Sat. Nov 9th, 2024

Paul Desmond was revered for the pure, gentle tone of his alto saxophone, and the elegant lyricism of his improvisations: Video

25.11. – Happy Birthday !!! For seventeen years Paul Desmond was the lead soloist in the most commercially successful jazz combo ever, the Dave Brubeck Quartet. In an era that worshipped the frenetic, bebop style of Charlie Parker, Paul Desmond found his own sound, a tone that he claimed imitated a “dry martini.”

It was a sound that made him a favourite with critics and fans alike, and won him jazz poll after jazz poll. “I have won several prizes as the world’s slowest alto player, as well as a special award in 1961 for quietness.” He was a modest, retiring man, known to his friends for his wit and charm. Twenty years after his death from cancer, his music still sells, is still played, and still moves people.

To me his lyricism has never been equalled, as far as logic and lyricism combined, because there’s always a strand going back some place in his melodies, and in his choruses that shows a great intellect combined with a great emotionalism, and usually you don’t find the two things in one person. —Dave Brubeck

Born in San Francisco in 1924, Desmond was one of the leading proponents of the West Coast “cool” style. Influenced by Lester Young and Pete Brown he originally played clarinet in the big bands of Jack Fina and Alvino Rey. But it was his simpatico partnership with the formally-trained pianist Dave Brubeck that rocketed him to fame on the concert stages of the world. Desmond’s melodic solos were in marked contrast to the polytonal rhythms of Brubeck, but somehow they clicked and drove each other to greatness. After meeting and playing together in the late 40s, they formed the Dave Brubeck Quartet in 1951 and never looked back.

For the critics it was a strange musical relationship. Some found Brubeck’s playing heavy-handed. In one Down Beat review he was described as “oftimes loud and pounding and seemingly at a loss for melodic ideas.” Desmond meanwhile was gaining a reputation for his “original, intensely personal style.” Famed critic Nat Hentoff called him “one of the most creative figures in modern jazz.” No wonder that articles started appearing questioning the basis of the Desmond-Brubeck collaboration. In 1953, Down Beat proclaimed, “It is again a case where the sideman (in this instance Desmond) seems to be quite superior to the leader as a jazzman.” But through their years together Desmond remained remarkably loyal to his partner, “There’s certainly nobody else with whom I would have stuck around this long.” Perhaps it was their uncanny ability to play counterpoint that endeared them to their fans and to each other. Theirs was a musical rapport that Desmond described as “kind of scary.”

They toured the world, playing 300 concerts a year, and had a Columbia recording contract that called for four albums a year. In 1959, Desmond penned the first million-seller, jazz single, “Take Five”. It became the theme for the Quartet, de rigueur at all their concert appearances, and it made Desmond a small fortune in royalties.

At the time I really thought it was kind of a throw-away. I was ready to trade the entire rights, lifetime-wise of “Take Five” for a used Ronson electric razor. And the thing that makes “Take Five” work is the bridge, which we almost didn’t use. We really came within … I shudder to think how close we came to not using that, because I said “Well I got this theme that we could use for a middle part”. And Dave said, “Well let’s run it through.” And that’s what made “Take Five”. – Paul Desmond

When the Quartet split up in 1967, Desmond unofficially retired. He was 43 years old, and he didn’t play his horn again for three years. Officially he was writing a humorous memoir of his years on the road with the Quartet, to be titled How Many of You Are There in the Quartet? — a question invariably asked by airline stewardesses. The book never appeared. Desmond who had studied creative writing and loved the “concept” of being a writer never got around to it. The closest he came was one hilarious chapter that appeared in the British humour magazine, Punch.

One thing I learned during the years of not playing — I started hanging out in the bar in New York called Elaine’s, where a lot of heavyweight writers spend a lot of time, and I discovered over a year or so that almost all of them have secret Walter Mitty dreams of becoming jazz players. And I figure that it’s a dumb move to trade a fairly secure place in the world of jazz for Number 493 Unemployed Humorist. – Paul Desmond

Eventually he was coaxed out of retirement to play occasional gigs with his friends. He fronted a quartet featuring guitarist Jim Hall for two weeks at the “Half Note” in New York City, and broke their attendance record. At the New Orleans Jazz Festival he played a soaring set with Gerry Mulligan. As guest soloist he ventured out with the Modern Jazz Quartet for a 1971 Christmas concert. He blew on a couple of albums with his old friend Chet Baker. He appeared with Dave Brubeck in a series of concerts called “Two Generations of Brubeck” in which Dave played with his musical sons, and in 1976, the Quartet reunited for the Silver Anniversary Tour. They were greeted with enthusiasm wherever they played until the deteriorating eyesight of drummer Joe Morello cut short the tour. But his best work of the period was a happy collaboration with three Toronto musicians. Jim Hall talked him into coming to Toronto to play with Canada’s premier jazz guitarist Ed Bickert. So thrilled was he with his first two weeks at Toronto’s “Bourbon Street”, that Desmond rushed back to New York and talked record producer Creed Taylor into flying Bickert in so that he could record an album with him. Desmond appeared only half a dozen times with his “Canadian Quartet” — Ed Bickert on guitar, Don Thompson on bass, and Jerry Fuller on drums. Fortunately Don Thompson also doubles as a recording engineer, and a number of the club dates were recorded and released. The group also appeared on CBC-TV’s Take 30, and were recorded at the Edmonton Jazz Festival.

