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Charlie Parker

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Who2 Biography: Charlie Parker, Saxophonist / Bandleader / Jazz Musician
Charlie Parker
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  • Born: 29 August 1920
  • Birthplace: Kansas City, Kansas
  • Died: 12 March 1955
  • Best Known As: Influential alto saxophone player

Name at birth: Charles Christopher Parker, Jr.

Charlie Parker, nicknamed "Yardbird" ("Bird" for short), had an undistinguished early career, but ended up being one of the creators of bebop jazz in the 1940s. He played with artists such as Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis, all the while making his mark as an inventor of melodies and creative improviser. Highly influential and praised by fellow musicians, Parker had a brief career due to his troubled personal life and addictions to alcohol and heroin.

In 1988 jazz fan Clint Eastwood made a biographical movie about Parker, Bird, with Forest Whitaker in the title role.

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Charlie Parker, 1949.
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Charlie Parker, 1949. (credit: AP)
(born Aug. 29, 1920, Kansas City, Kan., U.S. — died March 12, 1955, New York, N.Y.) U.S. saxophonist and composer. He played with Jay McShann's big band (1940 – 42) and those of Earl Hines (1942 – 44) and Billy Eckstine (1944) before leading his own small groups in New York City. (A nickname acquired in the early 1940s, Yardbird, was shortened to Bird and used throughout his career.) Parker frequently worked with Dizzy Gillespie in the mid-1940s, making a series of small-group recordings that heralded the arrival of bebop as a mature outgrowth of the improvisation of the late swing era. His direct, cutting tone and unprecedented dexterity on the alto saxophone made rapid tempos and fast flurries of notes trademarks of bebop, and his complex, subtle harmonic understanding brought an altogether new sound to the music. Easily the most influential jazz musician of his generation, Parker suffered chronic drug addiction, and his early death contributed to making him a tragic legend.

For more information on Charlie Parker, visit Britannica.com.

Music Encyclopedia: Charlie Parker
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(b Kansas City, 29 Aug 1920; d New York, 12 March 1955). American jazz alto saxophonist. In 1942 he joined Earl Hines's band and in 1944 Billy Eckstine's. In New York he first led his own group, with Dizzy Gillespie. In Los Angeles, he had a nervous breakdown, exacerbated by addictions. Back in New York from 1947, he formed a quintet which recorded many of his most famous pieces. He toured Europe and had a large following, but drugs forced him into a more peripatetic life and sporadic employment. A virtuoso with distinctive tone and thorough control, he was a brilliant improviser. His line combined drive and a complex organization of pitch and rhythm; he used pitches outside the harmony, with a variety of melodic devices, but his best work retained a clear, coherent line.



Biography: Charles Christopher Parker, Jr.
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Charles Christopher Parker, Jr. (1920-1955), American musician, was one of the most widely influential soloists in jazz history.

Charlie Parker, widely known as Yardbird or Bird, was born in Kansas City, Kans., on Aug. 29, 1920. His mother bought him an alto saxophone in 1931, and in the following years he played with several prominent local big bands. In 1941 he became a member of Jay McShann's band, with which he made his first commercial recordings.

At this time Parker met Dizzy Gillespie, widely accepted as the cofounder with Parker of the jazz style that became known as bop or bebop. In 1945 they recorded the definitive titles in the new idiom. Although younger musicians quickly realized his genius, Parker met with considerable hostility from musicians of earlier stylistic persuasions. In 1946, as a result, he suffered a mental breakdown and was committed for 6 months to a sanitarium. Upon his release he formed his own quintet and worked with this format for several years, mainly in the New York City area. He also toured with Norman Granz's "Jazz at the Philharmonic" and made trips to Paris in 1949 and Scandinavia in 1950. From his teen-age years Parker had been a narcotics addict, and in the last 5 years of his life he worked irregularly as a result of physical and mental illness. On March 4, 1955, he made his final public appearance; he died 8 days later.

Parker's earliest records reveal that he was already developing the more complex harmonic approach that was characteristic of his mature work. This style is notable for a then unheard-of variety of rhythmic accentuation, harmonic complexity allied to an acute melodic sensitivity, solo lines that employ a wider range of intervals than had previously been the norm, and a disregard for the four-and eight-bar divisions of the standard jazz repertoire. This approach and his strident, even harsh, tone made it difficult for the casual listener to follow the logic of his choruses. Also, with major changes taking place in the rhythm section, it was not altogether surprising that his music sometimes met with opposition or downright incomprehension. Another facet of Parker's playing was its extraordinary technical facility, enabling him to express his ideas with the greatest clarity even at the most rapid tempos.

Parker composed a number of tunes that became jazz standards, though these were usually casually assembled items based on chord sequences of popular tunes. In terms of melodic skill, his recordings of ballads such as "Embraceable You" and "How Deep Is the Ocean" are even more revealing than his interpretations of the bebop repertoire. He spawned dozens of imitators, but his own achievements were unique.

Further Reading

Robert George Reisner, Bird: The Legend of Charlie Parker (1962), contains a great deal of material on Parker by his fellow musicians and friends, some of it more colorful than enlightening. A critical study that offers many valuable insights into Parker's music is Max Harrison, Charlie Parker (1960). See also Marvin Barrett, The Jazz Age (1959), and Albert McCarthy, Jazz on Record: A Critical Guide to the First Fifty Years, 1917-1967 (1968).

Black Biography: Charlie Parker
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jazz musician; saxophonist; composer

Personal Information

Born Charles Christopher Parker, August 29, 1920, in Kansas City, Missouri; son of Charles Parker (traveling entertainer and Pullman chef) and Addie (domestic); married Rebecca Ruffin July 25, 1936; children Francis Leon; Geraldine Marguerite Scott (dancer) April 10, 1943; Doris Snydor (hat check girl); Chan Richardson (model and dancer) July 1950; children Pree and Baird, also adopted Richardson's daughter Kim. Died March 12, 1955 in New York City. EXCEPTION: March 12, 1955 in New York City.

Career

Left school to play music at sixteen; mid 1930s played in Kansas City bands; 1937 with Buster "Prof" Smith; with Jay McShann orchestra 1940-1942; performed with Earl Hines 1942-1943; joined Billy Eckstine big band 1944; 1945 made first solo recordings in a quintet with Dizzy Gillespie; performed in California 1945-1947; first performed with Norman Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic series; recorded for Dial label 1945-1948; returned to New York in April 1947; recorded for Savoy label 1948; signed with Norman Granz's Mercury label 1948 and subsequently with recorded with Granz's Verve label; played the Paris International Jazz Festival, May 1949; recorded with strings 1949-1952; visited Scandinavia 1950; performed with various sidemen 1950-1955.

Life's Work

When alto-saxophonist Charlie Parker made his first significant solo recordings with trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie in 1945, his music had a tremendous impact on a new generation of jazz musicians. In cities across the country, jazz instrumentalists sought to play in the Parker-style. Known to fellow musicians as Yardbird, Yard, or Bird, Parker expanded the musical horizons of jazz and influenced various instrumentalists with his unique phrasing and harmonic conception. Parker drew much of his inspiration from the blues, swing jazz standards, popular song forms, Afro-Cuban music, and modern European symphonic music. While Parker's blues-based compositions elevated the form to a new creative level, his deep interest in the modern symphonic works of composers such as Igor Stravinsky and Bela Bartok inspired countless other jazzmen to study classical music. An avant-gardist of the bebop subculture, Parker's heroin addiction elevated him to cult status among hipsters, poets, and intellectuals. Despite his self-destructive lifestyle and early death, Parker remains one of the twentieth century's most innovative instrumentalists and composers.

Parker was born on August 29, 1920, in Kansas City, Kansas. His father, Charlie Sr., was a stage entertainer and his mother, a domestic of Native American descent. Raised by his mother, Parker attended Catholic schools and, not long after, became a student at Charles Sumner Elementary. In 1931 Addie took her son to live in Kansas City, Missouri, a hotbed of swing jazz and home to Tom Pendegast's political machine which, as a result of its widespread corruption, fostered the city's musical night club scene. A follower of tenor saxophonist Lester Young, Parker took up alto horn. Having never received any formal musical instruction, he faced stiff competition at local jam sessions from more seasoned musicians. Although Parker experienced humiliation at the hands of more experienced players, he persevered by practicing relentlessly and using exercise books.

Parker dropped out of school at age sixteen to pursue a career in music. His mother's full-time employment at Western Union offered Parker plenty of opportunities to experience Kansas City's nightlife and drug subculture alone. In 1937 Parker worked in Ozark mountain resort clubs, including a four-month stint with George E. Lee's band. The job with Lee's band afforded Parker ample time for private practice, and he spent hours trying to imitate the Lester Young tenor saxophone solos featured on recordings by the Count Basie Band. Back in Kansas City, he broadened his musical knowledge by performing with another influential saxophonist, Buster "Prof" Smith.

