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Andrew Hill

 

Composer, pianist, bandleader

Andrew Hill, a groundbreaking composer and pianist, who played an important role in the post-bop movement of the late 1950s and early 1960s, excels at creating music that sounds at once familiar and disorienting. An improviser who has embraced the avant-garde, he always appears in command of his material, regardless of a work’s complexities and abstractions. He is a visionary grounded in tradition, relying more upon compositional mastery than upon chance. "As a pianist," Chris Kelsey of All Music Guide wrote, Hill displays a "flowing melodicism and an elastic sense of time… Hill’s playing has an ever-present air of spontaneity and is almost completely devoid of cliché."

Hill’s music exhibits a certain abstract, intellectual quality that simultaneously invigorates and challenges the listener. "Andrew’s music is very heavily mental. You go into rooms you wouldn’t normally enter," recalled vibes player Bobby Hutcherson, who worked with Hill in the 1960s, to Down Beat’s Ted Panken. "There’s always a little story in the melody, a reason why this tune is being played." Nonetheless, Hill, unfairly overshadowed among many of his contemporaries, remains largely overlooked by many Americans.

Within the jazz community, however, Hill’s reputation is firmly grounded, and he continues to serve as a mentor to a new generation of musicians. "I hear some young artists with incredible techniques, but at a certain point their creativity turns monotonous," Hill observed, as quoted by Down Beat contributor John Murph. "When I listen to some of these artists, I can still tell that they need some new material to study or a record to help them evolve. All of a sudden I’m a mentor."

He furthermore strives, as an educator and advisor, to correct misinterpretations about the evolution of modern jazz. "I would like to talk to some of the young musicians about success, because historically jazz has become a bit Europeanized and discussed like it was art for art’s sake," he added to Murph. "It wasn’t art for art’s sake. It was a viable living for the community, and the community was involved. I want the younger musicians to realize that we weren’t like these sages who would go into this hibernation for knowledge and come out of the woodwork with this music. We have a responsibility to bring that magic to the people."

Born on June 30, 1937, in Chicago, Hill was drawn to the piano at an early age. "To my memory, I could play the piano as long as I’ve been talking," he told Fred Jung for a Jazz Weekly.com interview. Growing up on Chicago’s South Side, he was surrounded by music resonating from neighborhood clubs and theaters. At the age of six, Hill began playing blues accordion and tap dancing on the streets—with friend Leo Blevins on guitar—to earn money to help support his family. Hill eventually commenced his formal training around the age of 13, under encouragement from several prominent figures in his neighborhood. Pianist Earl Hines, as

well as jazz composer, arranger, and trombonist Bill Russo, took notice of Hill’s talent. Russo in particular took a great interest in his development and introduced the youngster to the renowned German classical composer and music theorist Paul Hindemith, with whom Hill studied from 1950 until 1952.

In 1952 Hill started performing professionally, and in the summer of 1953 he accompanied Charlie Parker in Detroit at the Greystone Ballroom. Thereafter, he worked with trumpeter Miles Davis and tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins prior to forming his own trio, featuring drummer James Slaughter and bassist Malachi Favors, a founder of the Art Ensemble of Chicago. In 1955 the trio recorded Hill’s first album, So in Love with the Sound of Andrew Hill.

In 1961 Hill relocated to New York to work with singer Dinah Washington, then spent a brief time in Los Angeles working with Rahsaan Roland Kirk’s group. Returning to New York in 1962, Hill pursued his own career in earnest, as sideman and leader. He recorded with Blue Note Records from November of 1963 through March of 1966. His albums for the label are now considered classics, especially Point of Departure. Recorded in 1964 with Eric Dolphy, Joe Henderson, Kenny Dorham, and Tony Williams, this album features some of the most brilliant and uncompromising ensemble work in free jazz. His other recordings with Blue Note include Black Fire, Smokestack, Judgment, Andrew!, Compulsion, Involution, and One for One. Years later, he returned to Blue Note to record Eternal Spirit and But Not Farewell.

During the 1970s and 1980s, Hill continued to release albums, among them From California with Love in 1978, Strange Serenade in 1980, and Shades in 1986. But he spent most of this period in academia, earning a doctorate degree from Colgate University and serving as the school’s composer-in-residence from 1970 until 1972. Thereafter, he remained mainly on the West Coast—until his wife La Verne’s death in 1989—where he offered solo concerts, gave classes and workshops, and played on occasion at international jazz festivals. Additionally, Hill became a tenured associate professor at Portland State University, founding that institution’s Summer Jazz Intensive, and he performed, held workshops, and/or established residencies at Wesleyan University, University of Michigan, University of Toronto, Harvard University, and Bennington College.

