Gillespie, Dizzy 1917—

views updated May 08 2018

Dizzy Gillespie 1917

Trumpeter, composer, bandleader

At a Glance

The Legend Gets His Name

Already a Musical Force at 19

Inspired by Charlie Parker

Bebop Born on 52nd Street

Quintet Revolutionized Jazz

1953 Triumph in Toronto

Selected writings

Selected discography

Sources

In 1989, the year he became 72 years of age, Dizzy Gillespie received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences Grammy Award ceremonies. The honorone of many bestowed on the trumpet virtuosorecognized nearly 50 years of pioneering jazz performances. That same year he received the National Medal of Arts from President George Bush for his trail-blazing work as a musician who helped elevate jazz to an art form of the first rank, and for sharing his gift with listeners around the world.

Not letting age slow him down, Gillespie in 1989 gave 300 performances in 27 countries, appeared in 100 U.S. cities in 31 states and the District of Columbia, headlined three television specials, performed with two symphonies, and recorded four albums. He was also crowned a traditional chief in Nigeria, named Commandeur dOrdre des Artes et LettresFrances most prestigious cultural awardwas named regent professor by the University of California, and received his fourteenth honorary doctoral degree, this one from the Berklee College of Music. The next year, at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts ceremonies celebrating the centennial of American jazz, Gillespie received the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers Duke Award for 50 years of achievement as a composer, performer, and bandleader.

Fifty years after helping found a new style of progressive jazz that came to be known as bebop, Dizzy Gillespie is still contributing all he can to the development of modern jazz. His band is a virtual training ground for younger musicians. In 1990 he led and wrote the arrangements for a group that included bassist John Lee, guitarist Ed Cherry, drummer Ignacio Berroa, conga drummer Paul Hawkins, and saxophonist Ron Holloway. More than 40 years earlier Gillespie was the first bandleader to use a conga player. Employing Latin rhythms and forging an Afro-Cuban style of polyrhythmic music was one of Gillespies many contributions to the development of modern jazz.

As a trumpet virtuoso Gillespie stands firmly as a major influence in the development of the jazz trumpet. Before Gillespie there was New Orleans musician Buddy Bolden the earliest known jazz cornetistwho was followed by King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, and Roy Eldridge. In his memoir, To Be Or Not To Bop, Gillespie described the

At a Glance

Real name, John Birks Gillespie; born October 21, 1917, to james (a bricklayer and musician) and Lottie Gillespie; youngest of nine children; raised in Cheraw, SC; married Lorraine Willis (a dancer), 1940. Education: Attended Laurinburg Institute.

Moved to New York City in 1937 and began playing trumpet in jam sessions with various musicians; played with the Teddy Hill Orchestra, beginning in 1937, and the Cab Calloway Orchestra, 1939-41; made first recording in 1939 with Lionel Hampton; joined Earl Fatha Hines band, 1942; with Sarah Vaughan, Charlie Parker, and others, formed new group headed by Billy Eckstein, 1943; also played for other bands, including the Duke Ellington Orchestra, c. 1943; formed quintet, 1944; has played in, led, and composed for numerous big bands, orchestras, and small groups throughout the world.

Awards: New Star Award from Esquire magazine, 1944; Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences, 1989; National Medal of Arts from President George Bush, 1989; Commadre dOrdre des Artes et Lettres (France), 1989; Duke Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, 1989; and numerous other awards and honors, including several honorary degrees.

Addresses: Home Camden, NJ.

influence of Armstrong and Eldridge on his trumpet playing: Roy Eldridge was a French-style trumpet player. Eldridge was in a direct line from Louis Armstrong, and he was the voice of that era, the thirties. I hardly ever listened to Louis, but was always aware of where Roys inspiration came from. So I was looking at Louis Armstrong, you see, because they are one and the same. My inspiration came through Roy Eldridge, from Louis Armstrong and King Oliver and Buddy Bolden. Thats the way it happened.

The Legend Gets His Name

Gillespie played with bands in Philadelphia from 1935 to 1937 before moving to New York. In Philadelphia, where his family had moved from Cheraw, South Carolina, Gillespie learned Eldridges trumpet solos from fellow trumpeter Charlie Shavers. It was then that Gillespie earned his nickname for his erratic and mischievous behavior. When Gillespie was in the Frankie Fairfax band in Philadelphia he carried his new trumpet in a paper bag; that inspired fellow musicians like Bill Doggett to call him Dizzy. While Gillespie himself acknowledges the paper bag incident, he says the nickname didnt stick until later.

Gillespies basic style of solo trumpet playing at that time involved running them changesimprovising on chord changes in a song and introducing new chord changes based on the songs melody. He had taught himself piano and used the instrument to experiment with new melodies and chord changes. When he went to New York in 1937 he did not have a specific job but was introduced to other musicians by Shavers. Gillespie joined in jam sessions, sometimes after hours at clubs in Harlem like Monroes Uptown House and Dicky Wellss. He would also sit in with bands; while jamming one night with Chick Webbs band at the Savoy Ballroom, Gillespie met Mario Bauza, a Cuban trumpeter who introduced him to Latin rhythms.

Already a Musical Force at 19

Within a year Gillespie was hired by the Teddy Hill Orchestra for a European tour when the regular trumpet player didnt want to go. Hill probably liked Gillespies style, which was similar at that time to Roy Eldridges; Eldridge had left Hills band to join Fletcher Henderson. By 1937when he was only 19Gillespie had already made a name for himself among New York musicians, who couldnt help but notice his radically fresh take on solo trumpet playing: he utilized the upper register of notes above high C, played with great speed, and used new rhythms and chord changes. Gillespie made his first recordings with the Teddy Hill Orchestra just prior to leaving for Europe on The Cotton Club Show.

Gillespie joined the Cab Calloway Orchestra in 1939 and stayed until 1941. He wrote in his memoir, It was the best job that you could possibly have, high class. Calloway played the Cotton Club and toured extensively. During this period Gillespie continued to play all-night jam sessions at Mintons and Monroes Uptown House to develop his musical knowledge and style. In 1939 the most in-demand trumpet players for recording dates in New York were Eldridge, Shavers, and Buck Clayton. Gillespie was fourth on the list, but somehow managed to land a recording date with Lionel Hampton, which resulted in the famed Hot Mallets session. In this session Gillespie became the first musician to record in the modern jazz style with a small group. Lionel Hampton said of the session, as quoted in Gillespies book, [Gillespie] came out with a new style, came out with a bebop style. He came out with a different style than wed ever heard before. A lot of people dont know that was the creation of bebop, the beginning of bebop. Of course, it wasnt called bebop just yet.

