204) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - I Didn't Know What Time It Was (Remastered).mp3"
205) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton - I Should Lose You (Remastered).mp3"
206) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - I Mean You (Remastered).mp3"
207) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - Skylark (Remastered).mp3"
208) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - St. Thomas (Remastered).mp3"
209) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - The Newest Blues (Remastered).mp3"
210) Billy Higgins, Cedar Walton, David Williams - The Theme (Remastered).mp3"

Tracks 101, 2,4,5,7,8,10 and, 203,4 ,5 from VIP Trio -Standards 1989
Tracks 103, 6, 9 and 206, 7, 8, 9, 10 from Cedar Walton Trio – Manhattan Afternoon 1992
Tracks 201 from Cecil Taylor & 202 from Ray Drummond albums.

A big thank you goes to Dennis for suggesting today’s birthday drummer and for the loan of above digital album. As you can see I found out where most of the tracks came from.
Here’s my contribution…

For “Billy Higgins – Billy's Smile (2002 Red Record)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/2jFMZNjZ

1. Billy Higgins– Plexis 7:28
2. Billy Higgins– Three And Four For Peace 8:35
3. Robert Stewart – Judgement 8:33
4. Cedar Walton, David Williams, Billy Higgins – Girl Talk 6:00
5. Cedar Walton Quintet – Cedar's Blues 12:00
6. Billy Higgins – Short Subject 7:42
7. Billy Higgins – Horizon 8:16
8. Billy Higgins – Bahia, Bahia, Bahia 10:20
9. Billy Higgins – Something For Juno - Drum Solo Suite For Juno Lewis 6:06

Original releases:
# 1, 7 - Billy Higgins - Once More (Red 164).
# 2, 6, 9 - Billy Higgins - 3/4 For Peace (Red 258).
# 3 - Robert Stewart (11) - Judgement (Red 268).
# 4 - Cedar Walton, David Williams (2), Billy Higgins - The Trio 3 (Red 194).
# 5 - Cedar Walton Quintet - Cedar's Blues: Cedar Walton Quintet Live (Red 179).
# 8 - Billy Higgins - Soweto (Red 258).

For “Billy Higgins – Three Classic Albums” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/UrUobScb

Billy Higgins – Soweto (1979 Red Record)
1. Soweto 9:20
2. Clockwise 8:08
3. Neptune 5:36
4. Back To Bologna 8:05
5. Bahia, Bahia, Bahia 10:20

Billy Higgins – The Soldier (1981 Timeless)
1. Sugar And Spice 4:50
2. Midnite Waltz 9:44
3. Just In Time 5:39
4. If You Could See Me Now 6:44
5. Peace 6:23
6. Sonny Moon For Two 5:55

Billy Higgins – 3/4 For Peace (1994 Red Record)
1. 3/4 For Peace 8:35
2. In The Trenches 5:27
3. Together With Love 7:15
4. Short Subject 7:42
5. Dark Mood 10:46
6. What's New 7:57
7. Step Right Up To The Bottom 9:19
8. Someday My Prince Will Come 7:48
9. Something For Juno 6:08