In 1938 Parker performed for several months with pianist Jay McShann's Sextet, and then moved on to New York City. On his way to New York, he stopped in Chicago where, at a breakfast dance, he sat-in with the band on saxophone. Despite his disheveled appearance, Parker's saxophone lines astounded listeners. Unable to find musical work in New York City, he washed dishes at Jimmy's Chicken Shack in Harlem. While working at Jimmy's, Parker had the opportunity to hear the brilliant house pianist, Art Tatum. As Royal W. Stokes remarked in The Jazz Scene, Art Tatum "was an important transitional figure" in Parker's musical education. Eventually, Parker performed at dime dance halls and jam sessions. At Don Walls' Chili House, his interaction with guitarist Bill "Biddy" Fleet expanded his knowledge of harmony and chord substitutions. Parker also took part in jam sessions at Clark Monroe's Uptown House in Harlem, where he worked out brilliant lines over the changes of pop standards such as his favorite showpiece, "Cherokee."

After returning to Kansas City in 1940, Parker joined Jay McShann's big band and was put in charge of organizing the reed section. "But it was no question [Parker] had a profound effort on the band," commented McShann in Talking Jazz, "...when Bird took a solo, he just lifted the band, lifted everybody." In April of 1941, Parker made his first commercial recordings with McShann's orchestra, including the Decca side "Hootie Blues." His playing on this slow blues number, though ignored by critics at the time, made an immediate impression on many saxophonists. Parker's appearance on McShann's 1942 sides "Jumpin' Blues," "Lonely Boy Blues," and "Sepian Bounce," inspired Gunther Schuller to remark in The Swing Era, "Although the 'cool' timbre and linearization of musical ideas of Lester Young are clearly the base of [Parker's] inspiration, he is also beginning to be very much his own man."

In January of 1942, Parker opened at Harlem's Savoy Ballroom. When he was not performing with McShann's orchestra, he sat in at Harlem jam sessions held at Monroe's and Minton's Playhouse. At these impromptu performances, Parker joined other jazzmen in experimenting with small ensembles and playing extended solos over complex harmonic forms built upon standard song and compositional forms. Although Parker's talent impressed his contemporaries at the jam sessions, his worsening drug habit forced McShann to fire him. Parker then bided his time between jam sessions and free lance work until December of 1942 when, through the intercession of Billy Eckstine and trumpeter Benny Harris, he found work as a tenor saxophonist in Earl "Fatha" Hines' big band which included vocalist Sarah Vaughan. However, Parker's erratic behavior forced Hines to fire him after only eight months with the band.

In 1944, Parker joined Billy Eckstine's innovative bebop big band. He often shared the bandstand with Dizzy Gillespie and several other former alumni of the Hines orchestra, including Sarah Vaughan. After a few months, Parker left Eckstine's band and played on 52nd Street with saxophonist Ben Webster, and later worked with trumpeter Cootie Williams. In February of 1945, Parker collaborated with Gillespie on sessions for the Guild label which produced the numbers "Groovin' High" and "Dizzy Atmosphere." Three months later, a session for Guild yielded "Salt Peanuts," "Shaw Nuff," "Hot House," and "Lover Man" with vocalist Sarah Vaughan. Not long after the first Guild sides were released, Parker's music divided musicians and critics into warring camps. "With Parker's emergence," noted jazz trombonist Benny Green in The Reluctant Art, "the term [jazz] had no longer a precise meaning." It forced jazz musicians to align themselves with "music that was pre-Charlie Parker or the music he was playing."

In the fall of 1945, Parker and Gillespie landed a job at the Three Deuces. Shortly thereafter, Parker's irresponsibility and disregard for promptness caused Gillespie to quit the group. Parker subsequently hired trumpeter Miles Davis to perform in a quintet which included drummer Max Roach. As Davis enthusiastically recounted in his memoir Miles, "I was nineteen years old and playing with the baddest alto saxophone player in the history of music." A month after opening at the Three Deuces, Parker debuted on the Savoy label. Under the name "Charlie Parker's Reboppers," Parker, Gillespie , Davis, Russell, and Roach recorded the classics "Ko Ko" and "Now's the Time." Gary Giddins stressed in Celebrating Bird that, ""Ko Ko' was the seminal point of departure for jazz in the postwar era. It's effect paralleled that of [Louis] Armstrong's 'West End Blues' in 1928."

As a member of the Dizzy Gillespie sextet, Parker traveled to Hollywood in December of 1945 to perform at Billy Berg's, a one- story stucco building on Vine Street. "That little band was very skillfully assembled, recalled Gillespie in To Be or Not to Bop. "Charlie Parker I hired, because he was undeniably a genius, musically, the other side of my heartbeat." Billed with the popular acts Slim Gillard and Henry "The Hipster" Gibson, the sextet played to packed houses. With the exception of a small circle of followers, however, the reaction to the sextet's modern sound was met with indifference.

After finishing their stint at Berg's, Parker and Gillespie recorded several sessions for Hollywood record store owner Ross Russell. As a result of poor organization and personnel problems, these first sessions for Russell's newly formed Dial label yielded little material. When Gillespie's band returned to New York, Parker stayed behind in Los Angeles and continued to record for Dial. Parker then took a job playing in Howard McGhee's group at the Club Finale. He also attended several Dial recording sessions which produced a wealth of music including "Yardbird Suite," "Moose the Mooche," and "A Night in Tunisia." As Ted Goia noted in West Coast Jazz, these sides "rank among the landmarks of jazz music. On a level with Louis Armstrong's Hot Fives and Hot Sevens and Ellington's work from the early 1940s, the Parker Dial sessions stand out as monumental achievements."

Despite the fine musicianship Parker displayed on the Dial recordings, his personal life was in shambles. He was living in poverty and suffering from drug withdrawal. On July 29, 1946, Parker attended a Dial recording session. Later that night a fire, presumably caused by careless smoking, destroyed his room at the Civic Hotel. Earlier that evening, Parker was seen wandering around the hotel lobby wearing only his socks. He was arrested and held in the psychiatric ward of the East Los Angeles Jail. Charged with arson, indecent exposure, and resisting arrest, Parker served a six-month term at the Camarillo State Hospital. He was released in January of 1947 and periodically experienced episodes of good health, only to succumb to eating binges and further drug abuse. Before returning to New York, Parker participated in recording sessions for Dial with pianist Erroll Garner, Howard McGhee and Wardell Gray.

Between 1947 and 1948 Parker led a quintet which included, at various times, Miles Davis, pianists Duke Jordan and Al Haig, and Max Roach. Also, extended engagements at New York nightclubs such as the Three Deuces and the Royal Roost provided Parker with a relatively stable period of work. In September of 1948, Parker cut the Savoy side "Parker's Mood." Acclaimed as one of Parker's finest blues numbers, "Parker's Mood," as Thomas Owens noted in Bebop: The Music and Its Players, "contains a number of [Parker's] standard melodic figures, but the slow tempo gives him more time than usual to reshape and combine them, and to think of new phrases. In the process he creates a beautiful and poignant picture of the poetic meaning of the blues - he 'tells his story' as though he was a great blues singer." In December of 1948 and January of 1949, Parker recorded with Machito's Afro-Cuban orchestra for the Verve label.

In May of 1949, Parker made his European debut at the Paris International Festival of Jazz. That same year, Parker hired trumpeter Red Rodney. Rodney told Ben Sidran in Talking Jazz, "Charlie Parker was very much like he played. He was beautiful. He was so proficient that the instrument was like a toy." In November of 1949, Parker recorded with a string section conducted by Mitch Miller. The session yielded the smash hit, "Just Friends." In 1950 and 1952, he continued to perform and record with string quartets and other small groups. In March of 1951 and January of 1952, Parker recorded his Latin-inspired album, South of the Border. This album, released on the Verve label, contained his popular number "My Little Suede Shoes."

In 1953 Parker joined Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, bassist Charles Mingus, and pianist Bud Powell for a performance at Toronto's Massey Hall. Around this time, Parker's constant drug use began to take its toll. Although he was still capable of delivering fine performances, his reputation for showing up in mid-performance or missing entire shows often forced club owners to hire Parker on a per set basis. After being admitted twice to Bellevue psychiatric hospital in 1954, Parker attempted suicide. On March 4, 1955, he made his final appearance at Birdland--the club named in his honor. During the performance, he exchanged harsh words onstage with Bud Powell and left the nightclub. Five days later, Parker traveled to New York City to visit his close friend and benefactor, Baroness "Nica" Ponnonica de Koenigswarter. Parker suffered an ulcer attack while visiting the Baroness, but refused to be hospitalized. He died on March 12, 1955. Autopsy results attributed the cause of death to lobar pneumonia and the long-term effects of alcohol and heroin abuse.

During his brief life, Charlie Parker inspired a school of jazz, a legion of followers, and helped to define a generation of post-war poets and writers. A few months after Parker's death, Beat writer Jack Kerouac hailed him in his book of poems Mexico City Blues, as "the perfect musician...and a great creator of forms." In recent decades, Parker has become the subject of books, film documentaries, and a feature motion picture. His music remains an internationally recognized source of musical inspiration and one of America's highest artistic achievements.

