Jazz is not a fine art but an indistinct one -- it is, after
all, made up on the spot. How do vocalists make up jazz? Some,
maybe most, will take a song from standard pop repertoire and
jazz it up, make it swing. Others will take jazz and put it to
words, make it sing. Eddie Jefferson was not just one of the
latter, he was the first. he made up the words that made King
Pleasure sound like the tenor sax on "Moody's Mood for
Love," which made Jon Hendricks sing a song of Basie with
Lambert, Hendricks & Ross which made vocalese a permanent
addition to the jazz vocabulary.
Jefferson, who
was born in Pittsburgh in 1918 and was shot to death last year
in Detroit, was a dancer and vaudeville-type entertainer long
before he was a singer. So maybe it was fitting that the
Newport Jazz Festival's tribute to Eddie Jefferson last week
at Carnegie Hall took the form of a vaudeville revue featuring
a veritable cavalcade of musicians associated with Jefferson:
James Moody, whose band Eddie joined a few years after "Moody's
Mood" took off in 1952; bopmaster and legendary scat
singer himself Dizzy Gillespie, representing the old guard of
pre-vocalese vocal adventurers (he strolled out just once, to
take a series of outrageous scat solos on "Oo Poo Pa Dah");
Jon Hendricks, with his group Hendricks, Hendricks &
McFerrin standing in for LH&R; Richie Cole, the young alto
player with whom Jefferson toured the last few years of his
life; and the Manhattan Transfer, who se latest album Extensions
is dedicated to Eddie and whose leader/founder Tim Hauser
produced Cole's new album Hollywood Madness, which
includes Jefferson's last recording sessions.
A special,
unadvertised but thoroughly delightful attraction was Sandman
Sims, introduced as "the world's greatest living jazz
dancer," who performed two spectacular routines -- a
mind-boggling tap dance and a soft-shoe on a miked,
sand-covered floor -- that were clearly his life's work.
Like any revue,
the Newport show had its ups and downs. The biggest downer was
Ben Sidran, a terrible singer and mediocre pianist whose
presence (i.e., his relation to Jefferson) was never
explained. he came out after intermission and played almost
half an hour of the sort of prefab cha-cha music you usually
hear when daytime talk shows cut to commercials. Professor
Irwin Corey also made a brief, bizarre but obnoxious
appearance. In addition, the sound system was pretty poor
throughout, and the format uncomfortably formal, making
participants wait backstage between numbers and forcing
prolonged entrances and exits. It would have been a lot more
efficient and fun to have everybody sitting onstage the whole
time and taking turns at the mike. The show's highlights were
blissful on their own, but the technical problems and obvious
lack of preparation left a feeling of frustration and
disappointment at the end of the evening.
Gertrude Stein
once said, referring to herself and Picasso, that when
something is done for the first time it may not be beautiful,
that the people who dot hat thing later can take out the flaws
and make it beautiful. This hold for Eddie Jefferson. You can
listen to his records -- The Jazz Singer and The
Main Man on Inner City, or Prestige's The Bebop Singers,
which also has cuts by Joe Carroll and Annie Ross -- and his
singing is interesting, clever, but not great. One important
reason why Jefferson's innovativeness is obscured in
retrospect is that the seed he planted was brought to full
fruition by Jon Hendricks, whose accomplishment in writing
lyrics and vocal arrangements for jazz music is unequaled.
Hendricks emceed
the Carnegie Hall concert, appropriately, and he delivered a
running commentary on the heritage of vocalese, with sly
impressions of Louis Armstrong (the father of scat) and Cab
Calloway as well as references to Eddie's mentor Leo Watson
and King Pleasure. (No one ever points out -- because Eddie
was so sanguine about it -- that Pleasure, who saw Jefferson
perform at the Cotton Club in Cincinnati in 1951, essentially
stole the lyrics and the credit for "Moody's Mood for
Love.") Then, gracefully crediting his own entry into the
field of vocal jazz, Hendricks brought out his daughter
Michelle, his wife Judith and Bobby McFerrin for a segment
that was one of the show's peaks.
It was exactly
the same set the foursome performs in clubs -- three Basie
numbers and an Ellington -- and though I was hoping for
something new, they couldn't have done anything better. What
these singers do together is a phenomenon unto itself. Bopping
through the Basie band's dense block cords, half-singing and
half-chanting intricately interlocking sets of lyrics, they
take their tunes beyond the cosmic comedy of split-second
timing and the sensual splendor of precision harmonies into
the realm of hypnosis and mysticism. One minute, they're just
regular people toodling swing variations on doo-wop; the next,
they're burning -- just for a moment or two, it's so intense
it doesn't last long -- with the spirit of something
unearthly, alien, impossibly out.
Perhaps the most
interesting circumstance of the Eddie Jefferson salute was
that it provided an opportunity to compare the Manhattan
Transfer, foremost proponents of pop harmonies and lately
aspiring jazzbos, with the Hendricks family, a
"real" jazz group. It was no context. HHH&McF
breezed through much trickier arrangements with hip
understatement and utter spontaneity; the Transfer came off as
forced, desperate-to-please, almost embarrassingly jive. For
all their good intentions and respect for elders, they're
still better students than practitioners of jazz.
Of course it's
not really fair to make such a comparison. The Transfer's
superiority exists in an idiom that wasn't on display at
Carnegie Hall, and they had prepared a bunch of new material
specifically for this performance -- ambitiously undertaken,
if unfortunately underrehearsed. Their four-part adaptation of
"Jeanine" got lost in the band's overamplification;
Tim Hauser's scat duets with Ben Sidran ("What's
This?") and Richie Cole ("Confirmation") stayed
decidedly earthbound, while Alan Paul -- the group's least
jazzy singer -- seemed plain bored with "The Common
Touch." Janis Siegel did do a nice instant replay of
James Moody's "Moody's Mood for Love" ( with Moody,
amusingly, doing the falsetto middle eight), and Cheryl
Bentyne salvaged the set with a sweet, sure "Parker's
Mood" that caught exactly the quality of a horn player's
interior monologue turned inside out that Eddie Jefferson
always wanted his lyrics to have.
It's a good
thing that I saw the Manhattan Transfer at Radio City last
April and know how fantastic they can be when they're not
suffering from jet lag, equipment problems and artistic
intimidation, because their showing in the jazz festival was
unexpectedly second-rate. Still, they managed to pull off the
show's most direct and affecting tribute to Eddie Jefferson.
Standing in cool blue spotlights, they crooned their
recreation of Eddie's first vocalization, Coleman Hawkins'
famous take on "Body and Soul," slipping almost
imperceptibly into swing-time when they came to Phil Mattson's
special additional lyrics:
And we've got
to remind you
Many years it took him
Singing every day to achieve his first claim to fame
He was 20 years ahead of his time
And he knew it
But he kept right on-a singing...
Sang with Moody and Richie Cole
He could sing it just like Bird
But his forte was the words he wrote to
Music that he sang
So he sang and he sang
And he sang his words so clever
And I know they'll silence him never.
Suddenly, the
evening made sense, we knew why we were there, and we were
glad we'd come.
Soho News, July
9, 1980
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