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Bassist from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
who started out on the piano but drifted toward the bass in high school in
order to fill a void in its jazz band.
He became a fixture on the local club circuit and was soon being
solicited by touring bands, but his mom laid down the law and encouraged
him to finish school. He did
just that, but not long after graduating high school, he began playing
professionally with artists such as Jimmy Hinsley and Luis
"Snookum" Russell.
It was New York City that allured Ray,
and in 1945, he headed to the Big Apple. He was literally an overnight
sensation. A chance meeting
with his friend Hank Jones led to an introduction to Dizzy Gillespie. Dizzy offered him a job that very
night. His first rehearsal was
the next day. Imagine his
surprise when he found out his fellow band-mates were Charlie Parker, Bud
Powell and Max Roach. Milt
Jackson joined the group shortly thereafter, and he and Brown became joined
at the hip, so much so that they earned the nickname "the
twins". The two of them
made the cut when Dizzy decided to form a big band in 1946. Dizzy was very generous about
spotlighting Ray as a soloist and songwriter: " One Bass Hit" and
"Two Bass Hit" are examples of the former, "Ray's Idea"
and "That's Earl Brother", the latter.
In 1947, Ella Fitzgerald did a stint with
the band and Ella and Ray hit it off right away. They were wed the following
year. In 1949, another musical
marriage began, and it would last longer than Ella's and Ray's. It happened at Carnegie Hall, when
Buddy Rich dumped out of his commitment to play in concert with Oscar
Peterson , and Ray was recruited to take the stage. Their chemistry was immediate and
lasting. In the meantime,
Dizzy's outfit disbanded and the rhythm section continued to perform and
record together as The Modern Jazz Quartet.
It was not long, however, before Ray
would help co-found The
Oscar Peterson Trio . In
1952, the Brown-Fitzgerald duo was no more, although they managed to stay
friends and continued to make music together, albeit literally. The
Oscar Peterson Trio had a revolving door of musicians until 1953, when Herb Ellis
signed up, and this is the most famous incarnation of the group. Their friendly and virtuosic
one-upmanship made for lively and electric performances and recordings,
including At the Concertgebouw
and At the Stratford Shakespearean
Festival.
In the late '50s, Brown moonlighted on a
quintet of Blossom Dearie albums on the Verve label. His loyalty to Oscar
Peterson , and his musical curiosity, remained unabated. He became a double threat by
learning to play the cello and invented a new musical instrument that
incorporated elements of the two instruments. It is considered to be the
inspiration for the piccolo bass.
He quit the band in 1966 and moved to
L.A., where he was soon indispensable as a session musician. Although it would have been easy for
him to gobble up all the work, he instead branched out by managing other
artists like Quincy Jones and The Modern Jazz Quartet, produced records and
live performances at the Hollywood Bowl, and wrote and published a series
of music instruction books.
He also continued to compose, and won a
Grammy Award for his song "Gravy Waltz", which Steve Allen would
eventually employ as his TV theme song. In 1972, he recorded the tribute
album, This One's for Blanton,
with Duke Ellington. The album,
dedicated to Ray's childhood idol Jimmy Blanton, was a realization of some
of Blanton's performances with Duke, circa 1939-1940.
In 1974, he helped co-found The L.A.
Four, along with Laurindo
Almeida, Shelly Manne and Bud Shank. Jeff Hamilton supplanted Shelly
Manne in 1977. The group
performed live and recorded together for about eight years. In 1983, he reunited with Milt
Jackson for an album entitled Jackson,
Johnson, Brown & Company.
Ray then formed his own trio, again with
a revolving cast of characters that stayed together for nearly a
decade. He eventually eschewed
the confines of the studio for the expanse of the road, touring for about
seven months out of the year.
In 2001, over 400 people paid tribute to him by turning out for his
75th birthday bash.
On 2nd July 2002, while
napping after a round of golf, Ray died in his sleep, hours before a
gig. He is regarded as one of
the most popular bassists that ever lived.
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Brown_(musician)
- http://www.npr.org/programs/jazzprofiles/archive/brown_ray.html
- http://members.tripod.com/~hardbop/raybrown.html
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?
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