Gillespie left Calloway in 1941 following a misunderstanding. During a performance someone from the vicinity of the trumpet section was having fun aiming spitballs at the bandleader, who was singing in front of the band at the time. Naturally Calloway assumed Gillespie was responsible. By most accounts, however, Gillespie was completely innocent and had been set up. Words led to action; Gillespie pulled a knife on Calloway and actually cut him a few times. While the two later reconciled and remained friends, Gillespie was forced to leave the band. This well-known incident illustrates the flip side of Gillespies jovial personality; he often found himself in situations where he might need to defend himself and was fully prepared to do so.

Inspired by Charlie Parker

Gillespie joined the Earl Fatha Hines band in 1942, about the same time Charlie Parker did. Although Parker became famous as an alto saxophonist, he was playing tenor sax at that time. Gillespie first met Parker in Kansas City in 1940 when he was on tour with Cab Calloway. The two of them jammed together at the Booker T. Washington Hotel for several hours. Gillespie ventured in To Be or Not to Bebop, I guess Charlie Parker and 1 had a meeting of the minds, because both of us inspired each other. They spent a lot of time together during their stint with the Hines band.

By the time he joined Hines, Gillespie had composed A Night in Tunisia, one of his most famous songs. He was also writing arrangements for other bandleaders, including Hill, Calloway, Jimmy Dorsey, and Woody Herman.

He wrote bebop arrangements, as most bandleaders at that time were interested in having one or two bebop numbers in their repertoires. Several musicians have commented that even if Gillespie had not been able to play the trumpet, he could have made a name for himself on the basis of his original compositions and arrangements. Other jazz standards credited in whole or in part to Gillespie include Groovin High, Manteca, Woody n You, Con Alma, and Salt Peanuts.

Bebop Born on 52nd Street

A large part of the Earl Hines band departed in 1943 to form a new group headed by Billy Eckstine. Former Hines members who joined Eckstine included Sarah Vaughan, Gillespie, Parker, and others. The band also featured saxophonists Gene Ammons and Dexter Gordon. Gillespie became musical director for Eckstine, whose backers got him a job on 52nd Street. Gillespie stayed with Eckstine for about seven months, touring and playing on 52nd Street. The Street, as it was described by critic Pete Migdol in Gillespies memoir, was the hippest block with regard to its short distance and that amount of music. This was the top talent street, and it was, of course, discoverer of a lot of the new people for that era.

After leaving Eckstine, Gillespie substituted in the Duke Ellington Orchestra for about four weeks, then formed his own group to play at the newly opened Onyx Club on 52nd Street. Gillespie had been playing bebop whenever he could since 1940, the year he married Lorraine Willis. Now he was able to play it full time. 52nd Street became the proving ground for a new jazz style that had previously been played primarily at late night jam sessions.

The opening of the Onyx Club represented the birth of the bebop era, Gillespie recalled in his book. In our long sojourn on 52nd Street we spread our message to a much wider audience. His first quintet at the Onyx Club in 1944 included Oscar Pettiford on bass, Max Roach on drums, George Wallington on piano, and Don Byas on tenor sax. Gillespie had tried to get Parker to join, but he had temporarily returned to Kansas City.

Quintet Revolutionized Jazz

That year Gillespie received the New Star Award from Esquire magazine, the first of many awards he would receive in his career. Describing the new style his quintet played, Gillespie wrote, Wed take the chord structures of various standard and pop tunes and create new chords, melodies, and songs from them. For example, Tadd Damerons composition Hothouse was based on What Is This Thing Called Love, and Parkers Ornithology came out of How High The Moon. Gillespie also noted, Our music had developed more into a type of music for listeners. There would be little dancing to bebop. Rhythm and phrasing, however, were also important to the new jazz style. The most important thing about our music was, of course, the style, how you got from one note to another, how it was played. We had a special way of phrasing. Not only did we change harmonic structure, but we also changed rhythmic structure.

Gillespies quintet also played other clubs, including the Downbeat and the Three Deuces, where the group included Charlie Parkerby then on alto saxand Bud Powell on piano. Gillespie also played for two months in Hollywood with Parker, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, bassist Ray Brown, pianist Al Haig, and drummer Stan Levy. This was the West Coast debut of bebop and it was very well received. In fact, it was around this time that the term bebop came into use. Gillespie recalled, People, when theyd wanna ask for one of those numbers and didnt know the name, would ask for bebop. And the press picked it up and started calling it bebop. The first time the term bebop appeared in print was while we played at the Onyx Club.

1953 Triumph in Toronto

Gillespies quintet and the presentation of modern jazz in that format reached its apex in 1953with a concert at Massey Hall in Toronto that featured Gillespie, Parker, Powell, Roach, and legendary jazz bassist Charles Mingus. As Roach recalled in Gillespies memoir, The five people that Dizzy had originally thought about in the group at the Onyx didnt really materialize until we did Jazz at Massey Hall, that album, in 1953. Billed by jazz critics as the greatest jazz concert ever, it was recorded by Mingusa last-minute substitute for Pettifordand later released on Debut Records.

From the big bands and orchestras that he first organized in the late 1940s, to the small combos of the early 1950s that served as incubators for young musicians like saxophone giant John Coltrane, Gillespies influence consistently defined modern jazz. Though the enterprise was short-lived, Gillespie had his own record label, Dee Gee Records, from 1951-53. He appeared at the historic first Newport Jazz Festival in 1954. And he later played the role of unofficial ambassador of jazz, beginning with a 1956 world tour sponsored by the U.S. State Department. These are just a few of the many accomplishments highlighting the career of this remarkably accomplished titan of contemporary American music.

Selected writings

(With Al Fraser) To Be or Not To Bop: Memoirs of Dizzy Gillespie, Doubleday, 1979.

Selected discography

(With the Quintet) Jazz at Massey Hall, Fantasy/Debut, 1953.

Dizzier and Dizzier, RCA, 1954.

Groovin High, Savoy, 1955.

The Champ, Savoy, 1956.

The Dizzy Gillespie Story, Savoy, 1957.

Concert in Paris, Roost, 1957.

Jazz From Paris, Verve, 1957.

Dizzy in Greece, Verve, 1957.

The Trumpet Kings, Verve, 1957.

For Musicians Only, Verve, 1958.

Manteca, Verve, 1958.

Birks Works, Verve, 1958.

Dizzy Gillespie at Newport, Verve, 1958.

Dizzy Gillespie Duets, Verve, 1958.

Have Trumpet Will Excite, Verve, 1959.

The Ebullient Dizzy Gillespie, Verve, 1959.

The Greatest Trumpet of Them All, Verve, 1960.

Gillespiana, Verve, 1961.

An Electrifying Evening, Verve, 1962.

Carnegie Hall Concert, Verve, 1962.

Dizzy on the French Riviera, Philips, 1962.

New Wave, Philips, 1963.

Something Old, Something New, Philips, 1963.

Cool World, Philips, 1964.

The Essential Dizzy Gillespie, Verve, 1964.

