HISTORY OF JAZZ
Part 6: Hard Bop
In some ways the history of the hard bop genre
is the history of all modern post-bop jazz. The strains
of blues, gospel, and R&B that figured in the music
of many hard bop musicians led to the development of soul
jazz, which eventually led to the development of fusion
and electric experiments in jazz. There were also developments
such as the organ/tenor sax combo, which brought bluesy
Hammond B-3 organ sounds and the open sounds of a variety
of hard-driving R&B tenor sax players. Bebop had set
jazz and R&B on divergent paths, and cool jazz further
solidified jazz music’s status as an art music, but
hard bop seemed designed to reconcile the two and to incorporate
newly-developing elements of black music into the jazz genre.
Hard bop truly began as a genre with a series
of recordings made and released in 1954. Art Blakey led
a group that played at Birdland and featured pianist Horace
Silver, bassist Curley Russell, trumpet player Clifford
Brown, and saxophonist Lou Donaldson. The two-volume recording
A Night at Birdland With the Art Blakey Quintet
was groundbreaking and pointed to future developments. That
same year, a newly clean Miles Davis, who had conquered
his heroin addiction, recorded the album Walkin’
for Prestige with an all-star group that included Silver,
Kenny Clarke, Percy Heath, J.J. Johnson, and Lucky Thompson.
The track “Walkin’” heralded the arrival
of a new paradigm in jazz with its relaxed tempo and straightforward,
bluesy melody. Davis’s soloing, emphasizing the use
of space, was particularly effective in this setting, and
the album, along with subsequent live performances, heralded
Miles’s comeback. It is interesting to note that Miles
was important in the development of the hard bop sound and
sensibility, which stood in direct opposition to the ethos
of the cool sound that Miles had also pioneered.
Blakey and Silver made another recording at
the end of 1954 entitled Horace Silver and the Jazz
Messengers. The album featured bassist Doug Watkins,
trumpet player Kenny Dorham, and tenor sax player Hank Mobley,
and featured the distinctive, simple, blues-based melodies
that would become Silver’s calling card as well as
the aggressive rhythms that became associated with Blakey.
Clifford Brown, who had recorded several Blue Note albums
including the live set with Blakey, joined drummer Max Roach
on Mercury Records’ Emarcy label to form the Clifford
Brown/Max Roach Quintet, which featured Richie Powell on
piano, George Morrow on bass, and Harold Land, a West Coast
tenor saxophonist who was a top-notch bebop player. This
band also laid down elements of what came to be considered
the hard bop style, with Sonny Rollins replacing Land near
the time of the group’s final recordings. Unfortunately,
Brown was killed in a car crash in June of 1956. Meantime,
Blakey began to hatch what would become known as The Jazz
Messengers, a cooperative that became a breeding ground
for the best jazz talent from the mid-fifties right into
the 1980s. Blakey kept the name Jazz Messengers when the
original group went in different directions. Subsequent
versions included Jackie McLean, Bill Hardman, and Donald
Byrd (1956), Lee Morgan, Benny Golson, Bobby Timmons, and
Jymie Merritt (1958). It was this 1958 version of the band
that recorded the classic album Moanin’,
with Timmons coming to the fore as a composer and arranger.
The tune “Moanin’” follows a typical blues
pattern, and demonstrates clearly that hard bop was about
a certain melodic simplicity even though soloists still
used this basic backdrop as a base for virtuosic solo adventures.
The interplay between Lee Morgan and Benny Golson also provided
a strong blueprint for later editions of the band.
Golson was later replaced by Wayne Shorter,
who became the band’s musical director and composed
numerous songs for the group. His playing also fit well
with the group’s overall dynamic, and this version
of the Messengers distinguished itself on a variety of recordings
including The Big Beat and A Night In Tunisia.
When Morgan left, Freddie Hubbard was brought in to fill
the trumpet chair, and other alumni of this band include
pianist Cedar Walton and trombonist Curtis Fuller. Shorter
eventually left this consummate small group to join another,
the “Second Great Quintet” of Miles Davis, which
included Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams,
the band that further expanded the reaches of small group
jazz and carried Miles all the way to his first experiments
with electronic instruments and rock beats.
Meanwhile Horace Silver, graduate of the first
Jazz Messengers sessions, was continuing to pursue a path
that led through the blues, R&B, and gospel. Compositions
like “Sister Sadie” demonstrated his compositional
aesthetic, and he recorded a string of albums that explore
similar areas, including Song For My Father and
The Jody Grind. Other musicians were also exploring
some of the same thematic components and producing music
that was as much a part of popular black music of the ‘60s
as the music of leading R&B and soul recording artists
of the day. These included guitarist Wes Montgomery, whose
use of unison octaves became a trademark sound, organist
Jimmy Smith, who was influenced by blues organists and whose
funky organ sound became an influence in the burgeoning
acid jazz movement of the 1980s, and saxophonist Julian
“Cannonball” Adderley, who fused the exquisite
harmonic conception of Charlie Parker with the funky blues-based
sensibilities of artists like Ray Charles. The music of
these artists was sometimes called “soul jazz”
because of its mixture of jazz’s improvisation and
harmonic conception with the blues-based melodies of R&B.
Smith proved to be a major inspiration to
later jazz organists, including Jack McDuff, Jimmy McGriff,
and Richard “Groove” Holmes. Many jazz purists
deride the Hammond B-3 players, judging them to be playing
blues or soul music and outside the parameters of jazz,
but there’s no doubt that these organists were bona
fide jazz players. McDuff led a quartet with tenor sax player
Red Holloway, drummer Joe Dukes, and a very young guitarist
named George Benson, a group that absolutely sizzled. Organist
Jimmy “Hammond” Smith and saxophonist Houston
Person played together in one of the premiere organ/tenor
bands of the 1960s and ‘70s; Person later hooked up
with Richard “Groove” Holmes as well. Saxophonist
Illinois Jacquet worked with organists Milt Buckner and
Wild Bill Davis, and Jimmy McGriff continues to be a force,
releasing the recent album McGriff Avenue.
Soul Jazz may be seen as a further outgrowth
of hard bop, but it should be noted that many hard bop players
remained very clearly within the confines of mainstream
jazz even while mining components of blues and R&B.
Others, like Jackie McLean, Dexter Gordon, and Sonny Rollins,
to name but three, were influenced by hard bop, but continued
to mine the more harmonically complex areas of bebop itself.
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