- Jimmy Giuffre
Infobox musical artist
Name = Jimmy Giuffre
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Born = birth date|1921|4|26
Dallas,Texas ,United States
Died = death date and age|2008|4|24|1921|4|26
Pittsfield,Massachusetts ,United States
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Instrument =saxophone ,clarinet
Genre =Jazz Cool jazz
Occupation = composer, arranger, musician
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Notable_instruments =James Peter Giuffre (
April 26 ,1921 –April 24 ,2008 ) was an Americanjazz composer, arranger andsaxophone andclarinet player.Born in
Dallas, Texas , Giuffre (pronounced "Joo-free") was a graduate of Dallas Technical High School and North Texas State Teachers College (now theUniversity of North Texas ) . He first became known as an arranger forWoody Herman 'sbig band , for which he wrote the celebrated "Four Brothers" (1947). He would continue to write creative, unusual arrangements throughout his career.He was a central figure in so-calledWest coast jazz and was a member ofShorty Rogers 's groups before going solo.Instrumental playing
Giuffre played clarinet (which he had begun learning at the age of nine, starting on an E-flat because his hands were too small for a B-flat), as well as tenor and baritone saxophones, but eventually focused on clarinet. His style was unique and distinctive, "having been self-formed, the only possible precedent having been the clarinet of
Lester Young ." [http://users.bestweb.net/~msnyder/clarinet/giuffre.htm] His early music was sometimes classified ascool jazz . Giuffre's early saxophone work has been favorably compared toLester Young 's, as well.Trios
His first trio consisted of Giuffre,
guitar ist Jim Hall anddouble bass ist Ralph Pena (later replaced byJim Atlas ). They had a minor hit in 1957 when Giuffre's "The Train and the River" was featured on thetelevision specialThe Sound of Jazz . This trio explored what Giuffre dubbed "blues-based folk jazz". This same special matched Giuffre with fellow clarinetistPee Wee Russell for a leisurely jam session simply titled "Blues".When Atlas left the trio, Giuffre replaced him with valve trombonist
Bob Brookmeyer . This unusual instrumentation was partly inspired byClaude Debussy . The group can be seen performing in the film "Jazz on a Summer's Day " filmed at the 1958Newport Jazz Festival .In 1961, Giuffre formed a new trio with
piano playerPaul Bley anddouble bass istSteve Swallow . This group received little attention when they were active, but were later cited by some fans and musicians as among the most important groups in jazz history. They exploredfree jazz not in the loud, aggressive mode ofAlbert Ayler orArchie Shepp , but with a hushed, quiet focus more resemblingchamber music . The trio's explorations ofmelody ,harmony andrhythm are still as striking and radical as any in jazz. Thom Jurek has written that this trio's recordings are "one of the most essential documents regarding the other side of early-'60s jazz." [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:edug6jp771e0~T1]Improvised music
Giuffre, Bley and Swallow eventually explored wholly improvised music, several years ahead of the
free improvisation boom in Europe. Jurek writes that "Free Fall," their final record, "was such radical music, no one, literally no one, was ready for it and the group disbanded shortly thereafter on a night when they made only 35 cents apiece for a set." [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:59k9kentjq7v~T1]In the early 1970s, Giuffre formed a new trio with bassist Kiyoshi Tokunaga and drummer Randy Kaye. Giuffre added instruments including bass flute and soprano saxophone to his arsenal. A later group included Pete Levin playing synthesizer and replaced Tokunaga with electric bassist Bob Nieske. This group recorded three albums for the Italian Soul Note label.
Teaching and performing
During the 1970s, Giuffre was hired by
New York University to head its jazz ensemble, and to teach private lessons in saxophone and music composition.Into the 1990s, Giuffre continued teaching and performing. He recorded withJoe McPhee , and revived the trio with Bley and Swallow (though Swallow had switched to bass guitar, giving the group a different sound). Through the mid 1990s Giuffre taught at theNew England Conservatory of Music . He suffered fromParkinson's Disease and in his last years he no longer performed. Giuffre died ofpneumonia inPittsfield, Massachusetts , onApril 24 ,2008 , two days short of his 87th birthday.External links
* [http://www.skyjazz.com/commentaries/guiffre.htm The Quiet Class of Jimmy Giuffre]
* [http://www.creativemusicarchive.com/artistList_query.asp?artID=65&artName=Jimmy+Giuffre A profile from Creative Music Archive]
* [http://www.jazzhouse.org/library/index.php3?read=butters1 Jimmy Giuffre: Cry Freedom by Rex Butters]
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1918688/Jimmy-Giuffre.html Daily Telegraph obituary]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/25/arts/music/25cnd-giuffre.html New York Times obituary]
* [http://www.jazzpolice.com/content/view/7693/79/ Jazz Police obituary]
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