Jambo Caribe, Limelight, 1964.

The New Continent, Limelight, 1965.

Montreux 77, Pablo, 1977.

Dee Gee Days, Savoy, 1985.

New Faces, GRP, 1985.

Oo Pop A Da, Affinity, 1985.

Dizzy Gillespie and His Sextets, Musicraft, 1986.

Dizzy Gillespie and His Orchestra, Musicraft, 1986.

Dizziest, RCA Bluebird, 1987.

Enduring Magic, Black Hawk, 1987.

Dizzy Gillespie and His Orchestra, Giants of Jazz, 1988.

Small Combos, Giants of Jazz, 1988.

(With Max Roach) Max and Dizzy: Paris 1989, A&M, 1990.

Sources

Books

Feather, Leonard, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Sixties, Horizon, 1966.

Feather, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies, Horizon, 1976.

Horricks, Raymond, Dizzy Gillespie and the Bebop Revolution, Hippocrene, 1984.

Koster, Piet, and Chris Sellers, Dizzy Gillespie, Volume 1: 19371953, Micrography, 1986.

McRae, Barry, Dizzy Gillespie, Universe Books, 1988.

The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Macmillan, 1988.

Periodicals

Down Beat, December 1985; January 1986; September 1989; August 1990.

IAJRC Journal, Winter 1991.

Macleans, March 20, 1989.

David Bianco

Gillespie, Dizzy

views updated May 08 2018

Dizzy Gillespie

Trumpeter, composer, bandleader

Influenced by Roy Eldridge and Louis Armstrong

Already a Musical Force at 19

Inspired, and Inspired by, Charlie Parker

Bebop Born on 52nd Street

Quintet Revolutionized Jazz

1953 Triumph in Toronto

Selected writings

Selected discography

Sources

In 1989, the year he became 72 years of age, Dizzy Gillespie received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences Grammy Award ceremonies. The honorone of many bestowed on the trumpet virtuosorecognized nearly 50 years of pioneering jazz performances. That same year he received the National Medal of Arts from President George Bush for his trail-blazing work as a musician who helped elevate jazz to an art form of the first rank, and for sharing his gift with listeners around the world.

Not letting age slow him down, Gillespie in 1989 gave 300 performances in 27 countries, appeared in 100 U.S. cities in 31 states and the District of Columbia, headlined three television specials, performed with two symphonies, and recorded four albums. He was also crowned a traditional chief in Nigeria, received the Commandre dOrdre des Artes et LettresFrances most prestigious cultural awardwas named regent professor by the University of California, and received his fourteenth honorary doctoral degree, this one from the Berklee College of Music. The next year, at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts ceremonies celebrating the centennial of American jazz, Gillespie received the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers Duke Award for 50 years of achievement as a composer, performer, and bandleader. Fifty years after helping found a new style of progressive jazz that came to be known as bebop, Dizzy Gillespie is still contributing all he can to the development of modern jazz. His band is a virtual training ground for younger musicians. In 1990 he led and wrote the arrangements for a group that included bassist John Lee, guitarist Ed Cherry, drummer Ignacio Berroa, conga drummer Paul Hawkins, and saxophonist Ron Hollo-way. More than 40 years earlier Gillespie was the first bandleader to use a conga player. Employing Latin rhythms and forging an Afro-Cuban style of polyrhythmic music was one of Gillespies many contributions to the development of modern jazz.

Influenced by Roy Eldridge and Louis Armstrong

As a trumpet virtuoso Gillespie stands firmly as a major influence in the development of the jazz trumpet. Before Gillespie there was New Orleans musician Buddy Boldenthe earliest known jazz cornetistwho was followed by King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, and Roy Eldridge. In his memoir, To Be Or Not To Bop, Gillespie described the influence of Armstrong and Eldridge on his trumpet playing: Roy Eldridge was a French-style trumpet player. Eldridge was in a direct line from Louis Armstrong, and he was the voice of that era, the thirties. I hardly ever listened to Louis, but was always aware of

For the Record

Born John Birks Gillespie, October 21, 1917; son of James (a bricklayer and musician) and Lottie Gillespie; youngest of nine children; raised in Cheraw, SC; married Lorraine Willis (a dancer), 1940. Education: Attended Laurinburg Institute.

Moved to New York City in 1937 and began playing trumpet in jam sessions with various musicians; played with the Teddy Hill Orchestra, beginning in 1937, and the Cab Calloway Orchestra, 1939-41; made first recording in 1939 with Lionel Hampton; joined Earl Fatha Hines band, 1942; with Sarah Vaughan, Charlie Parker, and others, formed new group headed by Billy Eckstein, 1943; also played for other bands, including the Duke Ellington Orchestra, c. 1943; formed quintet, 1944; has played in, led, and composed for numerous big bands, orchestras, and small groups throughout the world.

Awards: New Star Award from Esquire magazine, 1944; Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences, 1989; National Medal of Arts from President George Bush, 1989; Commadre dOrdre des Artes et Lettres (France), 1989; Duke Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, 1989; and numerous other awards and honors, including several honorary degrees.

Addresses: Home- Camden, NJ.

where Roys inspiration came from. So I was looking at Louis Armstrong, you see, because they are one and the same. My inspiration came through Roy Eldridge, from Louis Armstrong and King Oliver and Buddy Bolden. Thats the way it happened. Gillespie played with bands in Philadelphia from 1935 to 1937 before moving to New York. In Philadelphia, where his family had moved from Cheraw, South Carolina, Gillespie learned Eldridges trumpet solos from fellow trumpeter Charlie Shavers. It was then that Gillespie earned his nickname for his erratic and mischievous behavior. When Gillespie was in the Frankie Fairfax band in Philadelphia he carried his new trumpet in a paper bag; that inspired fellow musicians like Bill Doggett to call him Dizzy. While Gillespie himself acknowledges the paper bag incident, he says the nickname didnt stick until later.

Gillespies basic style of solo trumpet playing at that time involved running them changesimprovising on chord changes in a song and introducing new chord changes based on the songs melody. He had taught himself piano and used the instrument to experiment with new melodies and chord changes. When he went to New York in 1937 he did not have a specific job, but was introduced to other musicians by Shavers. Gillespie joined in jam sessions, sometimes after hours at clubs in Harlem like Monroes Uptown House and Dicky Wellss. He would also sit in with bands; while jamming one night with Chick Webbs band at the Savoy Ballroom, Gillespie met Mario Bauza, a Cuban trumpeter who introduced him to Latin rhythms.

