Randy Weston — R.I.P.
Posted: September 2nd, 2018, 3:55 pm
Randy Weston, Pianist Who Traced Roots of Jazz to Africa, Dies at 92
Randy Weston performing in 1963. His playing and composing emphasized the African roots of jazz.CreditCreditChuck Stewart/Mosaic Records
By Giovanni Russonello
Sept. 1, 2018
Randy Weston, an esteemed pianist whose music and scholarship advanced the argument — now broadly accepted — that jazz is, at its core, an African music, died on Saturday at his home in Brooklyn. He was 92.
His death was confirmed by his lawyer, Gail Boyd.
On his earliest recordings, in the mid-1950s for the Riverside label, Mr. Weston almost fit the profile of a standard bebop musician: He recorded jazz standards and galloping original tunes in a typical small-group format. But his sharply cut harmonies and intense, gnarled rhythms conveyed a manifestly Afrocentric sensibility, one that was slightly more barbed and rugged than the popular hard-bop sound of the day.
Early on, he exhibited a distinctive voice as a composer. “Hi-Fly,” which he first released in 1958 on the LP “New Faces at Newport,” became a standard. And he eventually distinguished himself as a solo pianist, reflecting the influence of his main idol, Thelonious Monk.
But more than Monk, Mr. Weston liked constantly to reshape his cadences, rarely lingering on a steady pulse.
Full Story
Randy Weston performing in 1963. His playing and composing emphasized the African roots of jazz.CreditCreditChuck Stewart/Mosaic Records
By Giovanni Russonello
Sept. 1, 2018
Randy Weston, an esteemed pianist whose music and scholarship advanced the argument — now broadly accepted — that jazz is, at its core, an African music, died on Saturday at his home in Brooklyn. He was 92.
His death was confirmed by his lawyer, Gail Boyd.
On his earliest recordings, in the mid-1950s for the Riverside label, Mr. Weston almost fit the profile of a standard bebop musician: He recorded jazz standards and galloping original tunes in a typical small-group format. But his sharply cut harmonies and intense, gnarled rhythms conveyed a manifestly Afrocentric sensibility, one that was slightly more barbed and rugged than the popular hard-bop sound of the day.
Early on, he exhibited a distinctive voice as a composer. “Hi-Fly,” which he first released in 1958 on the LP “New Faces at Newport,” became a standard. And he eventually distinguished himself as a solo pianist, reflecting the influence of his main idol, Thelonious Monk.
But more than Monk, Mr. Weston liked constantly to reshape his cadences, rarely lingering on a steady pulse.
Full Story