Awards

Down Beat New Star Award, 1946; elected to Down Beat Hall of Fame 1955.

Works

Selective Discography

  • Charlie Parker, The Verve Years (1952-54), Verve, 1977.
  • Charlie Parker at Storeyville, Blue Note, (recorded 1953) 1988.
  • Charlie Parker The Legendary Dial Masters Vol. I, Stash, 1989.
  • Charlie Parker Swedish Schnapps+, The Great Quintet Sessions 1919-1951, Verve, 1991.
  • Charlie Parker, "Round Midnight and Other Gems," Tel-Star, 1991.
  • Bird at St. Nick's, Original Jazz Classics, (recorded 1950) 1992.
  • Charlie Parker, Jazz at the Philharmonic 1949, Verve, 1993.
  • Bird on 52nd Street, Original Jazz Classics, (recorded 1948) 1994.
  • Charlie Parker Plays Standards, Jazz Masters 28, Verve, 1994.
  • Charlie Parker, South of the Border, (recorded 1951-1952), 1995.
  • Charlie Parker, The Complete Dial Recordings, Rhino, 1996.
  • Bird and Diz, (recorded 1948) Verve, 1997.
  • Yardbird Suite, The Ultimate Charlie Parker, Rhino, 1997.

Further Reading

  • Davis, Miles with Quincy Troupe. Miles, The Autobiography, Simon & Schuster, 1990.
  • Giddins, Gary. Celebrating Bird, The Triumph of Charlie Parker, Beech Tree Books, 1987.
  • Gillespie, Dizzy with Al Fraser. To Be, or not...To Bop, Memoirs, Doubleday & Co., 1979.
  • Gioa, Ted. West Coast Jazz: Modern Jazz in California 1945-1960, Oxford University Press, 1992.
  • Gitler, Ira. Jazz Masters of the Forties, Collier Books, 1966.
  • Green, Benny. The Reluctant Art: Five Studies in the Growth of Jazz, Da Capo, expanded edition, 1991.
  • Hennessey, Mike. Klook: The Story of Kenny Clarke, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1990.
  • Kerouac, Jack. Mexico City Blues (242) Choruses, Grove Press, 1959.
  • Owens, Thomas. Bebop: The Music and Its Players, Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Reisner, Robert, ed. Bird: The Legend of Charlie Parker, Da Capo, 1962.
  • Schuller, Gunther. The Swing Era: The Development of Jazz 1930-1945, Oxford University Press, 1989.
  • Sidran, Ben. Talking Jazz: An Oral History, expanded edition, Da Capo, 1995.
  • Stokes, Royal W. The Jazz Scene: An Informal History From New Orleans to 1990, Oxford University Press, 1990.

— John Cohassey

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Charlie "Bird" Parker
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Parker, Charlie "Bird" (Charles Christopher Parker, Jr.), 1920-55, American musician and composer, b. Kansas City, Kans. He began playing alto saxophone in 1933, and after shifting from one band to another he met Dizzy Gillespie in New York City. They formed a quintet, which in 1945 made the first bop (or bebop) records and thus became the leaders of the bop movement in jazz. Parker's brilliant improvisations, noted for their power and beauty, soon earned the admiration of innumerable musicians. He composed several instrumental quartets and made many recordings. For many years Parker was addicted to drugs, which hastened his death.

Bibliography

See biography by B. Priestley (2006); studies by L. O. Koch (1988) and G. Giddens (1998).

Quotes By: Charlie Parker
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Quotes:

"Music is your own experience, your own thoughts, your wisdom. If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn. They teach you there's a boundary line to music. But, man, there's no boundary line to art."

Artist: Charlie Parker
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Charlie Parker

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Phil Woods, Sahib Shihab, J.R. Monterose, Al Cohn, Burt Bacharach, Bill Watrous, Bob Mover, Ira Sullivan, Sonny Stitt, Tubby Hayes, Wardell Gray, Dexter Gordon, Stan Getz, Don Friedman, Allen Eager, Gene Ammons, Joe Albany, Eugene Chadbourne, Pearl Django, Stefon Harris, Sherman Irby, Jimmy Ford, Edgardo Cintron, Toots Thielemans, Roland Prince, Nathen Page, David "Fathead" Newman, Jackie McLean, Arnie Lawrence, J.J. Johnson, Willis "Gator" Jackson, Harry Lookofsky, Leroy Harris, Hampton Hawes, Eric Gale, Joe Farrell, Lou Donaldson, Johnny Dankworth, Norman Connors, John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Jeff Coffin, Wessell Anderson, Yusef Lateef, David Murray, Sugar Blue, Mary Lou Williams, Michael Howell, Alex Foster, Pete Yellin, Nabil Totah, Al Belletto, Chris Woods, Joe Temperley, Ray Pizzi, Hal McKusick, Frank Lowe, Zbigniew Namyslowski, Luis Gasca, Gerd Dudek, Klaus Doldinger, Ted Brown, Walter Benton, Gordon Beck, Fred Anderson, Leo Wright, Barney Wilen, Bob Wilber, Andrew White, Bobby Watson, Sadao Watanabe, Carlos Ward, Keith and Julie Tippett, René Thomas, John Surman, Heiner Stadler, Lew Soloff, Louis Smith, Sonny Simmons, Charlie Shoemake, Archie Shepp, Bud Shank, Tom Scott, David Schnitter, David Sanborn, Hilton Ruiz, Sonny Rollins, Perry Robinson, Sam Rivers, Jerome Richardson, Dewey Redman, Vi Redd, Enrico Rava, Julian Priester, Jean-Luc Ponty, Art Pepper, Leo Parker, Walter Norris, Oliver Nelson, Brew Moore, Hank Mobley, Charles Mingus, Ken McIntyre, Hugh Masekela, Charlie Mariano, Albert Mangelsdorff, Booker Little, George Lewis, Harold Land, Steve Kuhn, Lee Konitz, Eric Kloss, Richie Kamuca, Sheila Jordan, Plas Johnson, Dick Johnson, Leroy Jenkins, Bobby Jaspar, Ernie Henry, Jimmy Heath, Barry Harris, Joe Harriott, Slide Hampton, Johnny Griffin, Grant Green, Herb Geller, Art Farmer, Jon Faddis, Candy Dulfer, Eric Dolphy, Jack DeJohnette, Miles Davis, Paquito d'Rivera, Sonny Criss, Buddy Collette, Steve Coleman, George Coleman, Richie Cole, Pete Christlieb, Teddy Charles, Tony Campise, Alan Broadbent, Nick Brignola, Arthur Blythe, Bird-Trane-Sco-Now!, Bob Berg, Gato Barbieri, Iain Ballamy, Albert Ayler, Cannonball Adderley, George Adams, Steely Dan, Ray Barretto, The Skatalites, Tómas R. Einarsson, Michael DeVellis, Keyan Williams, Mace Hibbard, Diego Rivera, Soweto Kinch, David Bixler, Grant Stewart, Johnny "Dizzy" Moore, Till Brönner, Eddie Gale, Boulou Ferré, Arne Domnérus, The Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Paul Keller, Lucky Thompson, Fredrik Nordström, Sharp Nine Class of 2001, Joe Evans, Charlie May, Tim O'Dell, Nicholas Hoffman, Trick Pony, Danny Zamir, Dave Glasser, Miri Ben-Ari, Al Garcia, Ravi Coltrane, Otis Taylor, John Sinclair, Giancarlo Schiaffini, Bobby Sanabria, Vince Montana, Robert Kyle, Dave Bernstein, Ron Jefferson

Performed Songs By:

Worked With:

Formal Connection With:

See Charlie Parker Lyrics
  • Born: August 29, 1920, Kansas City, KS
  • Died: March 12, 1955, New York, NY
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Sax (Alto), Leader
  • Representative Albums: "The Legendary Dial Masters, Vols. 1-2," "Charlie Parker: A Studio Chronicle 1940-1948," "The Greatest Jazz Concert Ever"
  • Representative Songs: "Ornithology," "Now's the Time," "A Night in Tunisia"

Biography

One of a handful of musicians who can be said to have permanently changed jazz, Charlie Parker was arguably the greatest saxophonist of all time. He could play remarkably fast lines that, if slowed down to half speed, would reveal that every note made sense. "Bird," along with his contemporaries Dizzy Gillespie and Bud Powell, is considered a founder of bebop; in reality he was an intuitive player who simply was expressing himself. Rather than basing his improvisations closely on the melody as was done in swing, he was a master of chordal improvising, creating new melodies that were based on the structure of a song. In fact, Bird wrote several future standards (such as "Anthropology," "Ornithology," "Scrapple from the Apple," and "Ko Ko," along with such blues numbers as "Now's the Time" and "Parker's Mood") that "borrowed" and modernized the chord structures of older tunes. Parker's remarkable technique, fairly original sound, and ability to come up with harmonically advanced phrases that could be both logical and whimsical were highly influential. By 1950, it was impossible to play "modern jazz" with credibility without closely studying Charlie Parker.