Already a Musical Force at 19

Within a year Gillespie was hired by the Teddy Hill Orchestra for a European tour when the regular trumpet player didnt want to go. Hill probably liked Gillespies style, which was similar at that time to Roy Eldridges; Eldridge had left Hills band to join Fletcher Henderson. By 1937when he was only 19Gillespie had already made a name for himself among New York musicians, who couldnt help but notice his radically fresh take on solo trumpet playing: he utilized the upper register of notes above high C. played with great speed, and used new rhythms and chord changes. Gillespie made his first recordings with the Teddy Hill Orchestra just prior to leaving on a European tour with a revue that featured talent from Harlems famed Cotton Club.

Gillespie joined the Cab Calloway Orchestra in 1939 and stayed until 1941. Gillespie wrote in his memoir, It was the best job that you could possibly have, high class. Calloway played the Cotton Club and toured extensively. During this period Gillespie continued to play all-night jam sessions at Mintons and Monroes Uptown House to develop his musical knowledge and style. In 1939 the most in-demand trumpet players for recording dates in New York were Eldridge, Shavers, and Buck Clayton. Gillespie was fourth on the list, but somehow managed to land a recording date with Lionel Hampton, which resulted in the famed Hot Mallets session. In this session Gillespie became the first musician to record in the modern jazz style with a small group. Lionel Hampton said of the session, as quoted in Gillespies book, [Gillespie] came out with a new style, came out with a bebop style. He came out with a different style than wed ever heard before. A lot of people dont know that was the creation of bebop, the beginning of bebop. Of course, it wasnt called bebop just yet.

Gillespie left Calloway in 1941 following a misunderstanding. During a performance someone from the vicinity of the trumpet section was having fun aiming spitballs at the bandleader, who was singing in front of the band at the time. Naturally Calloway assumed Gillespie was responsible. By most accounts, however, Gillespie was completely innocent and had been set up. Words led to action; Gillespie pulled a knife on Calloway and actually cut him a few times. While the two later reconciled and remained friends, Gillespie was forced to leave the band. This well-known incident illustrates the flip side of Gillespies jovial personality; he often found himself in situations where he might need to defend himself, and was fully prepared to do so.

Inspired, and Inspired by, Charlie Parker

Gillespie joined the Earl Fatha Hines band in 1942, about the same time Charlie Parker did. Although Parker became famous as an alto saxophonist, he was playing tenor sax at that time. Gillespie first met Parker in Kansas City in 1940 when he was on tour with Cab Calloway. The two of them jammed together at the Booker T. Washington Hotel for several hours. Gillespie ventured in To Be or Not to Bebop, I guess Charlie Parker and I had a meeting of the minds, because both of us inspired each other. They spent a lot of time together during their stint with the Hines band.

By the time he joined Hines, Gillespie had composed A Night in Tunisia, one of his most famous songs. He was also writing arrangements for other bandleaders, including Hill, Calloway, Jimmy Dorsey, and Woody Herman. He wrote bebop arrangements, as most bandleaders at that time were interested in having one or two bebop numbers in their repertoires. Several musicians have commented that even if Gillespie had not been able to play the trumpet, he could have made a name for himself on the basis of his original compositions and arrangements. Other jazz standards credited in whole or in part to Gillespie include Groovin High, Manteca, Woody n You, Con Alma, and Salt Peanuts.

Bebop Born on 52nd Street

A large part of the Earl Hines band departed in 1943 to form a new group headed by Billy Eckstine. Former Hines members who joined Eckstine included Sarah Vaughan, Gillespie, Parker, and others. The band also featured saxophonists Gene Ammons and Dexter Gordon. Gillespie became musical director for Eckstine, whose backers got him a job on 52nd Street. Gillespie stayed with Eckstine for about seven months, touring and playing on 52nd Street. The Street, as it was described by critic Pete Migdol in Gillespies memoir, was the hippest block with regard to its short distance and that amount of music. This was the top talent street, and it was, of course, discoverer of a lot of the new people for that era.

After leaving Eckstine, Gillespie substituted in the Duke Ellington Orchestra for about four weeks, then formed his own group to play at the newly opened Onyx Club on 52nd Street. Gillespie had been playing bebop whenever he could since 1940, the year he married Lorraine Willis. Now he was able to play it full time. 52nd Street became the proving ground for a new jazz style that had previously been played primarily at late night jam sessions.

The opening of the Onyx Club represented the birth of the bebop era, Gillespie recalled in his book. In our long sojourn on 52nd Street we spread our message to a much wider audience. His first quintet at the Onyx Club in 1944 included Oscar Pettiford on bass, Max Roach on drums, George Wallington on piano, and Don Byas on tenor sax. Gillespie had tried to get Parker to join, but he had temporarily returned to Kansas City.

Quintet Revolutionized Jazz

That year Gillespie received the New Star Award from Esquire magazine, the first of many awards he would receive in his career. Describing the new style his quintet played, Gillespie wrote, Wed take the chord structures of various standard and pop tunes and create new chords, melodies, and songs from them. For example, Tadd Damerons composition Hothouse was based on What Is This Thing Called Love, and Parkers Ornithology came out of How High the Moon. Gillespie also noted, Our music had developed more into a type of music for listeners. There would be little dancing to bebop. Rhythm and phrasing, however, were also important to the new jazz style. The most important thing about our music was, of course, the style, how you got from one note to another, how it was played. We had a special way of phrasing. Not only did we change harmonic structure, but we also changed rhythmic structure.

Gillespies quintet also played other clubs, including the Downbeat and the Three Deuces, where the group included Charlie Parkerby then on alto saxand Bud Powell on piano. Gillespie also played for two months in Hollywood with Parker, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, bassist Ray Brown, pianist Al Haig, and drummer Stan Levy. This was the West Coast debut of bebop and it was very well received. In fact, it was around this time that the term bebop came into use. Gillespie recalled, People, when theyd wanna ask for one of those numbers and didnt know the name, would ask for bebop. And the press picked it up and started calling it bebop. The first time the term bebop appeared in print was while we played at the Onyx Club.

1953 Triumph in Toronto

Gillespies quintet and the presentation of modern jazz in that format reached its apex in 1953with a concert at Massey Hall in Toronto that featured Gillespie, Parker, Powell, Roach, and legendary jazz bassist Charles Mingus. As Roach recalled in Gillespies memoir, The five people that Dizzy had originally thought about in the group at the Onyx didnt really materialize until we did Jazz at Massey Hall, that album, in 1953. Billed by jazz critics as the greatest jazz concert ever, it was recorded by Mingusa last-minute substitute for Pettifordand later released on Debut Records. From the big bands and orchestras that he first organized in the late 1940s, to the small combos of the early 1950s that served as incubators for young musicians like saxophone giant John Coltrane, Gillespies influence consistently defined modern jazz. Though the enterprise was short-lived, Gillespie had his own record label, Dee Gee Records, from 1951-53. He appeared at the historic first Newport Jazz Festival in 1954. And he later played the role of unofficial ambassador of jazz, beginning with a 1956 world tour sponsored by the U.S. State Department. These are just a few of the many accomplishments highlighting the career of this remarkably accomplished titan of contemporary American music.

Selected writings

(With Al Fraser) To Be or Not To Bop: Memoirs of Dizzy Gillespie, Doubleday, 1979.

Selected discography

(With the Quintet) Jazz at Massey Hall, Fantasy/Debut, 1953.

Dizzier and Dizzier, RCA, 1954.

Groovin High, Savoy, 1955.

The Champ, Savoy, 1956.

The Dizzy Gillespie Story, Savoy, 1957.

Concert in Paris, Roost, 1957.

Jazz from Paris, Verve, 1957. Dizzy in Greece, Verve, 1957.

The Trumpet Kings, Verve, 1957.

For Musicians Only, Verve, 1958.

Manteca, Verve, 1958.

Birks Works, Verve, 1958.

Dizzy Gillespie at Newport, Verve, 1958.

Dizzy Gillespie Duets, Verve, 1958.

Have Trumpet Will Excite, Verve, 1959.

The Ebullient Dizzy Gillespie, Verve, 1959.

The Greatest Trumpet of Them All, Verve, 1960.

Gillespiana, Verve, 1961.

An Electrifying Evening, Verve, 1962.

Carnegie Hall Concert, Verve, 1962.

Dizzy on the French Riviera, Philips, 1962.

New Wave, Philips, 1963.

Something Old, Something New, Philips, 1963.

Cool World, Philips, 1964.

The Essential Dizzy Gillespie, Verve, 1964.

Jambo Caribe, Limelight, 1964.

The New Continent, Limelight, 1965.

Montreux 77, Pablo, 1977.

Dee Gee Days, Savoy, 1985.

New Faces, GRP, 1985.

Oo Pop A Da, Affinity, 1985.

Dizzy Gillespie and His Sextets, Musicraft, 1986.

Dizzy Gillespie and His Orchestra, Musicraft, 1986.

Dizziest, RCA Bluebird, 1987.

Enduring Magic, Black Hawk, 1987.

Dizzy Gillespie and His Orchestra, Giants of Jazz, 1988.

Small Combos, Giants of Jazz, 1988.

(With Max Roach) Max and Dizzy: Paris 1989, A&M, 1990.

Sources

Books

Feather, Leonard, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Sixties, Horizon, 1966.

Feather, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies, Horizon, 1976.

Horricks, Raymond, Dizzy Gillespie and the Bebop Revolution, Hippocrene, 1984.

Koster, Piet, and Chris Sellers, Dizzy Gillespie, Volume 1: 1937-1953, Micrography, 1986.

McRae, Barry, Dizzy Gillespie, Universe Books, 1988.

The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Macmillan, 1988.

Periodicals

Down Beat, December 1985; January 1986; September 1989; August 1990.

IAJRC Journal, Winter 1991.

Macleans, March 20, 1989.

New Yorker, September 17, 1990.

David Bianco

Dizzy Gillespie

views updated May 21 2018

Dizzy Gillespie

Fifty years after helping found a new style of progressive jazz that came to be known as bebop, Dizzy Gillespie's (1917-1993) music is still a major contributing factor to the development of modern jazz.

As a trumpet virtuoso Gillespie stands firmly as a major influence in the development of the jazz trumpet. His band was a virtual training ground for younger musicians. In 1990 he led and wrote the arrangements for a group that included bassist John Lee, guitarist Ed Cherry, drummer Ignacio Berroa, conga drummer Paul Hawkins, and saxophonist Ron Holloway. More than 40 years earlier Gillespie was the first bandleader to use a conga player. Employing Latin rhythms and forging an Afro-Cuban style of polyrhythmic music was one of Gillespie's many contributions to the development of modern jazz.

Before Gillespie there was New Orleans musician Buddy Bolden—the earliest known jazz cornetist—who was followed by King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, and Roy Eldridge. In his memoir, To Be or Not to Bop, Gillespie described the influence of Armstrong and Eldridge on his trumpet playing: "Roy Eldridge was a French-style trumpet player. Eldridge was in a direct line from Louis Armstrong, and he was the voice of that era, the thirties. I hardly ever listened to Louis, but was always aware of where Roy's inspiration came from. So I was looking at Louis Armstrong, you see, because they are one and the same. My inspiration came through Roy Eldridge, from Louis Armstrong and King Oliver and Buddy Bolden. That's the way it happened."

Gillespie played with bands in Philadelphia from 1935 to 1937 before moving to New York. In Philadelphia, where his family had moved from Cheraw, South Carolina, Gillespie learned Eldridge's trumpet solos from fellow trumpeter Charlie Shavers. It was then that Gillespie earned his nickname for his erratic and mischievous behavior. When Gillespie was in the Frankie Fairfax band in Philadelphia he carried his new trumpet in a paper bag; that inspired fellow musicians like Bill Doggett to call him "Dizzy." While Gillespie himself acknowledged the paper bag incident, but he said the nickname didn't stick until later.

Gillespie's basic style of solo trumpet playing at that time involved "running them changes"—improvising on chord changes in a song and introducing new chord changes based on the song's melody. He had taught himself piano and used the instrument to experiment with new melodies and chord changes. When he went to New York in 1937 he did not have a specific job, but was introduced to other musicians by Shavers. Gillespie joined in jam sessions, sometimes after hours at clubs in Harlem like Monroe's Uptown House and Dicky Wells's. He would also sit in with bands; while jamming one night with Chick Webb's band at the Savoy Ballroom, Gillespie met Mario Bauza, a Cuban trumpeter who introduced him to Latin rhythms.

Within a year Gillespie was hired by the Teddy Hill Orchestra for a European tour when the regular trumpet player didn't want to go. Hill probably liked Gillespie's style, which was similar at that time to Roy Eldridge's; Eldridge had left Hill's band to join Fletcher Henderson. By 1937—when he was only 19—Gillespie had already made a name for himself among New York musicians, who couldn't help but notice his radically fresh take on solo trumpet playing: he utilized the upper register of notes above high C, played with great speed, and used new rhythms and chord changes. Gillespie made his first recordings with the Teddy Hill Orchestra just prior to leaving for Europe on "The Cotton Club Show."

Gillespie joined the Cab Calloway Orchestra in 1939 and stayed until 1941. Gillespie wrote in his memoir, "It was the best job that you could possibly have, high class." Calloway played the Cotton Club and toured extensively. During this period Gillespie continued to play all-night jam sessions at Minton's and Monroe's Uptown House to develop his musical knowledge and style. In 1939 the most in-demand trumpet players for recording dates in New York were Eldridge, Shavers, and Buck Clayton. Gillespie was fourth on the list, but somehow managed to land a recording date with Lionel Hampton, which resulted in the famed "Hot Mallets" session. In this session Gillespie became the first musician to record in the modern jazz style with a small group. Lionel Hampton said of the session, as quoted in Gillespie's book, "[Gillespie] came out with a new style, came out with a bebop style. He came out with a different style than we'd ever heard before. A lot of people don't know that was the creation of bebop, the beginning of bebop." Of course, it wasn't called bebop just yet.