He was great to play with. He was very easy, because harmonically there was a real clear logic in everything he played musically. The harmony was always right, the melodies were always right. His time was amazing. You don’t think of Paul Desmond as a real swinging musician, he’s not famous for that. But he had really great time feel, he really did swing beautifully. Playing with him, you really couldn’t go wrong. It was really easy to play.” – Don Thompson

At first glance, his seems a small, perhaps insignificant, career. Was he just a minor figure in a jazz landscape of greats? One of the greats, Charlie Parker, named him as his favourite alto player. Julian “Cannonball” Adderley, an arch rival in various jazz polls said, “I believe that Paul Desmond shares with Benny Carter the title of most lyrical altoist. He is a profoundly beautiful player.” Though various critics credited the success of the Dave Brubeck Quartet to Desmond’s horn, others over-looked his playing as “too pretty”. Brubeck himself, thought that Desmond lacked ambition, but was upset when he signed a deal with RCA to record on his own, while still part of the Quartet. That RCA deal called for two albums a year and led to an incredible series of recording dates with guitarist Jim Hall, and the Modern Jazz Quartet drummer Connie Kay. Standards such as “I Get a Kick Out of You” and “For All We Know” shared album space with Desmond originals like “Take Ten”, and “El Prince”. They recorded fifty tunes in all, plus an album with strings. There were also two albums with a Desmond/Gerry Mulligan quartet. Then in the 70s he changed labels to CTI, and did half a dozen more albums, proving once again that he was more than just a sideman.

Desmond’s pure tone, the ingenuity of his melodic lines, his harmonic resourcefulness, the musical wit that reflected his literate and sophisticated personality, made him one of the most personal and appealing of all jazz stylists. —Doug Ramsey

Though a mild-mannered, professorial-looking man, Desmond was capable of strong emotion. When pushed musically he rose to the occasion, turning out chorus after brilliant chorus. But he was also a moody man. When drummer Joe Morello joined the Quartet in 1956, Desmond disliked his crowd-pleasing performances so much that he threatened to quit the Quartet. Instead, though they shared the same concert stage nearly every night, he didn’t speak to Morello for a year. Eventually they became friends, but Desmond could often be found backstage, reading a book during Morello’s extended drum solo on “Take Five”.

His friends called him “the perennial bachelor” — few knew that he had been married early in life. He had a reputation as a lady’s man, and was often seen accompanied by gorgeous models. When pianist Marian McPartland asked him about his dates he punned, “Sometimes they go around with guys who are scuffling — for a while. But usually they end up marrying some cat with a factory. This is the way the world ends, not with a whim but a banker.” Despite his many friends, Gene Lees wrote that Desmond was the “loneliest man” he ever knew.

His last concert was with Dave Brubeck in February, 1977 at New York’s Avery Fisher Hall. Observers noted that he seemed out of shape, needing 2 or 3 breaths to complete a phrase that he usually did with one great gasp. His many fans didn’t know that he was dying, and incapable of the level of playing that he was famous for.

Paul never said it would be the end. But we knew he was getting weaker and weaker. So he just played the second half. And when it came time for the encore, because the whole audience wanted Paul back onstage he said the old cliche “Leave em wanting more.” And we didn’t go back on. – Dave Brubeck

In a business where booze and drugs abound, his drinking was legendary, but it was three packs a day that caught up with him in May of that year. Much to his own amusement his liver was fine, “Pristine, one of the great livers of our time. Awash in Dewars and full of health.” He had spoken to Don Thompson earlier that month, making plans to play New York with his quartet, but he never made it.

His friends tell of his last weeks, when an old friend, jazz legend Charles Mingus, appeared at his apartment draped in a swirling black cape and a matching Spanish cowboy hat. He stood in silent vigil at Desmond’s bedside. Then slowly, Desmond awoke. Looking up, he searched his memory, trying to make sense of the image looming before him. Finally it clicked — the hooded harvester from Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal. “Okay, set up the chess board.” And he grinned.

One of the things I thought about after Paul died was that it was really a shame because he would have been a really great old man. I could see him about 70-75 years old — he would have been terrific just to talk to and hang out with. —Jim Hall

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFtnMecXQMA

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