Born in Kansas City, KS, Charlie Parker grew up in Kansas City, MO. He first played baritone horn before switching to alto. Parker was so enamored of the rich Kansas City music scene that he dropped out of school when he was 14, even though his musicianship at that point was questionable (with his ideas coming out faster than his fingers could play them). After a few humiliations at jam sessions, Bird worked hard woodshedding over one summer, building up his technique and mastery of the fundamentals. By 1937, when he first joined Jay McShann's Orchestra, he was already a long way toward becoming a major player.

Charlie Parker, who was early on influenced by Lester Young and the sound of Buster Smith, visited New York for the first time in 1939, working as a dishwasher at one point so he could hear Art Tatum play on a nightly basis. He made his recording debut with Jay McShann in 1940, creating remarkable solos with a small group from McShann's orchestra on "Oh, Lady Be Good" and "Honeysuckle Rose." When the McShann big band arrived in New York in 1941, Parker had short solos on a few of their studio blues records, and his broadcasts with the orchestra greatly impressed (and sometimes scared) other musicians who had never heard his ideas before. Parker, who had met and jammed with Dizzy Gillespie for the first time in 1940, had a short stint with Noble Sissle's band in 1942, played tenor with Earl Hines' sadly unrecorded bop band of 1943, and spent a few months in 1944 with Billy Eckstine's orchestra, leaving before that group made their first records. Gillespie was also in the Hines and Eckstine big bands, and the duo became a team starting in late 1944.

Although Charlie Parker recorded with Tiny Grimes' combo in 1944, it was his collaborations with Dizzy Gillespie in 1945 that startled the jazz world. To hear the two virtuosos play rapid unisons on such new songs as "Groovin' High," "Dizzy Atmosphere," "Shaw 'Nuff," "Salt Peanuts," and "Hot House," and then launch into fiery and unpredictable solos could be an upsetting experience for listeners much more familiar with Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman. Although the new music was evolutionary rather than revolutionary, the recording strike of 1943-1944 resulted in bebop arriving fully formed on records, seemingly out of nowhere.

Unfortunately, Charlie Parker was a heroin addict ever since he was a teenager, and some other musicians who idolized Bird foolishly took up drugs in the hope that it would elevate their playing to his level. When Gillespie and Parker (known as "Diz and Bird") traveled to Los Angeles and were met with a mixture of hostility and indifference (except by younger musicians who listened closely), they decided to return to New York. Impulsively, Parker cashed in his ticket, ended up staying in L.A., and, after some recordings and performances (including a classic version of "Oh, Lady Be Good" with Jazz at the Philharmonic), the lack of drugs (which he combated by drinking an excess of liquor) resulted in a mental breakdown and six months of confinement at the Camarillo State Hospital. Released in January 1947, Parker soon headed back to New York and engaged in some of the most rewarding playing of his career, leading a quintet that included Miles Davis, Duke Jordan, Tommy Potter, and Max Roach. Parker, who recorded simultaneously for the Savoy and Dial labels, was in peak form during the 1947-1951 period, visiting Europe in 1949 and 1950, and realizing a lifelong dream to record with strings starting in 1949 when he switched to Norman Granz's Verve label.

But Charlie Parker, due to his drug addiction and chance-taking personality, enjoyed playing with fire too much. In 1951, his cabaret license was revoked in New York (making it difficult for him to play in clubs) and he became increasingly unreliable. Although he could still play at his best when he was inspired (such as at the 1953 Massey Hall concert with Gillespie), Bird was heading downhill. In 1954, he twice attempted suicide before spending time in Bellevue. His health, shaken by a very full if brief life of excesses, gradually declined, and when he died in March 1955 at the age of 34, he could have passed for 64.

Charlie Parker, who was a legendary figure during his lifetime, has if anything grown in stature since his death. Virtually all of his studio recordings are available on CD along with a countless number of radio broadcasts and club appearances. Clint Eastwood put together a well-intentioned if simplified movie about aspects of his life (Bird). Parker's influence, after the rise of John Coltrane, has become more indirect than direct, but jazz would sound a great deal different if Charlie Parker had not existed. The phrase "Bird Lives" (which was scrawled as graffiti after his death) is still very true. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Discography: Charlie Parker
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Diz 'N Bird at Carnegie Hall

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Founding Fathers of Be Bop

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Charlie Parker: Bird [Platinum Disc]

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Recordings 1944-1948

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Complete Legendary Rockland Palace Concert 1952

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1951-1952

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Charlie Parker: A Studio Chronicle 1940-1948

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Big Band

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Groovin' High [BCI]

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To Go: Stick It in Your Ear

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Masterworks: 1946-1947

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Bird at Birdland [Charly]

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Live Sessions

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Parker Plus Strings

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Bird & Sarah

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Strike up the Band

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Complete Savoy and Dial Master Takes

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Now's the Time [Verve]

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Charlie Parker, Vol. 1

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1947 Klactoveedsedstene

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Gold Collection [Fine Tune]

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Jazz Biography Series

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Bebop & Bird, Vol. 1

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Bebop & Bird, Vol. 1

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Bebop & Bird, Vol. 2

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Bird: The Complete Charlie Parker on Verve

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Complete Savoy and Dial Studio Recordings 1944-1948

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Bird Up: The Originals

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Complete Verve Master Takes

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Gold Collection [Deja Vu]

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Complete Dial Sessions Master Takes

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Complete Dial Sessions Master Takes

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Cole Porter Songbook

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Compact Jazz: Charlie Parker

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Cool Blues [Jazz Archives]

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Night and Day

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1947

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Complete Savoy Live Performances: Sept. 29, 1947-Oct. 25, 1950

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Now's the Time [Universal]

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 15

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 16

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Best of the Bird [LaserLight]

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Gypsy/Quasimodo/Billie's Bounce

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Star Eyes

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Best of the Bird, Vol. 2

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Very Best of Charlie Parker [Music Brokers]

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Alternative Takes, Vol. 2: 1947

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Bird of Paradise [Recall]

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Groovin' High [Fabulous]

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Charlie Parker in Sweden 1950

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Complete Royal Roost Live: Savoy Years, Vol. 2

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Complete Royal Roost Live: Savoy Years, Vol. 3

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Complete Royal Roost Live: Savoy Years, Vol. 4

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Complete Studio Recordings, Vol. 1

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Complete Studio Recordings, Vol. 2

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Complete Studio Recordings, Vol. 3

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Complete Studio Recordings, Vol. 4

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April in Paris [Pazzazz]

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Ornithology [Living Era]

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Best of the Bird [Collectables]

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Quintessence New York - Los Angeles - Toronto, Vol. 2: 1947-1954

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Bird of Paradise, Vol. 1

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Blue Bird

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Alternative Takes, Vol. 3: 1947-1948

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Vol. 4: 1947-1948

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Complete 1944-1948 Small Group Sessions, Vol. 3: 1946-1947

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Immortal Sessions, Vol. 2

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Jazz After Dark: Great Songs

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Don't Blame Me [Blu Mountain]

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Chasin' the Bird [Synergy]

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Dancing in the Dark

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Bird and Chet/Live at the Trade Winds

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Inspired By The Motion Picture Bird

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Blues For Norman

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Flying High: Live in New York

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Bird in Time 1940-1947

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1945-1947

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Ken Burns Jazz

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Young Bird, Vol. 3: 1945

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Parker's Mood [EPM Musique]

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Jazz at the Philharmonic [Indigo]

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Essential Charlie Parker

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Charlie Parker and Miles Davis

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All Stars Live

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Charlie Parker on Dial: The Complete Sessions

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Modern Jazz Archive

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Ultimate Charlie Parker

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Bird's Best Bop on Verve

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Ornithology [Golden Stars]

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Best of the Complete Live Performances on Savoy

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At Birdland, Vol. 1

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 11

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 12

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1947-1949

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BD Jazz

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1950

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Timeless

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In Sweden 1950

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 19

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 20

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Rare Recordings 1947-1952

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Verve Latin Sides

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Greatest Verve Bop Quintets

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Soulful Mood

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Days and Birds

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At the Finale Club and More

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Montreal (1953)

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Dial Masters and Roost Sessions

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Jazz Legends [Acrobat]

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Yardbird Suite: The Ultimate Collection

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Live Performances, Vol. 2

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At Café Society Downtown and Birdland

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Immortal

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Newly Discovered Sides [Bonus Tracks]

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Young Bird, Vol. 4: 1945

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Very Best of the Dial Years

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Lover Man

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Savoy Recordings, Vol. 4

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Live at Trade Winds

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Jazz Masters [Delta]

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Complete Dial Masters

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Complete Savoy Masters [Gran Via Espana]

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Carvin' the Bird

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Complete Savoy and Dial Studio Recordings 1944-1948

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Washington D.C. 1948

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Night in Tunisia [2005]

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Complete Carnegie Hall Performances

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World of Charlie Parker/Six Faces of Jazz

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Now's the Time [Japan Gold CD]

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Bird & Diz

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Bird & Diz [1986 Bonus Tracks]