Gillespie left Calloway in 1941 following a misunderstanding. During a performance someone from the vicinity of the trumpet section was having fun aiming spitballs at the bandleader, who was singing in front of the band at the time. Naturally Calloway assumed Gillespie was responsible. By most accounts, however, Gillespie was completely innocent and had been set up. Words led to action; Gillespie pulled a knife on Calloway and actually cut him a few times. While the two later reconciled and remained friends, Gillespie was forced to leave the band. This well-known incident illustrates the flip side of Gillespie's jovial personality; he often found himself in situations where he might need to defend himself, and was fully prepared to do so.

Gillespie joined the Earl "Fatha" Hines band in 1942, about the same time Charlie Parker did. Although Parker became famous as an alto saxophonist, he was playing tenor sax at that time. Gillespie first met Parker in Kansas City in 1940 when he was on tour with Cab Calloway. The two of them jammed together at the Booker T. Washington Hotel for several hours. Gillespie ventured in To Be or Not to Bebop, "I guess Charlie Parker and I had a meeting of the minds, because both of us inspired each other." They spent a lot of time together during their stint with the Hines band.

By the time he joined Hines, Gillespie had composed "A Night in Tunisia," one of his most famous songs. He was also writing arrangements for other bandleaders, including Hill, Calloway, Jimmy Dorsey, and Woody Herman. He wrote bebop arrangements, as most bandleaders at that time were interested in having one or two bebop numbers in their repertoires. Several musicians have commented that even if Gillespie had not been able to play the trumpet, he could have made a name for himself on the basis of his original compositions and arrangements. Other jazz standards credited in whole or in part to Gillespie include "Groovin' High," "Manteca," "Woody 'n You," "Con Alma," and "Salt Peanuts."

A large part of the Earl Hines band departed in 1943 to form a new group headed by Billy Eckstine. Former Hines members who joined Eckstine included Sarah Vaughan, Gillespie, Parker, and others. The band also featured saxophonists Gene Ammons and Dexter Gordon. Gillespie became musical director for Eckstine, whose backers got him a job on 52nd Street. Gillespie stayed with Eckstine for about seven months, touring and playing on 52nd Street. "The Street," as it was described by critic Pete Migdol in Gillespie's memoir, "was the hippest block with regard to its short distance and that amount of music…. This was the top talent street, and it was, of course, discoverer of a lot of the new people for that era."

After leaving Eckstine, Gillespie substituted in the Duke Ellington Orchestra for about four weeks, then formed his own group to play at the newly opened Onyx Club on 52nd Street. Gillespie had been playing bebop whenever he could since 1940, the year he married Lorraine Willis. Now he was able to play it full time. 52nd Street became the proving ground for a new jazz style that had previously been played primarily at late night jam sessions.

"The opening of the Onyx Club represented the birth of the bebop era," Gillespie recalled in his book. "In our long sojourn on 52nd Street we spread our message to a much wider audience." His first quintet at the Onyx Club in 1944 included Oscar Pettiford on bass, Max Roach on drums, George Wallington on piano, and Don Byas on tenor sax. Gillespie had tried to get Parker to join, but he had temporarily returned to Kansas City.

Also in 1944 Gillespie received the New Star Award from Esquire magazine, the first of many awards he would receive in his career. Describing the new style his quintet played, Gillespie wrote, "We'd take the chord structures of various standard and pop tunes and create new chords, melodies, and songs from them." For example, Tadd Dameron's composition "Hothouse" was based on "What Is This Thing Called Love," and Parker's "Ornithology" came out of "How High The Moon." Gillespie also noted, "Our music had developed more into a type of music for listeners." There would be little dancing to bebop. Rhythm and phrasing, however, were also important to the new jazz style. "The most important thing about our music was, of course, the style, how you got from one note to another, how it was played…. We had a special way of phrasing. Not only did we change harmonic structure, but we also changed rhythmic structure."

Gillespie's quintet also played other clubs, including the Downbeat and the Three Deuces, where the group included Charlie Parker—by then on alto sax—and Bud Powell on piano. Gillespie also played for two months in Hollywood with Parker, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, bassist Ray Brown, pianist Al Haig, and drummer Stan Levy. This was the West Coast debut of bebop and it was very well received. In fact, it was around this time that the term "bebop" came into use. Gillespie recalled, "People, when they'd wanna ask for one of those numbers and didn't know the name, would ask for bebop. And the press picked it up and started calling it bebop. The first time the term bebop appeared in print was while we played at the Onyx Club."

Gillespie's quintet and the presentation of modern jazz in that format reached its apex in 1953—with a concert at Massey Hall in Toronto that featured Gillespie, Parker, Powell, Roach, and legendary jazz bassist Charles Mingus. As Roach recalled in Gillespie's memoir, "The five people that Dizzy had originally thought about in the group at the Onyx didn't really materialize until we did Jazz at Massey Hall, that album, in 1953." Billed by jazz critics as "the greatest jazz concert ever," it was recorded by Mingus—a last-minute substitute for Pettiford—and later released on Debut Records.

From the big bands and orchestras that he first organized in the late 1940s, to the small combos of the early 1950s that served as incubators for young musicians like saxophone giant John Coltrane, Gillespie's influence consistently defined modern jazz. Though the enterprise was short-lived, Gillespie had his own record label, Dee Gee Records, from 1951-53. He appeared at the historic first Newport Jazz Festival in 1954. And he later played the role of unofficial ambassador of jazz, beginning with a 1956 world tour sponsored by the U.S. State Department. These are just a few of the many accomplishments highlighting the career of this remarkably accomplished titan of contemporary American music.

In 1989, the year he became 72 years of age, Dizzy Gillespie received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences' Grammy Award ceremonies. The honor—one of many bestowed on the trumpet virtuoso—recognized nearly 50 years of pioneering jazz performances. That same year he received the National Medal of Arts from President George Bush "for his trail-blazing work as a musician who helped elevate jazz to an art form of the first rank, and for sharing his gift with listeners around the world."

Not letting age slow him down, in 1989 Gillespie gave 300 performances in 27 countries, appeared in 100 U.S. cities in 31 states and the District of Columbia, headlined three television specials, performed with two symphonies, and recorded four albums. He was also crowned a traditional chief in Nigeria, received the Commandre d'Ordre des Artes et Lettres—France's most prestigious cultural award—was named regent professor by the University of California, and received his fourteenth honorary doctoral degree, this one from the Berklee College of Music. The next year, at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts ceremonies celebrating the centennial of American jazz, Gillespie received the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers' Duke Award for 50 years of achievement as a composer, performer, and bandleader.

