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- <text id=93TT2305>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Dizzy Gillespie:1917-1993
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CULTURE, Page 57
- Two Who Transformed Their Worlds
- Dizzy Gillespie 1917-1993
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JAY COCKS
- </p>
- <p> That is the question: To be or not...to bop. The
- problem, first stated by an English playwright of some note, was
- rephrased and repunctuated by John Birks Gillespie in 1979 and
- used as the title of a free-swinging memoir. To Be or Not...to Bop: hip, funny, silly, fractured, rhythmic--each word
- is like a snap of the fingers--pointed, pertinent, dizzy. Very
- Dizzy.
- </p>
- <p> Did anyone ever call him John? When Dizzy Gillespie died
- last week at age 75, after a bout with pancreatic cancer, he
- was known the world over by his nickname. He was busted out of
- the Cab Calloway band in 1941 for excessive clowning, so legend
- has it; Calloway, no sobersides himself, could not have
- foreseen the full implications of the Gillespie handle. In any
- case, Dizzy required elbow room; he was preparing to break a
- mess of musical rules. Jazz, always loose, was about to be set
- free.
- </p>
- <p> Bebop: a revolution in two syllables. It jumped off of
- swing into the high ozone, on the wings of two unlikely angels,
- Gillespie and Charlie Parker. Together, and with the
- collaboration of a tight core of players like Thelonious Monk,
- Kenny Clarke and a few others, Dizzy and Bird drove jazz back
- into itself, straight through its heart and out again, sounding
- brand-new. Parker--the racked jazz saint and junkie genius--fit the hipster stereotype more than his good-timing,
- glad-handing buddy. But in matters of chops and talent,
- Gillespie played a supporting role to no one.
- </p>
- <p> There have been three jazz trumpet players who could be
- called, with no second thought, great: Louis Armstrong, Dizzy
- and Miles Davis. Satch played a sweet, raucous sound that kept
- its roots strong in the gumbo of hometown New Orleans. Dizzy
- knew how to nurse a tune too, but his armor-piercing solos tore
- those roots right up and replanted them farther north, in the
- new welter of urban angst. But his music, always intrepid,
- remained fleet. It was spontaneous reinvention in rhythm, a kind
- of fun that tweaked the far edges but never crossed them.
- </p>
- <p> "Dizzy was the catalyst, the man who inspired us all," the
- great drummer Max Roach has said. "By the time he came to New
- York he was playing in all the Big Bands. He was the one who
- told us about a saxophone player in Kansas City named Charlie
- Parker or a bass player in Minneapolis named Oscar Pettiford."
- Dizzy brought them all together to play at a fabled Harlem joint
- called Minton's, where, after the regular sessions, strange
- scrambled rhythms and impossible harmonies would float toward
- the dawn. It was, indeed, a new day.
- </p>
- <p> Bop was fractured, urgent, wired. It did not go down easy.
- In fact, its strenuous experimentation not only polarized the
- jazz audience but lost jazz itself much popular support. As if
- realizing this and trying to reach some sort of no-sweat
- accommodation, Gillespie turned up the volume on his
- personality. His goatee, heavy-black-frame specs and frequent
- beret became prototypical hepcat mufti. His voice, which sounded
- like a thunderclap wanting to purr, could be heard on cool
- novelties like Swing Low, Sweet Cadillac. His cheeks expanded
- so far past normal size when he played his horn that he looked,
- on the bandstand, as if he were on exhibit in an aquarium.
- </p>
- <p> And the horn. It was as much a trademark as Armstrong's
- handkerchief. Story goes that in 1953, Dizzy returned to a
- recording session and found that his trumpet had been sat upon,
- or fallen upon, or in some way molested. It was bent into a
- near-perfect 45 degrees angle. He played it anyway and liked
- what he heard; he used to say he could hear himself better. And
- that was pretty much the way he was heard, too, from then on.
- </p>
- <p> The horn was no more a stunt than all his roguish jokiness
- though. The music flowed from a kind of high spirit, a
- purposeful passion that the horn symbolized and the silliness
- deflected. There was nothing slight or offhand about the way he
- played, or how he lived. Born in South Carolina in 1917, he
- began to teach himself trombone and trumpet two years after his
- father--a bricklayer by trade and a weekend bandleader by
- calling--had passed on; before he left his teens he was
- playing professionally with the Frankie Fairfax band and had got
- himself his nickname.
- </p>
- <p> It was in those years too that he met the dancer Lorraine
- Willis, to whom he would be married ever after. He steered wide
- of the sundry social temptations of the musical life and, in
- 1968, became a member of the Baha'i faith. Personally, Dizzy was
- on the square and strictly legit; he fronted the first jazz
- band ever sent on a subsidized tour by the State Department,
- referred to President Dwight Eisenhower as "Pops," got Jimmy
- Carter to sing Salt Peanuts at the White House and copped one
- of those fancy medals from the Kennedy Center. He even ran for
- the highest office a couple of times himself (sample campaign
- lyric: "Your politics oughta be a groovier thing/ So get a good
- President who's willing to swing"), announcing that he would
- make Malcolm X Attorney General. None of this prankishness or
- social acceptance blunted the edge of his music: he initiated,
- almost singlehandedly, what's now called Afro-Cuban jazz, and
- as late as last year was still on the road, chops intact,
- wringing every note he could out of life.
- </p>
- <p> He claimed he seldom listened to his records "because
- after you've played it, it's all gone anyway." When Dizzy laid
- it down, though, it changed tomorrow, and it will last forever.
- That's bebop, and about that there is no question.
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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