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Charlie Parker at Jirayr Zorthian's Ranch, July 14 1952

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Bird [Sony]

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Diz N Bird

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Quintessence New York - Hollywood: 1942-1947

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Boss Bird

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Complete Savoy and Dial Sessions

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Bird [Giants of Jazz]

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South of the Border: The Verve Latin-Jazz Sides

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Complete Charlie Parker on Dial

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Bird of Paradise [Pazzazz]

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Complete JATP Performances

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Street Beat

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Complete Savoy Masters [Definitive Classics]

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BlueBird: Legendary Savoy Sessions

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BlueBird: Legendary Savoy Sessions

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Quasimodo: The Dial Sessions

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Ornithology: Rare Recordings

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Best of the Bird [Legacy]

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Hot House

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Burnin' Bird

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Legends of Jazz Saxophone

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Charlie Parker & Friends [Delta]

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Complete Bird at St. Nick's

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Complete Onyx Recordings

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Charlie Parker: Members Edition

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Roots of Jazz

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Fiesta

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At Birdland

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Live in Chicago

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Best of the Complete Savoy and Dial Studio Recordings

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Bird at St. Nick's [Complete Edition]

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Complete Live at Cafe Society

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Yardbird Sessions

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Cool Bird

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Charlie Parker with Strings: The Master Takes

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Masters

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 21

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 22

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Inglewood Jam

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Inglewood Jam

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Yardbird Suite

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Birdsong

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Together

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AKA "The Bird" Charlie Parker

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Autumn in New York

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Savoy Recordings, Vol. 2

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Savoy Recordings, Vol. 3

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Savoy Recordings, Vol. 1

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Rise and Fall of Charlie Parker

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Complete Verve Masters with Strings

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Plays It Cool

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Complete Bird in Sweden

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New York Anthology 1950-1954

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Talkin' Bird

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Young Bird, Vol. 6: 1947

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Bird & Miles

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Charlie Parker [Direct Source]

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1952-1954

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Bird at St. Nick's

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Now's the Time [Back Up]

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Liveology

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Parker's Mood [Giants of Jazz]

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Now's the Time [Savoy Jazz]

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Bird Returns [2003]

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Jazz Archives: Parker

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Genius of Charlie Parker [Savoy Box]

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 9

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 10

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Bird with the Herd

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Bird with the Herd

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Immortal Concerts

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Bebop

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Complete Studio Recording on Savoy Years

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Complete Royal Roost Live: Recordings on Savoy

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Charlie Parker [B.D. Jazz]

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World of Charlie Parker [Ember]

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Thousand Yen Jazz: Best

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At the Open Door

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Anthology

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Jazz Perennial

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Complete Royal Roost Live: Recordings on Savoy, Vol. 1

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Charlie Parker [Platinum Disc]

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From Dizzy To Miles

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Bird Eyes, Vol. 17: Last Unissued

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Portrait of a Genius [Past Perfect]

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With Strings

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Charlie Parker with Strings [Japan]

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At Birdland, Vol. 2

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Alternative Takes, Vol. 1: 1945-1947

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Bird After Dark

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Golden Greats

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April in Paris [Japan Import]

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April in Paris [Japan Import]

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20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Charlie Parker

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Jazz at Massey Hall

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Jumpin' at the Roost: 1948-1949

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Legendary Town Hall Concert, New York City 1945...Plus

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Jazz at Tiffany's

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Jazz at the Philharmonic [Arpeggio Jazz]

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Complete Storyville Performances

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Best of the Dial Years

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Confirmation: The Best of the Verve Years

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Be Bop: Best of the Bird

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Complete Savoy Sessions

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Complete Dial Sessions

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Legendary Jam Sessions 1952

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Complete Pershing Club Sets

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Complete Savoy Masters 1944-1949

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Complete Live Recordings

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Forever Gold

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Charlie Parker for Lovers

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Quintets: 1945-51

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Early Bird

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Charlie Parker & Arne Domnerus in Sweden 1950

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Young Bird, Vol. 5: 1945-1946

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April in Paris [Bonus Tracks]

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Complete Jazz at Massey Hall

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Essentials [Big Eye]

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Anthology 1948-1953

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Alternative Takes, Vol. 4: 1948-1950

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1944-1948: The Savoy Recording Sessions

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Verve Jazz Masters 15

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Now's the Time [Rajon]

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Legendary Dial Masters, Vols. 1-2

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Happy Bird

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Gold Collection [Retro]

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Overtime

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Retrospective 1940-1953

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Jazz Masters [EMI]

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Bird of Paradise [Prism]

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Washington Concerts

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Live with the Big Bands & Stan Kenton

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New Bird: Rare Live Recordings

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Round Midnight [Elap]

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Complete Recordings of Charlie Parker with Lennie Tristano

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Complete Norman Granz Master Takes

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East of the Sun

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Charlie Parker Story [Savoy 2003]

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Complete Savoy Masters [Disconforme]

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Jazz Collection:Charlie Parker and Miles Davis

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Ornithology [Proper]

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Bluebird [Proper]

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Charlie's Mood

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My Little Suede Shoes

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Jazz Legends [Madacy]

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Bird

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Bird Meets Diz

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Bird at the Apollo [Black Label]

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Verve Jazz Masters 28: Charlie Parker Plays Standards

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Don't Blame Me [Pilz]

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Congo Blues

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Jazz Greats [Black Label]

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Jazz 'Round Midnight: Charlie Parker

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Immortal Charlie Parker

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Charlie Parker, Vol. 2: 1949-1953

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Gitanes Jazz: 'Round Midnight

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Bird Flies High

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Au Privave [Object Enterprise]

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Au Privave [Object Enterprise]

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Bird: The Original Recordings of Charlie Parker

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Original Bird: The Best of Bird on Savoy

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Bird [Prime Cuts]

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Complete Original Master Takes: The Savoy Recordings

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Six Faces of Jazz

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Bird Is Free

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Bird Symbols

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Once There Was Bird

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Bird at the Hi-Hat

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Charlie Parker at Storyville

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Boston 1952

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Jam Session

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Verve Years (1952-1954)

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Legendary Rockland Palace Concert , Vol. 1

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Bird You Never Heard

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Bird with Strings

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Evening at Home with the Bird

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Genius of Charlie Parker, Vol. 3: Now's the Time

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Jazz at the Philharmonic, 1949

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Swedish Schnapps

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Rara Avis

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Bird Charlie Parker: 1949 Concert & All-Stars 1950-1951

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Charlie Parker & Stars of Modern Jazz at Carnegie Hall (Christmas 1949)

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Bird at the Roost, Vol. 4

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West Coast Time

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Sessions Live, Vol. 2

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Newly Discovered Sides

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Bird Returns

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Bird on 52nd Street

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Charlie Parker [Prestige]

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Sessions Live, Vol. 1

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Live Performances

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Live Performances

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Broadcast Performances, Vol. 2

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Charlie Parker [Verve]

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Charlie Parker Memorial, Vol. 1

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Complete Dean Benedetti Recordings of Charlie Parker

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Charlie Parker Story on Dial, Vol. 1: West Coast Days

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Charlie Parker Story on Dial, Vol. 2: New York Days

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In a Soulful Mood [Single Disc]

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Bird of Paradise [History]

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Compact Jazz: Charlie Parker Plays the Blues

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Legendary Dial Masters, Vol. 1

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Legendary Dial Masters, Vol. 1

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Legendary Dial Masters, Vol. 2

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Legendary Dial Masters, Vol. 2

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Jazz at the Philharmonic 1946

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Charlie Parker Memorial, Vol. 2

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Genius of Charlie Parker [Savoy Jazz]

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Charlie Parker Story [Savoy Jazz]

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Bird/The Savoy Recordings (Master Takes)

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Immortal Charlie Parker, Vol. 2

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Early Bird (1940-1944)

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Complete "Birth of the Bebop"

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Bird's Eyes, Vol. 18

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Bird: The Savoy Recordings (Master Takes)

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Bird's Nest

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Bird's Eyes, Vol. 25: Open Door '52 2nd Part

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Bird's Eyes, Vol. 23

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Bird's Eyes, Vol. 24

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Bird's Eyes: Last Unissued, Vol. 8

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Bird's Eyes: Last Unissued, Vol. 1/4

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Bird's Eyes, Vol. 13

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Bird's Eyes Vols. 2 & 3

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Bird's Eyes

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Bird's Eyes, Vol. 7

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In a Soulful Mood [Double Disc]

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Chasin' the Bird [Double Play]

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Wikipedia: Charlie Parker
Top
Charlie Parker

Background information
Birth name Charles Parker, Jr.
Also known as Bird, Yardbird,
Zoizeau (in France)[1]
Born August 29, 1920(1920-08-29)
Kansas City, Kansas, U.S.
Origin Kansas City, Missouri
Died March 12, 1955 (aged 34)
New York City, New York, USA
Genres Jazz, Bebop
Occupations Saxophonist, composer
Instruments Saxophone
Years active 1937 - 1955
Labels Savoy, Dial, Verve
Website Official Site
Notable instruments
Buescher, Conn, King and Grafton alto saxophones.