Although his health was failing due to pancreatic cancer, Gillespie continued to play the music that he loved late in his life. His last public appearance was in Seattle in February of 1992. Gillespie passed away quietly in his sleep on October 6, 1993 at the age of 75.

Further Reading

Feather, Leonard, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Sixties, Horizon, 1966.

Feather, Leonard, The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies, Horizon, 1976.

Horricks, Raymond, Dizzy Gillespie and the Bebop Revolution, Hippocrene, 1984.

Koster, Piet, and Chris Sellers, Dizzy Gillespie, Volume 1: 1937-1953, Micrography, 1986.

McRae, Barry, Dizzy Gillespie, Universe Books, 1988.

New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Macmillan, 1988.

Detroit Free Press, January 7, 1993; January 8, 1993.

Down Beat, December 1985; January 1986; September 1989; August 1990.

Entertainment Weekly, January 22, 1993.

IAJRC Journal, Winter 1991.

Maclean's, March 20, 1989.

New Yorker, September 17, 1990.

New York Times, January 7, 1993; January 13, 1993; January 17, 1993.

Time, January 18, 1993.

Times (London), January 8, 1993.

Washington Post, January 7, 1993; January 10, 1993. □

Gillespie, Dizzy

views updated May 17 2018

Gillespie, Dizzy

October 21, 1917
January 6, 1993


John Birks Gillespie, or "Dizzy," as he was later known, was born in Cheraw, South Carolina. He took up the trombone in his early teens and began playing the trumpet shortly thereafter. When he began to play the trumpet, he puffed out his cheeks, a technical mistake that later became his visual trademark. Starting in 1932, Gillespie studied harmony and theory at Laurinburg Institute, in Laurinburg, North Carolina, but in 1935 he broke off studies to move with his family to Philadelphia. The bandleader Frank Fairfax gave Gillespie his first important work, and it was in Fairfax's band that Gillespie earned his nickname, Dizzy, for his clowning onstage and off.

In 1937 Gillespie moved to New York and played for two years with Teddy Hill's band. Through the early 1940s his experience was mostly with big bands, including those of Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Carter, Charlie Barnet, Les Hite, Lucky Millinder, Earl Hines, Duke Ellington, and Billy Eckstine. Among his important early recordings were "Pickin' the Cabbage" (1940) with Calloway and "Little John Special" (1942) with Millinder. Gillespie married Lorraine Willis in 1940, and he began leading small ensembles in Philadelphia and New York shortly thereafter. In 1945 he joined with saxophonist Charlie Parker (19201955) to lead a bebop ensemble that helped inaugurate the modern jazz era.

Although younger jazz musicians had played in a bebop style in the early 1940s in big bands and in afterhours jam sessions at clubs in Harlem, it was not until Parker and Gillespie's 1945 recordings, including "Dizzy Atmosphere," "Shaw 'Nuff," and "Groovin' High," that the new style's break from swing became clear. Bebop reacted to the sometimes stodgy tempos of the big bands and was instead characterized by adventurous harmonies and knotty, fast lines played in stunning unison by Gillespie and Parker, with solos that emphasized speed, subtlety, and wit.

Gillespie's trumpet style during this time was enormously influential. By the mid-1940s he had broken away from his earlier emulation of Roy Eldridge (19111989) and arrived at a style of his own, one which he maintained for the next five decades. He had a crackling tone, and his endless flow of nimble ideas included astonishing runs and leaps into the instrument's highest registers. Although many of Gillespie's tunes were little more than phrases arrived at spontaneously with Parker, Gillespie composed many songs during this time that later became jazz standards,

including "A Night in Tunisia" (1942), "Salt Peanuts" (1942), and "Woody 'n' You" (1943). In addition to his virtuosity on trumpet, Gillespie continued to display his masterful sense of humor and instinct for gleeful mis-chief. Starting in the mid-1940s he affected the role of the jazz intellectual, wearing a beret, horn-rimmed glasses, and a goatee. He popularized bebop slang and served as the hipster patriarch to the white beatniks.

After his initial successes with Parker in the mid-1940s, Gillespie went on to enormous success as the leader of his own big band, for which he hired Tadd Dameron, George Russell, Gil Fuller, and John Lewis as composers and arrangers. Some of the band's recordings include "Things to Come" (1946), "One Bass Hit" (1946), and "Our Delight" (1946). The band's celebrated appearance at the Salle Pleyel in Paris, France, in 1948, yielded recordings of "'Round about Midnight," "I Can't Get Started," and "Good Bait." This appearance included the Cuban percussionist Chano Pozo, and during this time Gillespie began to explore Afro-Cuban rhythms and melodies. Gillespie's composition "Manteca" (1947) and his performance of George Russell's "Cubana Be, Cubana Bop" (1947) were among the first successful integrations of jazz and Latin music, followed later by his composition "Con Alma" (1957). In the late 1940s and early 1950s Gillespie also continued to work on small-group dates, including reunions with Charlie Parker in 1950, 1951, and 1953 and a return to the Salle Pleyel as a leader in 1953.

Although Gillespie never lost his idiosyncratic charm and sense of humorafter 1953 he played a trumpet with an upturned bell, supposedly the result of someone having bent the instrument by sitting on ithe outgrew the role of practical joker and instead became a figure of respect and genial authority. He released "Love Me" and "Tin Tin Deo" in 1951 on his own short-lived Dee Gee record label, and he became a featured soloist on many performances by the popular traveling sessions known as Jazz at the Philharmonic (JATP). In 1956 Gillespie's integrated band became the first to tour overseas under the sponsorship of the U.S. State Department, and in the following years he took the band on tours to the Middle East, South America, and Europe. In 1959 Gillespie, always an outspoken opponent of segregation, performed at the first integrated concert in a public school in his hometown of Cheraw, South Carolina. The next year he refused to back down when Tulane University in New Orleans threatened to cancel a concert unless he replaced his white pianist with an African American. Gillespie's political activities took another twist in 1964 when he went along with a tongue-in-cheek presidential campaign. During this time Gillespie continued to record, both with small groups (Swing Low, Sweet Cadillac, 1967) and with big bands (Reunion Big Band, 1968). He also worked extensively in film and television.

In the 1970s and 1980s, Gillespie maintained his busy schedule of touring and recording both in the United States and abroad as a leader of small and large bands and as a guest soloist. He appeared with the Giants of Jazz tour (1971-1972) and recorded with Mary Lou Williams (1971), Machito (1975), Count Basie (1977), Mongo Santamaria (1980), Max Roach (1989), and often with his trumpet protégé, John Faddis (b. 1953). During this time he also appeared on television shows such as Sesame Street and The Cosby Show. In 1979 he published his autobiography, To BE or Not to BOP, in which he explained his longstanding interest in Africa, which influenced his politics, music, and style of dress, and also recounted his involvement in the Bahá'í faith, to which he had converted in the late 1960s.