Upon his return to New York City, Hill, now remarried, experienced a renewed interest in his music through a series of live performances in the mid-1990s. Eventually, in 1998, he formed a new group, the Point of Departure Sextet, for the Knitting Factory’s 1998 Texaco Jazz Festival. In addition to Hill on piano, the sextet comprises saxophonists Marty Elrich and Greg Tardy, trumpeter Ron Horton, bassist Scott Colley, and drummer Billy Drummond. The group went on to hold week-long engagements at the New York venues Birdland and the Jazz Standard, and it performed at the Lincoln Center Out of Doors Summer 1999 series.

In 2000 Palmetto Records issued the sextet’s first album, Dusk, which was recorded in 1999 and garnered much acclaim, winning the recognition of "Best Album" from both Down Beat and Jazztimes. "The music is mysterious, elusive, soulful, rich in mood and character," wrote Panken in his review of the album, "expansively written, replete with beautiful melodies and counter-melodies, complex intervals, unique voicings, intense vamps and ostinatos. Each section is tailored to the tonal personalities of the musicians, morphing from keening rubato passages to long lines propelled by churning counter and cross-rhythms that define the overall motion."

Besides his sextet, Hill also formed a trio with Colley on bass and Nashied Waits on drums, as well as the Andrew Hill Big Band. With the latter, he recorded the album A Beautiful Day, released on Palmetto in 2002. It, too, drew critical accolades, as did the big band’s live performances.

Selected discography
(With Dave Shipp) Romping/Let’s Live, Vee Jay, 1954.
So In Love with the Sound of Andrew Hill, Warwick, 1955.
(With Johnny Hartman/Andrew Hill) Trio 1961 Live, VGM, 1961.
(With Rahsaan Roland Kirk) Domino, Mercury, 1962.
(With Walt Dickerson) To My Queen, New Jazz, 1962.
(With Jimmy Woods) Conflict, Contemporary, 1963.
(With Joe Henderson) Our Thing, Blue Note, 1963.
(With Hank Mobley) No Room for Squares, Blue Note, 1963.
Black fire, Blue Note, 1963.
smokestack, Blue Note, 1963.
Point of Departure, Blue Note, 1964.
Andrew!, Blue Note, 1964.
Compulsion, Blue Note, 1964.
(With Bobby Hutcherston) Dialogue, Blue Note, 1965.
Involution, Blue Note, 1966.
Grass Roots, Blue Note, 1968; reissued, 2000.
Dance with Death, Blue Note, 1968.
One for one, Blue Note, 1968.
Lift Every Voice, Blue Note, 1969; reissued, 2001.
Spiral, Arista/Freedom, 1974.
Blueback, East Wind, 1975.
Divine Revelation, Steeplechase, 1975.
Homage, East Wind, 1975.
Live at Montreux, Arista/Freedom, 1975.
Nefertiti, East Wind, 1976.
From California with Love, Arista House, 1978.
Faces of Hope, Soul Note, 1980.
Strange serenade, Soul Note, 1980.
Verona Reg, Soul Note, 1986.
Shades, Soul Note, 1986.
Eternal Spirit, Blue Note, 1989.
(With Russell Bab) Earth Prayer, Ruba Music, 1992.
(With Reggie Workman) Summit Conference, Postcards, 1994.
(With Greg Osby) Invisible Hand, Blue Note, 2000.
Dusk, Palmetto, 2000.
(With the Andrew Hill Big Band) A Beautiful Day, Palmetto, 2002.

Sources
Periodicals
Atlantic, April 1999.
Boston Globe, April 30, 1999, p. D16; May 5, 1999, p. F5; January 13, 2002, p. C4.
Down Beat, January 1995, p. 40; July 2000, p. 69; January 2001, p. 30; August 2001, p. 40; December 2001, p. 20; January 2002, p. 54; April 2002, p. 54.
Los Angeles Times, February 21, 1986, p. 3; November 8, 1989, p. 6; January 21, 2000, p. F24; December 29, 2000, p. F26; March 11, 2001, p. 1; April 13, 2001, p. F20; September 22, 2002, p. F69.
New York Times, July 24, 1999, p. 10; May 19, 2000, p. E25; February 2, 2001, p. 29; August 2, 2001, p. E5.
Rolling Stone, October 6, 1994, p. 89.
Village Voice, February 6, 1996, p. 62; November 24, 1998, p. 113.