Charles Parker, Jr. (August 29, 1920 – March 12, 1955) was an American jazz saxophonist and composer.

Parker, with Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, is often considered one of the most influential of jazz musicians. Parker acquired the nickname "Yardbird" early in his career,[2] and the shortened form "Bird" remained Parker's sobriquet for the rest of his life, inspiring the titles of a number of Parker compositions, such as "Birdfeathers", "Yardbird Suite" and "Ornithology."

Parker played a leading role in the development of bebop, a form of jazz characterized by fast tempos, virtuosic technique, and improvisation based on harmonic structure. Parker's innovative approaches to melody, rhythm, and harmony exercised enormous influence on his contemporaries. Several of Parker's songs have become standards, including "Billie's Bounce", "Anthropology", "Ornithology", and "Confirmation". He introduced revolutionary harmonic ideas including a tonal vocabulary employing 9ths, 11ths and 13ths of chords, rapidly implied passing chords, and new variants of altered chords and chord substitutions. His tone was clean and penetrating, but sweet and plaintive on ballads. Although many Parker recordings demonstrate dazzling virtuosic technique and complex melodic lines – such as "Ko-Ko", "Kim", and "Leap Frog" – he was also one of the great blues players. His themeless blues improvisation "Parker's Mood" represents one of the most deeply affecting recordings in jazz. At various times, Parker fused jazz with other musical styles, from classical to Latin music, blazing paths followed later by others.

Parker was an icon for the hipster subculture and later the Beat generation, personifying the conception of the jazz musician as an uncompromising artist and intellectual, rather than just a popular entertainer. His style – from a rhythmic, harmonic and soloing perspective – influenced countless peers on every instrument.

Contents

Biography

Childhood

Charlie Parker was born in Kansas City, Kansas and raised in Kansas City, Missouri, the only child of Charles and Addie Parker. Charles, an alcoholic, was often absent. Parker attended Lincoln High School [3]. He enrolled in September 1934 and withdrew in December 1935 about the time he joined the local Musicians Union.

Parker displayed no sign of musical talent as a child. His father presumably provided some musical influence; he was a pianist, dancer and singer on the T.O.B.A. circuit, although he later became a Pullman waiter or chef on the railways. His mother worked nights at the local Western Union. His biggest influence however was a young trombone player who taught him the basics of improvisation.

Parker began playing the saxophone at age 11 and at age 14 joined his school's band using a rented school instrument. One story holds that, without formal training, he was terrible, and thrown out of the band. Experiencing periodic setbacks of this sort, at one point he broke off from his constant practicing.

Early career

It has been said that, in early 1936, Parker participated in a 'cutting contest' that included Jo Jones on drums, who tossed a cymbal at Parker's feet in impatience with his playing. However, in the numerous interviews throughout his life, Jones made no mention of this incident. Exasperated and determined, in any case, at this time Parker improved the quality of practicing, learning the blues, "Cherokee" and "rhythm changes" in all twelve keys. In this wood-shedding period, Parker mastered improvisation and developed some of the ideas of be-bop. In an interview with Paul Desmond, he said he spent 3-4 years practicing up to 15 hours a day.[4]. Rumor has it that he used to play many other tunes in all twelve keys. The story, though undocumented, would help to explain the fact that he often played in unconventional concert pitch key signatures, like E (which transposes to C# for the alto sax). Groups led by Count Basie and Bennie Moten were the leading Kansas City ensembles, and undoubtedly influenced Parker. He continued to play with local bands in jazz clubs around Kansas City, Missouri, where he perfected his technique with the assistance of Buster Smith, whose dynamic transitions to double and triple time certainly influenced Parker's developing style.

In 1938, Parker joined pianist Jay McShann's territory band.[5] The band toured nightclubs and other venues of the southwest, as well as Chicago and New York City.[6][7] Parker made his professional recording debut with McShann's band. It was said at one point in McShann's band that he "sounded like a machine", owing to his virtuosity without implying a lack of musicality.

As a teenager, Parker developed a morphine addiction while in hospital after an automobile accident, and subsequently became addicted to heroin. Heroin would haunt him throughout his life and ultimately contribute to his death.

In NYC

In 1939, Parker moved to New York City. There he pursued a career in music, but held several other jobs as well. He worked for $9 a week as a dishwasher at Jimmie's Chicken Shack where pianist Art Tatum performed. Parker's later style in some ways recalled Tatum's, with dazzling, high-speed arpeggios and sophisticated use of harmony.

In 1942 Parker left McShann's band and played with Earl Hines for one year. Also in the band was trumpet player Dizzy Gillespie, which is where the soon to be famous duo met for the first time. Unfortunately, this period is virtually undocumented because of the strike of 1942-1943 by the American Federation of Musicians, during which no official recordings were made. Nevertheless we know that Parker joined a group of young musicians in after-hours clubs in Harlem such as Clark Monroe's Uptown House and (to a much lesser extent) Minton's Playhouse. These young iconoclasts included Gillespie, pianist Thelonious Monk, guitarist Charlie Christian, and drummer Kenny Clarke. The beboppers' attitude was summed up in a famous quotation attributed to Monk by Mary Lou Williams: "We wanted a music that they couldn't play" – "they" being the (white) bandleaders who had taken over and profited from swing music. The group played in venues on 52nd Street including the Three Deuces and The Onyx. In his time in New York City, Parker also learned much from notable music teacher Maury Deutsch.

Bebop

Right side view of a Conn 6M "Lady Face" alto sax with highly distinctive underslung octave key, a model that Parker is known to have used.[5][6] [7]

According to an interview Parker gave in the 1950s: one night in 1939, he was playing "Cherokee" in a jam session with guitarist William 'Biddy' Fleet when he hit upon a method for developing his solos that enabled him to play what he had been hearing in his head for some time, by building on the chords' extended intervals, such as ninths, elevenths, and thirteenths. Still with McShann's orchestra, Parker at this time realized that the twelve tones of the chromatic scale can each be quickly led melodically to any key, breaking some of the confines of simpler jazz soloing.

Early in its development, this new type of jazz was rejected by many of the established, traditional jazz musicians who disdained their younger counterparts with comments like Eddie Condon's putdown: "They flat their fifths; we drink ours." The beboppers, in response, called these traditionalists "moldy figs". However, some musicians, such as Coleman Hawkins and Benny Goodman, were more positive about its development, and participated in jam sessions and recording dates in the new approach with its adherents.

Because of the 2-year Musicians' Union recording ban on all commercial recordings from 1942-1944 (part of a struggle to get royalties from record sales for a union fund for out-of-work musicians), much of bebop's early development was not captured for posterity; as a result, the new musical concepts only gained limited radio exposure. Bebop musicians had a difficult time gaining widespread recognition. It was not until 1945, when the recording ban was lifted, that Parker's collaborations with Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Bud Powell and others had a substantial effect on the jazz world. One of their first (and greatest) small-group performances together was rediscovered and issued in 2005: a concert in New York's Town Hall on June 22, 1945. Bebop began to grab hold and gain wider appeal among musicians and fans alike.

On November 26, 1945 Parker led a record date for the Savoy label, marketed as the "greatest Jazz session ever." The tracks recorded during this session include "Ko-Ko" (based on the chords of "Cherokee"), "Now's the Time" (a twelve bar blues incorporating a riff later used in the late 1949 R&B dance hit "The Hucklebuck"), "Billie's Bounce", and "Thriving on a Riff".

Shortly afterwards, the Parker/Gillespie band traveled to an unsuccessful engagement at Billy Berg's club in Los Angeles. Most of the group returned to New York, but Parker remained in California, cashing in his return ticket to buy heroin. He experienced great hardship in California, eventually being committed to Camarillo State Hospital for a six month period.

Addiction

Parker's addiction to heroin, which began in his late teens, caused him to miss gigs and to be fired for being high. To satisfy his habit, he frequently resorted to busking on the streets for drug money, receiving loans from fellow musicians/admirers, pawning his own horn and borrowing other sax players' instruments as a result. Parker's situation was typical of the strong connection between drug abuse and jazz at the time.

Although he produced many brilliant recordings during this period, Parker's behavior became increasingly erratic due to his habit. Heroin was difficult to obtain after he moved to California for a short time where the drug was less abundant, and Parker began to drink heavily to compensate for this. A recording for the Dial label from July 29, 1946 provides evidence of his condition. Prior to this session, Parker drank about a quart of whiskey. According to the liner notes of Charlie Parker on Dial Volume 1, Parker missed most of the first two bars of his first chorus on the track, "Max Making Wax." When he finally did come in, he swayed wildly and once spun all the way around, going badly off mic. On the next tune, "Lover Man", producer Ross Russell physically supported Parker in front of the microphone. On the final track Parker recorded that evening, he begins a solo with a solid first eight bars. On his second eight bars, however, Parker begins to struggle, and a desperate Howard McGhee, the trumpeter on this session, shouts, "Blow!" at Parker. McGhee's bellow is audible on the recording. Charles Mingus considered this version of "Lover Man" to be among Parker's greatest recordings despite its flaws. Nevertheless, Parker hated the recording and never forgave Ross Russell for releasing the sub-par performance (and re-recorded the tune in 1953 for Verve, this time in stellar form, but perhaps lacking some of the passionate emotion in the earlier, problematic attempt).

During the night following the "Lover Man" session, Parker was drinking in his hotel room. He entered the hotel lobby stark naked on several occasions and asked to use the phone, but was refused on each attempt; the hotel manager eventually locked him in his room. At some point during the night, he set fire to his mattress with a cigarette, then ran through the hotel lobby wearing only his socks. He was arrested and committed to Camarillo State Mental Hospital, where he remained for six months.

Coming out of the hospital, Parker was initially clean and healthy, and proceeded to do some of the best playing and recording of his career. Before leaving California, he recorded "Relaxin' at Camarillo", in reference to his hospital stay. He returned to New York – and his addiction – and recorded dozens of sides for the Savoy and Dial labels that remain some of the high points of his recorded output. Many of these were with his so-called "classic quintet" including trumpeter Miles Davis and drummer Max Roach. The highlights of these sessions include a series of slower-tempo performances of American popular songs including "Embraceable You" and "Bird of Paradise" (based on "All the Things You Are").

Charlie Parker with strings

A longstanding desire of Parker's was to perform with a string section. He was a keen student of classical music, and contemporaries reported he was most interested in the music and formal innovations of Igor Stravinsky, and longed to engage in a project akin to what later became known as 'Third Stream Music'; a new kind of music, incorporating both jazz and classical elements as opposed to merely incorporating a string section into performance of jazz standards. On November 30, 1949, Norman Granz arranged for Parker to record an album of ballads with a mixed group of jazz and chamber orchestra musicians.[8] Six master takes from this session comprised the album Bird With Strings: "Just Friends", "Everything Happens to Me", "April in Paris", "Summertime", "I Didn't Know What Time It Was", and "If I Should Lose You." The sound of these recordings is rare in Parker's catalog. Parker's improvisations are, relative to his usual work, more distilled and economical. His tone is darker and softer than on his small-group recordings, and the majority of his lines are beautiful embellishments on the original melodies rather than harmonically based improvisations. These are among the few recordings Parker made during a brief period when he was able to control his heroin habit, and his sobriety and clarity of mind are evident in his playing. Parker stated that, of his own records, Bird With Strings was his favorite. Although using classical music instrumentation with jazz musicians was not entirely original, this was the first major work where a composer of bebop was matched with a string orchestra.

Some fans thought it was a "sell out" and a pandering to popular tastes. Time demonstrated Parker's move a wise one: Charlie Parker with Strings sold better than his other releases, and his version of "Just Friends" is seen as one of his best performances. In an interview, he considered it to be his best recording to that date.

Prominence

By 1950, much of the jazz world had fallen under Parker's spell. Many musicians transcribed and copied his solos. Legions of saxophonists imitated his playing note-for-note. In response to these pretenders, Parker's admirer, the bass player Charles Mingus, titled a tune "Gunslinging Bird" (meaning "If Charlie Parker were a gunslinger, there would be a whole lot of dead copycats") featured on the album Mingus Dynasty. In this regard, he is perhaps only comparable to Louis Armstrong: both men set the standard for their instruments for decades, and few escaped their influence.

In 1953, Parker performed at Massey Hall in Toronto, Canada, joined by Gillespie, Mingus, Bud Powell and Max Roach. Unfortunately, the concert clashed with a televised heavyweight boxing match between Rocky Marciano and Jersey Joe Walcott and as a result was poorly attended. Thankfully, Mingus recorded the concert, and the album Jazz at Massey Hall is often cited as one of the finest recordings of a live jazz performance, with the saxophonist credited as "Charley Chan" for contractual reasons.

At this concert, he played a plastic Grafton saxophone (serial number 10265);[9] later, saxophonist Ornette Coleman used this brand of plastic sax in his early career. Parker had sold his alto saxophone to buy drugs, and at the last minute, he, Dizzy Gillespie and other members of Charlie's entourage went running around Toronto trying to find Parker a saxophone. After scouring all the downtown pawnshops open at the time, they were only able to find a Grafton, which Parker proceeded to use at the concert that night.

Parker was known for often showing up to performances without an instrument, necessitating a loan at the last moment. There are various photos which show him playing a Conn 6M saxophone, a high quality instrument which was noted for having a very fast action[10] and a unique "underslung" octave key.[11][12][13][14] Some of the photographs showing Parker with a Conn 6M were taken on separate occasions [15][16][17][18] because Parker can be seen wearing different clothing and there are different backgrounds. However, other photos exist which show Parker holding alto saxophones with a more conventional octave key arrangement, i.e. mounted above the crook of the saxophone[19] e.g. the Martin Handicraft[20] and Selmer Model 22[21] saxophones, amongst others. Parker is also known to have performed with a King 'Super 20' saxophone, with a semi-underslung octave key which bears some resemblance to those fitted on modern Yanagisawa instruments. Parker's King Super 20 saxophone was made specially for him in 1947.

Death

Parker's grave at Lincoln Cemetery.

Parker died in the suite of his friend and patron Nica de Koenigswarter at the Stanhope Hotel in New York City while watching The Dorsey Brothers' Stage Show on television. Though the official causes of death were lobar pneumonia and a bleeding ulcer, Parker's demise was undoubtedly hastened by his drug and alcohol abuse. The coroner who performed his autopsy mistakenly estimated Parker's 34-year-old body to be between 50 and 60 years of age.[22]

It was well known that Parker never wanted to return to Kansas City, even in death. Parker had told his common-law wife, Chan, that he didn’t want to be buried in the city of his birth; that New York was his home and he didn’t want any fuss or memorials when he died. At the time of his death, though, he hadn’t divorced his previous wife Doris, nor had he officially married Chan, which left Parker in the rather awkward post-mortem situation of having two widows, a scenario which muddied the issue of next of kin and would ultimately serve to frustrate his wish to be quietly interred in his adopted hometown. Dizzy Gillespie was able to co-opt the funeral arrangements[23] that Chan had been putting together and coordinated a ‘lying-in-state’, a Harlem procession officiated by Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., and a memorial concert before flying Parker's body back to Missouri to be buried there per his mother's wishes. Parker was buried at Lincoln Cemetery[24] in Kansas City, Missouri.

Charlie Parker was survived by his widows Doris Parker and Chan Parker; a stepdaughter, Kim Parker, who is also a musician; and a son, Baird Parker; their later lives are chronicled in Chan Parker's autobiography, My Life in E Flat[25].

Shortly after Parker died, graffiti began appearing around New York with the words "Bird Lives", the ultimate source for this is usually considered to be the poet Ted Joans.

Musical approach

Parker's style of composition involved interpolation of original melodies over pre-existing jazz forms and standards, a practice still common in jazz today. Examples include "Ornithology" ("How High The Moon"), "Yardbird Suite" ("What Price Love") and "Donna Lee" ("Indiana"). The practice was not uncommon prior to bebop; however, it became a signature of the movement as artists began to move away from arranging popular standards and began to compose their own material .

While tunes such as "Now's The Time", "Billie's Bounce", and "Cool Blues" were based on conventional 12-bar blues changes, Parker also created a unique version of the 12-bar blues for his tune "Blues for Alice". These unique chords are known popularly as "Bird Changes". Like his solos, some of his compositions are characterised by long, complex melodic lines and a minimum of repetition although he did employ the use of repetitive (yet relatively rhythmically complex) motifs in many other tunes as well, most notably "Now's The Time".

Parker also contributed a vast rhythmic vocabulary to the modern jazz solo, one in which triplets and pick-up notes were used in (then) unorthodox ways to lead into chord tones, affording the soloist with more freedom to use passing tones which soloists would have previously avoided. Within this context, Parker was admired for his unique style of phrasing and innovative use of rhythm. Via his recordings and the popularity of the posthumously published Charlie Parker Omnibook, Parker's uniquely identifiable vocabulary of "licks" and "riffs" dominated jazz for many years to come. Today his concepts and ideas are transcribed, studied, and analyzed by a great deal of jazz students and are part of any player's basic jazz vocabulary.

Discography

Awards and recognitions

Grammy Award
Charlie Parker Grammy Award History[26]
Year Category Title Genre Label Result
1974 Best Performance By A Soloist First Recordings! Jazz Onyx Winner
Grammy Hall of Fame

Recordings of Charlie Parker were inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, which is a special Grammy award established in 1973 to honor recordings that are at least twenty-five years old, and that have "qualitative or historical significance."