By the late 1980s Gillespie had long been recognized as one of the founding figures of modern jazz. In 1989 he won the U.S. National Medal of the Arts and was made a French Commandeur d'Ordre des Arts et Lettres. Although his instrumental style was largely fixed by the mid-1940s, he won four Grammy Awards in the 1970s and 1980s, and his career as a trumpeter ranked in influence and popularity with Louis Armstrong (19011971) and Miles Davis (19261991); along with Armstrong he became jazz's unofficial ambassador and personification around the world. Gillespie, who lived in Queens, New York, and then in Camden, New Jersey, continued giving hundreds of concerts each year in dozens of countries until his death at the age of seventy-four.

See also Davis, Miles; Jazz; Parker, Charlie

Bibliography

Gillespie, Dizzy, and Al Fraser. To BE or Not to BOP. New York: Doubleday, 1979.

Gitler, Ira. Jazz Masters of the Forties. New York: Macmillan, 1966.

Horricks, Raymond. Dizzy Gillespie. Tunbridge Wells, UK: Spellmount, 1984.

Shipton, Alyn. Groovin' High: The Life of Dizzy Gillespie. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.

Vail, Ken. Dizzy Gillespie: The BebopYears, 19371952. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2003.

jonathan gill (1996)
Updated bibliography

Gillespie, Dizzy

views updated May 23 2018

Dizzy Gillespie

Born: October 21, 1917
Cheraw, South Carolina
Died: October 6, 1993
Englewood, New Jersey

African American musician and bandleader

Fifty years after helping found a new style of revolutionary jazz that came to be known as bebop, Dizzy Gillespie's music is still a major contributing factor in the development of modern jazz.

Difficult childhood

John Birks Gillespie was born October 21, 1917, in Cheraw, South Carolina, to John and Lottie Gillespie. The last of nine children, Gillespie's father was abusive and unusually strict and the youngest Gillespie grew up hard and strong.

When Gillespie was ten, his father died and left the family in terrible financial trouble. Around this time Gillespie's English teacher introduced him to music, and he soon joined the school band. At first he played the trombone, but switched to the trumpet after borrowing a neighbor's and immediately falling in love with the instrument. Over the next several years Gillespie played with local bandsto both black and white audiencesuntil his family moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

In Philly and New York

Gillespie played with bands in Philadelphia from 1935 to 1937 before moving to New York City. In Philadelphia Gillespie earned his nickname for his unpredictable and funny behavior. When Gillespie was in the Frankie Fairfax band in Philadelphia he carried his new trumpet in a paper bag, an act that inspired fellow musicians like Bill Doggett to call him "Dizzy."

In New York City the Teddy Hill Orchestra hired Gillespie for a European tour. By 1937when he was only nineteenGillespie had already made a name for himself among New York musicians, who could not help but notice his radically fresh take on solo (single) trumpet playing. Gillespie made his first recordings with the Teddy Hill Orchestra just prior to leaving for Europe with "The Cotton Club Show."

Gillespie joined the Cab Calloway (19071994) Orchestra in 1939 and stayed until 1941. Calloway played the Cotton Club and toured extensively. During this period Gillespie continued to play all-night jam sessions at Minton's and Monroe's Uptown House to develop his musical knowledge and style.

Gillespie joined the Earl "Fatha" Hines band in 1942, about the same time Charlie Parker (19201955) did. Although Parker became famous as an alto saxophonist, he was playing tenor sax at that time. Gillespie first met Parker in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1940 when he was on tour with Cab Calloway. The two of them jammed together at the Booker T. Washington Hotel for several hours.

Bebop born on 52nd Street

A large part of the Earl Hines band departed in 1943 to form a new group headed by Billy Eckstine. Former Hines members who joined Eckstine included Sarah Vaughan (19241990), Gillespie, Parker, and others. Gillespie became musical director for Eckstine, whose backers got him a job on 52nd Street.

After leaving Eckstine, Gillespie substituted in the Duke Ellington (18991974) Orchestra for about four weeks, then formed his own group to play at the newly opened Onyx Club on 52nd Street. Gillespie had been playing bebop (a new, radically different form of jazz) whenever he could since 1940, the year he married Lorraine Willis. Now he was able to play it full time. 52nd Street became the proving ground for a new jazz style that had previously been played primarily at late night jam sessions. "The opening of the Onyx Club represented the birth of the bebop era," Gillespie recalled in his book, To Be or Not to Bop.

Also in 1944 Gillespie received the New Star Award from Esquire magazine, the first of many awards he would receive in his career. Describing the new style his quintet played, Gillespie wrote, "We'd take the chord structures of various standard and pop tunes and create new chords, melodies, and songs from them."

Gillespie's quintet and the presentation of modern jazz reached its peak in 1953with a concert at Massey Hall in Toronto that featured Gillespie, Parker, Bud Powell (19241966), Max Roach (1924), and legendary jazz bassist Charles Mingus (19221979). Billed by jazz critics as "the greatest jazz concert ever," it was recorded by Mingus and later released on Debut Records.

Gillespie's legacy

In 1989, the year he turned seventy-two, Dizzy Gillespie received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences' Grammy Award ceremonies. The honorone of many awarded to the trumpet virtuosorecognized nearly fifty years of pioneering jazz performances. That same year he received the National Medal of Arts from President George Bush (1924).

Not letting age slow him down, in 1989 Gillespie gave three hundred performances in twenty-seven countries, appeared in one hundred U.S. cities in thirty-one states and the District of Columbia, headlined three television specials, performed with two symphonies, and recorded four albums. The next year, at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts ceremonies celebrating the centennial of American jazz, Gillespie received the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers' Duke Award for fifty years of achievement.

Although Gillespie's failing health was due to pancreatic (having to do with the organ that helps digestion) cancer, Gillespie continued to play the music that he loved late into his life. His last public appearance was in Seattle in February of 1992. Gillespie passed away quietly in his sleep on October 6, 1993, at the age of seventy-five.

For More Information

Horricks, Raymond. Dizzy Gillespie and the Bebop Revolution. New York: Hippocrene, 1984.

Lees, Gene. You Can't Steal a Gift: Dizzy, Clark, Milt, and Nat. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001.

McRae, Barry. Dizzy Gillespie. New York: Universe Books, 1988.

Shipton, Alyn. Groovin' High: The Life of Dizzy Gillespie. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.

Gillespie, ‘Dizzy’

views updated May 29 2018

Gillespie, ‘Dizzy’ ( John Birks) (1917–93) US jazz trumpeter and bandleader. With Charlie Parker and Bud Powell, ‘Dizzy’ was a pioneer of be-bop. His dazzling tone and harmonic invention is evident on Shaw 'Nuff (1946).