ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Obituary
Pianist Jay McShann, last of Kansas Citys jazz giants,
dies at 90
By John Andrews
12 December 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Pianist, singer and bandleader Jay McShann died Thursday, one
month before his 91st birthday. Fittingly, he passed away in Kansas
City, Missouri, his adopted hometown and one of the most significant
incubators of modern jazz.
During the early twentieth century, jazz developed largely
within communities where steady work for musicians was concentrated
in brothels, speakeasies and night clubs. While the pre-World
War I red-light Storyville district of New Orleans and gangster-dominated
Chicago and the Harlem renaissance of the late 1920s and early
1930s have passed into popular consciousness, the outstanding
contribution to jazz music emanating from Kansas City in the 1930s
is less widely appreciated.
Jazz flourished in Kansas City because of a unique confluence
of factors, including its role as a commercial center for livestock
and other commodities produced in the great American Midwest,
an established and relatively affluent black communityhome
to two daily newspapers and the most successful baseball team
in the Negro Leagues, the Kansas City Monarchsand the thoroughly
corrupted administration of the Democratic political machine,
led by Boss Tom Pendergast.
The best musicians in the territorial bands roaming what was
then known as the American Southwest invariably landed in Kansas
City to work in its clubs, dance halls and assorted hangouts.
By the mid-1930s Kansas City was home to, among many others, boogie-woogie
piano master Pete Johnson, blues shouter Big Joe Turnerwho
would become a founding icon of rock and roll two decades laterand
the original Count Basie Orchestra featuring tenor saxophonist
Lester Young, the first player to suggest the modern jazz style
of the 1940s and 1950s.
Born in Oklahoma, where he taught himself piano, McShann moved
to Kansas City in late 1936, the year before the Basie band was
discovered there by jazz impresario John Hammond,
who arranged for the band to leave Kansas Citys Reno Club
for national tours and recording sessions. By the end of 1938,
the Kansas City jazz styleextremely hard swinging and bluesy,
emphasizing instrumental solos backed by patterns called riffswere
essential to the exploding popularity of swing music.
On December 23, Hammond, a supporter of the Communist Party, made
the Basie band the centerpiece of his first Spirituals to
Swing concert, which sold out Carnegie Hall in New York
City as a benefit for the Republican forces fighting Franco in
the Spanish Civil War.
Eventually, McShann would fill the void Basie left in Kansas
City with a swing orchestra assembled from local musicians, including,
most notably, a teenaged Kansas City native and budding alto saxophonist
named Charles Parker, Jr. In the opinion of many jazz aficionadosincluding
this writerParker would become the greatest improviser in
jazz history and the largest single influence on its subsequent
development, despite his struggle with substance abuse and premature
demise at the age of 34.
In later interviews, McShann relished telling his version of
how Parker got his famous nickname Yardbirdlater
shortened to Bird. Supposedly, a car in which they
were both riding to an engagement killed a chicken, and Parker
insisted they pull over, so he could retrieve the yardbird
and have it cooked for his dinner.
By 1939, work began drying up in Kansas City as a result of
state and federal crackdowns on the political machine, with Pendergast
himself convicted of income tax evasion and sentenced to a federal
penitentiary. Parker left for New York City, where he worked as
a dishwasher, while honing his skills in Harlem jam sessions.
McShann kept his band together by touring throughout the Midwest,
with occasional stops in Kansas City dancehalls still operating.
The Jay McShann Orchestra made its first recordingswithout
Parkerin late 1939. Parker rejoined McShann the next year
and stayed until he became a member of pianist Earl Hines
band in 1943, a group that included Dizzy Gillespie and several
other jazz modernists. In 1945, Parker and Gillespie made the
seminal early recordings of bebop-style jazz, which overwhelmed
the conventions of the large swing orchestras and transformed
jazz into its modern form.
The five 78 rpm records of the McShann band featuring Charlie
Parker solosmade for Decca Records Sepia
series, aimed specifically at black audiencesare among the
most important in jazz history because of Parkers tremendous
impact on his peers. They make great listening today. Hootie
Blues (the title refers to McShanns nickname), for
example, includes all the best elements of the Kansas City style,
McShanns skillful piano introduction, a chorus of riffs
from the band, Parkers passionate blues solo, an excellent
vocal by bluesman Walter Brown (Well, hello little girl,
dont you remember me?) and a final riff chorus.
Unfortunately, although the Jay McShann Orchestra excelled
at popular songs, the success of Browns vocal on Confessin
the Blues led Decca management to pigeon-hole the band as
The Band that Plays the Blues. Live recordings, unearthed
decades later by collectors Frank Driggs and Norman Saks, reveal
a much broader repertoire than those on the commercial recordings,
exemplified by an astounding Savoy Ballroom performance of Im
Forever Blowing Bubbles, a hoary 1919 popular song featuring
an extended, and extremely modern, Parker solo.
McShann was drafted in 1943, bringing his classic swing band
to an end. He unsuccessfully attempted to establish a viable jazz
orchestra after his discharge, but times had changed. While bebop
took leadership of the jazz world, McShann became a more commercially
oriented rhythm-and-blues performer. He scored a huge hit backing
vocalist Jimmy Witherspoon on a cover recording of Aint
Nobodys Business.
McShann returned to Kansas City in 1950, where he raised his
three daughters and performed regularly in local establishments.
He toured sporadically, including a highly rewarding 1969 European
trip, made occasional recordings and settled comfortably into
the role of an elder statesman. He was prominently featured in
the excellent 1980 homage to the Kansas City golden age, Last
of the Blue Devils, was interviewed in Ken Burns uneven
2001documentary Jazz, and performed during the piano
segment of Clint Eastwoods 2003 PBS mini-series The
Blues.
On recordings, McShann displayed a high degree of piano skill,
with elements of boogie-woogie underlying his always imaginative
melodic improvisations. He never developed the more modern sound
of his Kansas City contemporary, Mary Lou Williams, however, and
sounded increasingly dated as the years rolled on. Eventually,
he began singing as well, sounding remarkably like Walter Brown.
McShann was a tireless advocate of his musical tradition. Youd
just have some people sitting around, and youd hear some
cat play, and somebody would say, This cat, he sounds like
hes from Kansas City, the Associated Press quoted
McShann as saying in a 2003 interview promoting his CD Goin
to Kansas City, which received a Grammy nomination in the
traditional blues category. It was the Kansas City style.
They knew it on the East Coast. They knew it on the West Coast.
They knew it up north, and they knew it down south.
McShann performed live until last year, when deteriorating
health made it impossible for him to continue. It was only a few
days before his death, however, when he entered St. Lukes
Hospital in Kansas City complaining of a respiratory infection.
For those interested in learning more about this fascinating
chapter in the history of jazz, I strongly recommend Kansas
City Jazz: From Ragtime to Bebopa History, by Frank
Driggs and Chuck Haddix (Oxford University Press, 2005).
See Also:
What bebop
meant to jazz history
[22 May 1998]
Artie Shaw: a remarkable
twentieth-century American life
[4 January 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |