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Meeting the Underdog
By John Sobol
On June 3,1989 I spent the better part of three hours onstage at
Alice Tully Hall in New York's Lincoln Centre alongside Gunther
Schuller, John Handy, Wynton Marsalis, John Hicks and literally
dozens of other great musicians in what was called by the New York
Times, “the jazz event of the decade.” It was an amazing
experience. Here’s how it happened…
Back then I was the jazz critic for the Montreal Gazette, the oldest
daily newspaper in Canada. One of my friends was Andrew Homzy, a
musician and bandleader who was also the head of Concordia University’s
jazz department. (He still is, I think.) One day Andy told me a
story. Some years after the death of Charles Mingus in 1979, he
had called up the legendary bassist ‘s widow, Sue, and asked
her whether she had any of Charles’ old charts in her possession.
She said ‘sure, come have a look’. Andy was right around
the corner in downtown Manhattan and moments later he found himself
sifting through hundreds of pages of the great composer’s
original handwritten compositions. It was quite a find.
Eventually Andy catalogued every page in that pile with a scholar’s
care. But one thing was bugging him. Scattered amongst the charts
for Pithecanthropus Erectus, for Jump Monk, for
Haitian Fight Song and other revered tunes, were these
large-format orchestral pages that he couldn’t identify. There
seemed to be hundreds of them. And what’s more, they all seemed
to be part of the same work because the measures were numbered consecutively
well into the thousands. And they weren’t for quintet or sextet
but they were detailed orchestrations for a 30-piece band! What
the hell was this huge composition written in Charles’ own
hand?
Eventually Andy solved the mystery. The piece was called Epitaph
and it had been intentionally buried by Mingus after its only attempted
performance resulted in the most disastrous and humiliating night
of the great artist’s musical life. Back in 1962 Mingus had
assembled a top-notch 33-piece band that included Clark Terry, Pepper
Adams, Jaki Byard, Zoot Sims and Toshiko Akiyoshi, among other jazz
greats, to perform a 2 1/2-hour piece in 18 sections. But the music
was late getting to the musicians – the sheer volume of hand-copied
of parts was enormous – and the band had almost no time to
rehearse. On the day of the performance there were scribes copying
charts in the wings as the band sight-read the complex music. With
the volcanic Mingus driving the band in his unique and ferocious
way, the band was stressed to the limit. As the concert progressed,
the venue-owner objected to the length of the performance. At the
stoke of midnight he shut off the power, plunging the entire hall
into darkness. It was bedlam. Mingus was crushed.
The concert – such as it was -– had been recorded and
eventually portions of it were released on the United Artist label
as The Town Hall Concert. But Mingus never mentioned Epitaph
again, and eventually people forgot it had ever existed. He cannibalized
it once in a while by pulling out sections and arranging them for
his small ensembles. It wasn’t until Andy uncovered all of
this 30 years later that it was learned that songs that had appeared
on albums such as Black Saint and the Sinner Lady
and Mingus Ah-Um had originally been part
of Epitaph.
So, now that he had pieced it all together and reassembled this
epic work (without a doubt the single most ambitious composition
in the history of jazz at the time it was written), what was next?
To Andy it was obvious, the music had to be played. And properly
this time. Although he could have put himself in charge (his own
big band was terrific) he brought on board Gunther Schuller, famed
musicologist, conductor and President of the New England Conservatory
of Music, among many other achievements. Schuller and Andy, along
with Sue Mingus spent several years preparing until finally, in
late 1989, they were ready.
This was the story that Andy had told me in Montreal. I was –
needless to say – blown away. Then Andy asked if I’d
like to accompany him to New York for the week of rehearsals. I
was stunned. And so I went, feeling incredibly grateful and fortunate.
That week was extraordinary. The band was truly the crème
de la crème of various jazz scenes. Among the players were
Sir Roland Hanna on piano, George Adams on tenor sax, John Abercrombie
on guitar, Urbie Green on trombone, Reggie Williams on bass –
the list went on and on. And other wonderful players who had played
with Mingus but weren’t in the band – like drummer Paul
Motian and trumpeter Marcus Belgrave – also dropped by regularly.
Stanley Crouch was around a lot. (I recall having a beer with him
and being told by Stanley that he had ascertained that Charlie Parker
had died from hitting his head on the curb after being punched by
Art Blakey, but that he couldn’t write about it for fear of
being sued by Art.) And the band was huge. 6 trumpets, 7 saxes,
4 trombones, 2 basses, 2 pianos, drums, guitar, percussion, tuba,
vibes. Wow.
Ironically, the rehearsals were plagued by the same problems that
had caused Mingus so much trouble 30 years earlier. This time a
new computer program was being used to print out the charts but
it wasn’t working properly and time was running out. The day
before the highly-publicized concert at Lincoln Centre the band
was still playing some parts of the 3-hour piece for the first time.