Online
"Andrew Hill," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (November 19, 2002).
Andrew Hill Official Website, http://www.andrewhilljazz.com (November 22, 2002).
"Dusk," All About Jazz, http://www.allaboutjazz.com/reviews/r0600_031.htm (November 22, 2002).
"A Fireside Chat with Andrew Hill," Jazz Weekly.com, http://www.jazzweekly.com/interviews/ahill.htm (November 22, 2002).
"Making the Rounds: Andrew Hill at the San Jose Repertory Theater," Jazz Now, http://www.jazznow.com/300rnds.html (November 22, 2002).
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Biography

Andrew Hill was a great and even groundbreaking composer and pianist, yet the relatively circumscribed scale of his innovations might have originally caused him to get lost in the shuffle of the '60s free jazz revolution. While many of his contemporaries were totally jettisoning the rhythmic and harmonic techniques of bop and hard bop, Hill worked to extend their possibilities; his was a revolution from within. Much of the most compelling '60s jazz was nearly aleatoric; Hill, on the other hand, exhibited a determined command of his materials, however abstract they might sometimes be. His composed melodies were labyrinthine, and rhythmically and harmonically complex tunes like "New Monastery" from his Point of Departure album exhibit a sophistication born of mastery, not chance or contingency. As a pianist, Hill had a flowing melodicism and an elastic sense of time. Like his composing, Hill's playing had an ever-present air of spontaneity and was almost completely devoid of cliché.

He began playing the piano at about the age of 13. As a youngster in Chicago, Hill was encouraged by pianist Earl Hines. Jazz composer Bill Russo also took an interest, and introduced Hill to the renowned classical composer Paul Hindemith, with whom Hill studied from 1950-1952. While in his teens, he gigged with prominent jazz musicians passing through the Midwest, Miles Davis and Charlie Parker among them. In 1955, he recorded So in Love with the Sound of Andrew Hill for the Warwick label. He moved to New York in 1961 to work with singer Dinah Washington. After a brief foray to Los Angeles with Rahsaan Roland Kirk's band in 1962, Hill moved back to New York, where he began his recording career in earnest.

He made several records for Blue Note from 1963-1969, both as leader and sideman. Hill's Blue Note work featured some of the best and brightest post-bop musicians of the day, including Eric Dolphy, Joe Henderson, Woody Shaw, Tony Williams, and Freddie Hubbard. Like many jazz musicians, Hill eventually turned to academia to make a living. He received his doctorate from Colgate University and served as the school's composer in residence from 1970-1972. Hill relocated to the West Coast, teaching in public schools and prisons in California. He eventually landed a teaching position at Portland State University, where he established the school's Summer Jazz Intensive. In addition to his teaching, Hill continued to perform and record in the '70s and '80s, making records for the Arista-Freedom and Black Saint/Soul Note labels. In 1989 and 1990, Hill recorded twice more for Blue Note, Eternal Spirit and But Not Farewell.

Hill moved back to the New York area in the '90s; a series of performances and new recordings helped place him back in the jazz spotlight. Hill formed a new Point of Departure Sextet for the Knitting Factory's 1998 Texaco Jazz Festival. The band included saxophonists Marty Ehrlich and Greg Tardy, trumpeter Ron Horton, bassist Scott Colley, and drummer Billy Drummond. The band went on to play New York club engagements to much acclaim. In 2000, Palmetto Records released Dusk, which was named the best album of 2001 by Down Beat and Jazz Times magazines. It was followed by A Beautiful Day in 2002, Passing Ships in 2003, and Black Fire in 2004, as well as a solid series of Blue Note reissues of his '60s work that included bonus tracks and new liner notes. His 2006 album, Time Lines, reunited him with both trumpeter Charles Tolliver and the Blue Note label. Hill also participated in a 17-piece big band, and a January 2002 engagement at New York's Birdland was filmed and recorded by Palmetto for future broadcast. After battling lung cancer for many years, Hill succumbed to the disease on April 20, 2007, leaving behind a stunning legacy of work. ~ Chris Kelsey, Rovi
 
 
Related topics:
Hommage (1975 Album by Andrew Hill)
Faces of Hope (1980 Album by Andrew Hill)
Andrew!!! [Bonus Tracks] (1964 Album by Andrew Hill)

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