Charlie Parker: Grammy Hall of Fame Awards[27]
Year Recorded Title Genre Label Year Inducted
1945 "Billie's Bounce" Jazz (Single) Savoy 2002
1953 Jazz at Massey Hall Jazz (Album) Debut 1995
1946 "Ornithology" Jazz (Single) Dial 1989
1950 Charlie Parker with Strings Jazz (Album) Mercury 1988
Inductions
Year Inducted Title
2004 Jazz at Lincoln Center: Nesuhi Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame
1984 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
1979 Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame
National Recording Registry

In 2002, the Library of Congress honored his recording "Ko-Ko" (1945) by adding it to the National Recording Registry.

U.S. Postage Stamp
Year Issued Stamp USA Note
1995 32 cents Commemorative stamp U.S. Postal Stamps Photo (Scott #2987)[28]

Musical tributes

  • Lennie Tristano's overdubbed solo piano piece "Requiem" was recorded in tribute to Parker shortly after his death. It begins with a classically-tinged introduction, and then turns into a slow blues that gradually accumulates layers of overdubbing – one of the earliest experiments in jazz with multiple overdubbing.
  • Deeply touched by Charlie Parker's death, street musician Moondog wrote his famous "Bird's Lament" in his memory. Moondog affirmed that he had met Charlie Parker in the streets of New York and that they had planned to jam together.
  • The Californian ensemble Supersax harmonized many of Parker's improvisations for a five-piece saxophone section, which to many listeners bring new life to them, whereas others consider the arrangements as somewhat constructed.
  • Saxophonist Phil Woods recorded a tribute concert for Parker, and in an interview stated that he thought Parker had said everything he needed to say.
  • In 2003 various artists including Serj Tankian and Dan the Automator put out Bird Up: The Charlie Parker Remix Project. This album created new songs by remixing Charlie Parker's originals.
  • A biographical song entitled "Parker's Band" was recorded by Steely Dan on their 1974 album Pretzel Logic.
  • British jazz-rock band If paid tribute to Parker in the title track of their last album, Tea Break Over, Back on Your 'Eads (1975), including a Parker-styled saxophone solo and the lyrics "The Bird was the man to be heard" and "The music was the word".
  • The avant-garde trombonist George Lewis recorded Homage to Charles Parker (1979), an album that offers a unique combination of electronic music and the blues.
  • TISM's The White Albun (2004) contains a song titled "Tonight Harry's Practice Visits the Home of Charlie "Bird" Parker". The song focuses on celebrity resentment and the possibility that taking drugs will make the otherwise dull celebrities more interesting. The title of the song refers to Australian television show Harry's Practice and, more specifically, the segment where Dr. Harry Cooper would visit a celebrity, in this case, the visit is to Charlie "Bird" Parker's house.
  • Sparks released a song entitled "(When I Kiss You) I Hear Charlie Parker Playing" on their 1994 album Gratuitous Sax & Senseless Violins, which prominently features Charlie Parker's name in the lyrics and makes references to his saxophone playing.
  • Duane Allman devised a unique slide guitar technique that enabled him to mimic the sounds of chirping birds, stating in at least one interview that this was his tribute to Parker. This can be heard in numerous live recordings, most notably "Mountain Jam" on The Allman Brothers Band's CDs Eat a Peach and The Fillmore Concerts (shortly before the drum interlude). Another, more delicate, version is in the song "Finding Her" on Boz Scaggs' self-titled debut album, first released in 1969. This technique can also be heard at the end of Derek & the Dominos 1970 hit "Layla" on which Allman played.
  • The Only World by poet Lynda Hull includes a poem titled "Ornithology" about Charlie Parker.
  • The poem "Song for Bird and Myself" by Jack Spicer was written in memory of Charlie Parker.
  • The song Jack & Neal/California, Here I Come, on the album Foreign Affairs by Tom Waits has a line that goes: with charlie parker on the bandstand not a worry in the world.
  • In the song "Can't Stop" by Red Hot Chili Peppers, the lyrics refer to Parker with the line "birds that blow the meaning into bebop."
  • Richard Thompson references Charlie Parker in his song "Outside of the Inside" on the album The Old Kit Bag (2005).
  • Charlie Parker is referenced in the song "Rothko Chapel" by David Dondero on the album Simple Love (2007).
  • Refused included live recordings of Parker at the end of the song "Liberation Frequency" and transitioned it into "The Deadly Rhythm" on the album The Shape of Punk to Come.

Other tributes

"Bird Lives" sculpture by Robert Graham in Kansas City, Missouri
  • A memorial to Parker was dedicated in 1999 in Kansas City at 17th Terrace and The Paseo, near the American Jazz Museum located at 18th and Vine, featuring a 10-foot (3 m) tall bronze head sculpted by Robert Graham.
  • In New York City, Avenue B between 7th and 10th Streets was renamed Charlie Parker Place in 1992. The townhouse in which Parker had lived with Chan and their children, on Avenue B between 9th and 10th streets, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.[29]
  • Every August, the Tribes Gallery in New York's Lower East Side sponsors a Charlie Parker Festival that includes musical performances, art exhibits, poetry readings, and culminates with a street festival and outdoor concert on August 29 (Parker's birthday) in Tompkins Square Park, which is located on Charlie Parker Place (see above).
  • Every weekday morning, disc jockey Phil Schaap plays Parker's music on WKCR in New York. His show, called Birdflight, is devoted to Parker's music and has been running since 1981.
  • In one of his most famous short-story collections, Las armas secretas (The Secret Weapons), Julio Cortázar dedicated El perseguidor (The Pursuer) to the memory of Charlie Parker. This piece examines the last days of Johnny, a drug-addict saxophonist, through the eyes of Bruno, his biographer. Some qualify this story as one of Cortazar's masterpieces in the genre.
  • In 1984, legendary modern dance choreographer Alvin Ailey created a piece entitled "For Bird – With Love" in honor of Parker. The piece chronicles his life, from his early career to his failing health.
  • In 2005, the Selmer Paris saxophone manufacturer commissioned a special "Tribute to Bird" alto saxophone, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the death of Charlie Parker (1955-2005). This saxophone will be built until 2010, each one featuring a unique engraving and an original design.
  • Parker's performances of "I Remember You" and "Parker's Mood" were selected by Harold Bloom for inclusion on his short list of the "twentieth-century American Sublime", the greatest works of American art produced in the 20th century.
  • The Oris Watch Company created a limited edition timepiece in Charlie Parker's name. The watch features the word "bird" at the 4 o'clock hour, in honor of Parker's nickname and signifying "Jazz, until 4 in the morning".
  • Jean-Michel Basquiat created many pieces to honour Charlie Parker, including Charles the First, CPRKR and Discography I.
  • In 1995 a one-man play about Charlie Parker entitled "Live Bird" written and performed by actor/saxophonist Jeff Robinson made its premier at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • A Far Side cartoon published on Parker's birthday in 1990 entitled "Charlie Parker's private hell" shows him locked in a recording booth, screaming, while a whistling devil pipes in nothing but new age music.
  • Charley Parker, the real name of comic book character Golden Eagle, is a reference to Parker.[citation needed]
  • In an episode of Cowboy Bebop, Jet Black dreams that Parker tells him, "Only hands can wash hands. If you want to receive, you have to give."
  • In an episode of Metalocolypse William Murderface of the band Dethklok is heard to be singing his own tribute to Charlie Parker while drunk in a bar in the opening minutes of an episode. The lyrics included "Stand up U.S.A, stand up like Charlie Parker stood up, stand up Charlie Parker style..."
  • Owen Dodson wrote a poem whose title itself indicates the tribute. It is called "Yardbird's Skull".
  • On the Del Close recording How to Speak Hip, John Brent's character, Geetz Romo, says it is "uncool to claim you used to run with Bird, or that you have Bird's ax, and you know, it's even less cool to ask, 'Who is Bird?'".
  • Parker plays at a night club in The Subterraneans by Jack Kerouac. He appears in other works by Kerouac as well.
  • In episode 16 of The Mighty Boosh, Charlie Parker's rare "Yardbird" LP can be seen on one of the racks in the Nabootique.
  • The protagonist in the novel Every Dead Thing is named Charlie Parker and even shares the nickname "Bird."

References

Sources

  • Aebersold, Jamey, editor (1978). Charlie Parker Omnibook. New York: Michael H. Goldsen.
  • Giddins, Gary (1987). Celebrating Bird: The Triumph of Charlie Parker. New York: Beech Tree Books, William Morrow. ISBN 0-688-05950-3.
  • Koch, Lawrence (1999). Yardbird Suite: A Compendium of the Music and Life of Charlie Parker. Boston, Northeastern University Press. ISBN 1-55555-384-1.
  • Reisner, George (1962). Bird: The Legend of Charlie Parker. New York, Bonanza Books.
  • Russell, Ross (1973). Bird Lives! The High Life & Hard Times of Charlie (Yardbird) Parker. New York: Charterhouse. ISBN 0-306-80679-7.
  • Woideck, Carl (1998). Charlie Parker: His Music and Life. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08555-7.
  • Woideck, Carl, editor (1998). The Charlie Parker Companion: Six Decades of Commentary. New York: Schirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-864714-9.
  • Yamaguchi, Masaya, editor (1955). Yardbird Originals. New York: Charles Colin, 2005. Originally published in 1955.

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