http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/27/arts/music/buddy-defranco-versatile-jazz-clarinetist-dies-at-91.html
Buddy DeFranco, the innovative clarinetist who rose from the remains of the swing era to forge new and lasting prominence
as the instrument's pre-eminent interpreter of bebop, died on Wednesday in Panama City, Fla. He was 91.
His death was confirmed by his wife, Joyce. From 1939, the year he graduated from a high school music program in
Philadelphia, until just a few years ago, Mr. DeFranco was rarely off a stage, large or small.
After a decade of roadwork with big-name dance bands, Mr. DeFranco — tall, handsome and not yet 30 — was poised to inherit
the throne shared for years by Benny Goodman, the King of Swing, and Artie Shaw, the King of the Clarinet. But by the time
that moment arrived, the big-band clarinet realm had diminished significantly, overtaken by the saxophone and modern jazz.
Captivated by the complex, challenging new sounds and increasingly aware that the music market was evolving, Mr. DeFranco
moved quickly to carve out a fresh career in bebop, a perilous undertaking on an instrument that requires nearly superhuman
skill and dexterity to keep up with bebop's sometimes freakishly fast tempos.
"Buddy is unique because he was really the only clarinetist who caught on to the new jazz language," Dan Morgenstern, the jazz
critic and historian, said in an interview in 2012. Unlike Goodman, Mr. Morgenstern said, "he had an ear to deal harmonically with
modern jazz" — and unlike Shaw, who ultimately gave up playing, he was more consistent and more disciplined.
Over a 70-year career, Mr. DeFranco became a perennial fan favorite, winning Down Beat magazine's annual popularity poll 20
times and drawing fresh audiences with his warm tone and effortless technique. In a business known for the volatility — even
mortal dissipation — of its stars, Mr. DeFranco was noted, and occasionally needled, for his relentless daily practice regimen. On
the bandstand he was focused yet easygoing, preferring to showcase fluid playing over instrument-waving histrionics.
His first big job was playing alto saxophone and clarinet with the band led by the trumpeter Johnny (Scat) Davis, followed by
stints with Gene Krupa, Charlie Barnet and Tommy Dorsey. From the late 1940s on, he became known for his more intimate
collaborations with other greats, among them the pianists George Shearing, Count Basie, Art Tatum and Oscar Peterson
and the drummer Art Blakey.
After a brief, unsuccessful stint as the leader of his own big band in 1951, he moved on to small-group performances around
the country until 1966, when he returned to swing and a steady income, taking charge of the still-popular Glenn Miller Orchestra
for eight years.
Mr. DeFranco's crucial career change did not come all at once but evolved through the '40s, as the saxophone, long the
stalwart of big-band woodwind sections, moved into greater solo prominence and even greater stature as the driving sound
of bebop, with the alto saxophonist Charlie Parker as its prophet.
"DeFranco, unbearably challenged by Charlie Parker, attacked bebop head-on and mastered it," Whitney Balliett wrote in a
New Yorker magazine profile in 1990. "He developed such fluency and invention and speed that he was considered the
supreme jazz clarinetist. His work has never faltered, and he has kept the instrument alive in jazz simply by playing it so well."
Mr. DeFranco's goal, he told the jazz writer Ted Panken in 1999, was putting his own stamp on whatever music he was
playing "so that you become an original, so that people will say, when they hear your record: 'That's who it is. That's Bird.
That's Art Tatum. That's Oscar Peterson. That's Buddy.' "
"I had about six careers during the last 60 years," Mr. DeFranco said. "Periodically, I'll envelop a new concept on the clarinet,
stay with that for a while, almost discarding what I was doing before, though not quite. I gradually wound up with a sensible
mixture, combining whatever new thing I was doing with my earlier way of playing."
But dealing with the ferociously fast rhythms and chord changes of modern jazz is often trickier on a clarinet than on the
more forgiving saxophone. For one thing, the saxophone is an octave instrument; if you press a key to go up an octave,
the fingering is still the same. But a clarinet goes up 12 tones, and the fingering changes, a challenge Mr. DeFranco often
mentioned in interviews.
"It's hard," he told The New York Times in 1983. "For a clarinet to keep pace with a contemporary big band, or with a
rhythm section, takes a lot of energy. It could take 20 years off your life. Young people keep saying to me, 'I didn't know
you could play modern jazz on a clarinet.' "
Boniface Ferdinand Leonardo DeFranco was born on Feb. 17, 1923, in Camden, N.J., and grew up in Philadelphia, one of
five children. His father, Leonardo, an immigrant from Italy, lost his eyesight to an infection and eventually trained to be a
piano tuner. He was also an amateur guitarist who played with a band called the Jovial Night Owls, whose members were
all blind.