And the music was complex. Some of it was really tricky. Guys were
sweating. At one point. Drummer Victor Lewis threw up his hands.
He was frustrated because he had to read 5,000 measures of music.
His chart was as thick as a small telephone book. “How can
I possibly do this by myself?” he asked. “Can’t
you get someone to turn pages for me?” The room went silent.
Gunther, who was conducting, looked around and said, “is there
anyone here who can turn pages for Victor?”
I read music but I still wasn’t sure what I was doing when
I put up my hand. But nobody doubted me and so off I went. I pulled
up a chair next to one of jazz’s most respected drummers and
started following Mingus’ music.
And so it was that the next night, before a sold out gala crowd,
I found myself onstage at Lincoln Centre, wedged between Victor
Lewis and Snooky Young, who was the nearest and most senior member
of a trumpet section that also included Randy Brecker, Lou Soloff,
Joe Wilder, Wynton Marsalis and Mingus stalwart Jack Walrath. It
was awe-inspiring.
Earlier in the day, during sound check, Andy had nudged me. “See
that guy,” he said, nodding towards a solitary figure sitting
about 30 rows up in Alice Tully Hall. “That’s Jimmy
Knepper. You should go talk to him.” So I did. It was significant
seeing Jimmy Knepper there because he had been an integral part
of many of Mingus’ most celebrated recordings. By rights he
should have been part of this. But he wasn’t. And even before
I sat down I thought I knew why. Many years earlier, Mingus –
in one of his moods ---– had taken a punch at him onstage.
The punch had connected and broken Knepper’s jaw. His playing
had never been the same. And as far as I knew he’d never played
– or spoken – with Mingus again. Yet here he was, watching,
and listening. We talked for a while. He was still a little bitter,
still resentful of Mingus. He told me the story -– no doubt
for the millionth time – of how Mingus had busted his chops,
and he ran him down a bit musically, saying it was the arranger
Gene Rowland who had done a lot of the orchestration of Epitaph.
Jimmy Knepper had of course been part of that original Town Hall
concert. He had been a great player.
At last the concert was almost underway. Looking at drummer Victor
Lewis, I could tell he was worried. He had to hold this huge band
together for 3 hours. But that didn’t stop him from kibbitzing
with Snooky Young, admiring the genteel trumpet man’s red
leather shoes. (Snooky, like alto saxist Jerome Richardson, tuba-ist
Eddie Bert and a couple of others playing at Lincoln Centre, had
been on the original Mingus band performing the music back in 1962
at the Town Hall!) and I myself was wearing a silk suit I’d
had tailored in Bangkok a few years earlier. Everyone was dressed
to the nines. This was an event. There were speeches, By Sue Mingus
and I can’t recall who else. And then the music started.
The band performed spectacularly. Among the highlights etched in
my memory are: Wynton Marsalis playing a dirtier, meaner and more
gorgeous lowdown solo than I ever imagined he was capable of; a
plunger solo by trombonist and former Ellingtonian Britt Woodman
that left me oozing with funk; George Adams bobbing and weaving
with hawkish fury; cascading saxy grooves and massive brassy climaxes,
all driven by the propulsive rhythmic intensity and sublime artistry
of Victor Lewis. Of course, there were times when he got lost, and
once or twice I was actually able to point to the chart and say
“we’re here”, and know what I was talking about.
And one time dignified white-haired Snooky Young leaned over to
me and whispered, “Where the hell are we?” But that
particular time I was as lost as he was.
At one point in the concert there was a stretch of 20 or 30 minutes
where we had determined I wasn’t needed. So I slipped offstage
and out into the audience, where I watched the show with the mesmerized
crowd. The band was terrific. All the spotty bits in rehearsal shone
like diamonds, crystal clear, perfectly etched. It was such a success
that the entire band subsequently toured the world performing the
music, although I didn't get to go along...
That night I went back to my hotel and typed up an article describing
my experience. What a coup, I thought, for my newspaper, that their
jazz critic should be sitting in the band for this historic event.
I wrote about what it had been like onstage and faxed my article
in. For some reason, however, my editor thought my ‘subjective’
review sucked and he rewrote it as if I had been just another critic
in the audience. What a jerk. What a waste. It was one of the reasons
I quit mainstream journalism shortly thereafter. And so I never
did tell anyone this story, not in print anyway. Until now.
The next day Andy and I no longer had a hotel room. He ended up
staying somewhere else, I’m not sure where, but I ended up
sleeping a couple of nights on the floor of Sue Mingus’ living
room, under the shadow of Charles’ four looming basses. Charles
Mingus. I could feel the man’s presence. His music –
and some of his spirit – had gotten into me. And I do believe
it’s still there.
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