Mr. DeFranco's mother, the former Louise Giordano, who worked in clerical and factory jobs, was, he recalled, frail and
high-strung and was committed to a state mental hospital, where she died after 35 years. With their father struggling to
make ends meet, the children were taken in by an aunt and uncle.
When Buddy was 5, his father coached him on his first instrument, the mandolin, which he played by ear, but by 8, he had
switched to the clarinet and the saxophone. He continued his musical education at the Mastbaum School of Music in
Philadelphia (now the Jules Mastbaum Technical/Vocational School). He graduated at 16 and was hired by Scat Davis
shortly after that.
Mr. DeFranco was married three times and divorced twice. After a brief first marriage, he wed Mitchell Vanston; they
had a son, Christopher, who died in 2001. In addition to his wife, whom he married in 1975, he is survived by their
son, Charles.
Mr. DeFranco recorded dozens of albums; his 1958 album "Cross Country Suite" won a Grammy Award for its
composer-arranger, Nelson Riddle. An avid experimenter with musical styles and instrumental combinations, he also
collaborated with the virtuoso accordionist Tommy Gumina in the 1960s. Through the '80s and '90s, Mr. DeFranco
and the vibraphonist Terry Gibbs often performed together.
He was named a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master, the country's highest honor for jazz musicians, in
2006. But his quest to conquer the clarinet and its challenges never ceased.
"You know, this is all tricky stuff," Mr. DeFranco told the jazz critic Howard Mandel. "Once I was doing some school
clinics, and one of the great symphonic clarinet players, Daniel Bonade of the Philadelphia Orchestra, was doing another
clinic in the same school. I used to pick the brains of as many clarinet players as I could, to see how they got their
sound, what reeds they used, everything. So I went to hear his clinic, and at the end I sidled up and said, 'When do
you finally master the clarinet?' And he said: 'Master the clarinet? That’s the funniest thing I ever heard.' "
R.I.P.
Buddy DeFranco, jazz clarinetist, age 91 — R.I.P.
- Ron Thorne
- Fadda Timekeeper
- Posts: 3072
- Joined: June 27th, 2013, 4:14 pm
- Location: Anchorage, Alaska
Re: Buddy DeFranco, jazz clarinetist, age 91 — R.I.P.
Jazz clarinet great Buddy DeFranco dead at 91
Buddy DeFranco, seen here playing with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra in 2007, died Wednesday in Panama City, Fla. He was 91.
(William Rice/Chicago Tribune)
December 25, 2014
Howard Reich
Chicago Tribune
Buddy DeFranco, one of the most virtuosic and musically accomplished clarinetists in the history of jazz, died Wednesday night in Panama City, Fla., said his wife of 44 years, Joyce DeFranco. He was 91.
DeFranco, more than anyone, brought the clarinet into the rarefied realm of bebop. As Charlie Parker did with alto saxophone, Dizzy Gillespie with trumpet and J.J. Johnson with trombone, DeFranco proved that his instrument could finesse the extraordinary technical hurdles of bebop music of the 1940s.
DeFranco also had copious performance and recording experience, working with Gene Krupa, Tommy Dorsey, Count Basie, Oscar Peterson, Billie Holiday and practically everyone else of his era. He won the country's most prestigious jazz honor, the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Fellowship, in 2006.
DeFranco last performed publicly at age 89, said his wife. A public celebration of his life will take place next year, she added.
Buddy DeFranco, seen here playing with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra in 2007, died Wednesday in Panama City, Fla. He was 91.
(William Rice/Chicago Tribune)
December 25, 2014
Howard Reich
Chicago Tribune
Buddy DeFranco, one of the most virtuosic and musically accomplished clarinetists in the history of jazz, died Wednesday night in Panama City, Fla., said his wife of 44 years, Joyce DeFranco. He was 91.
DeFranco, more than anyone, brought the clarinet into the rarefied realm of bebop. As Charlie Parker did with alto saxophone, Dizzy Gillespie with trumpet and J.J. Johnson with trombone, DeFranco proved that his instrument could finesse the extraordinary technical hurdles of bebop music of the 1940s.
DeFranco also had copious performance and recording experience, working with Gene Krupa, Tommy Dorsey, Count Basie, Oscar Peterson, Billie Holiday and practically everyone else of his era. He won the country's most prestigious jazz honor, the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Fellowship, in 2006.
DeFranco last performed publicly at age 89, said his wife. A public celebration of his life will take place next year, she added.
- moldyfigg
- Founding Member
- Posts: 435
- Joined: July 1st, 2013, 9:07 am
- Location: Behind the Orange curtain
Re: Buddy DeFranco, jazz clarinetist, age 91 — R.I.P.
Buddy was the first clarinetist I can recall who truly played bebop. He gave us so much. He'll be featured during our cocktail hour tonight.
Bright moments
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests