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James Moody

 

Saxophonist, flutist

James Moody, American saxophonist famed for his 1949 version of "I’m in the Mood for Love," is an original master of bebop—the first style of modern jazz developed in the late 1940s. Early in his outstanding musical career, Moody worked with bebop founders and legends such as saxophonist Charlie Parker, pianist Thelonious Monk, drummer Kenny Clarke, and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie to forge a radical style of music marked by complicated improvisation and vast harmonic territory for jazz soloists. Moody himself has proven to be a fluent soloist on the tenor and alto saxophone, as well as the flute. Decades after the creation of bebop, Moody’s musical style and vision continue to evolve. "Over the years, Moody has become so free—not in a random fashion, but a scientific freedom—that he can do anything he wants with the saxophone…. He has true knowledge. He is in complete control," saxophonist Jimmy Heath told Down Beat’s Ted Panken. Moody has been honored by receiving induction into the International Jazz Hall of Fame, and he was presented with the Jazz Masters Fellowship Award from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1998.

Born on March 26, 1925, in Savannah, Georgia, and raised in Newark, New Jersey, James Moody—named after his absent, trumpet-playing father—discovered his love of music at a young age. "When I was a kid [my mother] had a washing machine outside of the house that would go ‘arookata-arookata.’ She said I used to stand by and dance to the washing machine," Moody explained to Saxophone Journal. Although he was born partially deaf, at the age of 16, Moody began playing an old, silver alto saxophone given to him by an uncle. A few years later, he heard tenor saxophonists Don Byas and Buddy Tate perform with the Count Basie Band at the Adams Theater in Newark where he became enchanted by the more full-bodied sound of the tenor. The music of two other great tenor saxophonists, Lester Young and Coleman Hawkins, electrified Moody and helped convince him to dedicate his life to playing the saxophone.

Found Friend and Mentor in Gillespie
While serving in an African American unit of the United States Air Force from 1943-46, Moody met Gillespie, the influential trumpeter in whom he would find a lifelong friend and mentor. At the time, Moody was playing in the unauthorized ‘Negro Air Force Band,’ led by trumpeter Dave Burns, whom Moody would soon play with in Gillespie’s big band and later in Moody’s own band of the mid 1950s. Moody and Burns were blown away when they heard Gillespie perform at a military base in Greensboro, North Carolina. The two young men talked to the trumpeter and told him of their upcoming discharge from the Air Force. Gillespie invited them to audition for his band in New York. A few months after failing his first audition, Moody joined

Gillespie’s all-star bebop big band in 1946. By joining Gillespie’s group, Moody established an association that would offer him international exposure and the chance to create his own brilliant improvisational style.

The 21-year-old Moody was overwhelmed and impressed by the orchestra’s awe-inspiring range of talent, which included the supreme vibraphonist Milt Jackson, Clarke on drums, bassist Ray Brown, Monk on piano, Dave Burns on trumpet, and arguably one of the twentieth century’s greatest creative artists, trumpeter Miles Davis. It was during his first recording with the band that Moody established himself as a superb soloist. He made a startling impact on Gillespie’s 1946 version of "Emanon," in which he opened his nowfamous 16-bar solo with a surprising, trumpet-like burst of notes. "Moody’s ‘Emanon’ solo was very exciting to all the saxophone players around Philadelphia. It was very different than any blues solo that you had heard. He had the bebop sound," Heath told Panken. One year later, Moody recorded with Jackson for Dial Records, and in 1948, he made his recording debut as a leader using players from Gillespie’s band on James Moody and His Bebop Men for Blue Note.

Recorded Classic" I’m in the Mood for Love"
In 1949, Moody moved to Paris, where he lived with his uncle, to recover from a bout with alcoholism. He frequently played at the Club St. Germain and toured France, Scandinavia, and Switzerland, recording with both European and visiting American stars such as Davis and Clarke. He also got married and had a daughter, all the while recording over 90 sides for a variety of labels, melodically reinventing ballads, blues and bop tunes.

On October 12, 1949, while in Sweden on a two-week nightclub engagement, Moody recorded "I’m in the Mood for Love," the risky, improvisational masterpiece for which he is now renowned. A group called James Moody and His Swedish Crowns recorded Moody’s adventurous interpretation of this pop song by Jimmy McHugh for Metronome in Stockholm. As fate would have it, legendary Swedish saxophonist Lars Gullin came by the studio to hear Moody in action. On a whim, Moody asked Gullin if he could borrow the beat up alto saxophone that he had brought along with him. It was the first time Moody played the alto professionally. Pianist Gosta Theselius, who arranged the music, jotted down the harmonies to "I’m in the Mood for Love" while in the bathroom. When he came out, the song was done in one fantastic take. The beginning of Moody’s solo has become classic, but in fact, the musician, accustomed to playing the tenor, hesitated while he tried to find the right notes on his new instrument. The song changed Moody’s life and launched a fresh career for him back in the United States where the song unexpectedly became a huge juke box hit when it was initially released by Prestige Records. In 1954, the tune had a resurgence in popularity when the singer King Pleasure released a new version called "Moody’s Mood For Love" using lyrics by vocalist Eddie Jefferson, which referred to Moody by name. The song has since become a standard, with famous singers like Aretha Franklin covering it.

Due to the racism he had experienced during his service in the Air Force, Moody had not considered returning from Europe to the United States. In 1951, however, he did so in order to capitalize on his record’s success as a professionally established alto and tenor player. Shortly after his arrival, he formed a septet that integrated R&B with jazz and employed bop vocalist Eddie Jefferson as the band’s singer. In 1956, Moody’s septet recorded Flute ‘n’ the Blues, the band’s label debut with Argo Records and Moody’s first as a flutist. "I never really studied the flute, although I had help from many beautiful people. So I just got a flute and started ‘spittin’ into it not knowing what I was doing. The fingerings, some of them, seemed similar to saxophone, and I just blew like that and that’s how I started," Moody told Saxophone Journal. Flute ’n the Blues is an album on which Moody plays all three of his instruments, conveying the same deep feeling with his flute that he does on the saxophone. The record features "Boo’s Tune," one of two pieces recorded by Moody to be covered by the Ray Charles band.

Rebirth of Music and Spirit in Chicago
The 1950s saw Moody play a series of three-tenor shows with saxophonists Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt, as well as work with R&B and soul singers Dinah Washington and Brook Benton. Despite producing a number of exceptional recordings for Argo, Moody grew dissatisfied with the incessant touring and constant pressures of road life. In 1958, Moody’s career took a bad turn when a fire destroyed his band’s instruments, uniforms, and arrangements. A series of events led Moody to seek treatment for alcoholism at a mental institution called Overbrook Hospital in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. He was determined not to allow his addiction to mean the end of his life and career. After a six-month recovery period, his mother picked him up from Overbrook and saw him off at the Newark train station. He was on his way to Chicago, embarking on a journey that symbolized rebirth after months of suffering. In Chicago, he recorded the inspirational, bluesy album entitled Last Train from Overbrook on which he demonstrates his growth and agility as a flutist.

In 1963, after more than a decade, Moody rejoined Gillespie, replacing Leo Wright as reedman-flutist in Gillespie’s quintet until 1970. According to Panken, Moody’s thorough study of Coltrane’s harmonic system "brought his playing to new levels of complexity and abstraction." Wanting a steady job that would afford him time with his new wife and young daughter, Moody left the one-nighters behind and moved to Las Vegas in 1973. He had a seven-year stint in the Las Vegas Hilton Orchestra performing shows for rock ‘n’ roll mega-star Elvis Presley, popular television personality Bill Cosby, and glitzy pianist Liberace.

Moody got divorced and moved back to the East Coast in the 1980s. His career received a boost during this decade when he put together his own band again and received a 1985 Grammy Award nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance for his playing on the Manhattan Transfer’s Vocalese album. The record launched Moody back into the jazz scene as a recording artist, and the next year, he released his RCA/Novus debut titled Something Special. This recording was followed by Moving Forward, which features Moody’s energetic vocals on the tune" What Do You Do" and showcases his creative flute playing on the song "Giant Steps." His 1989 album, Sweet and Lovely, is dedicated to his wife Linda, whom he married in April of the same year. Gillespie was the best man, and he performed the solo on "Con Alma" to which the bride and groom walked down the aisle.

Honored for Work
Moody teamed with Gillespie again during the 1990s. They received a Grammy Award nomination for their version of Gillespie’s "Get the Booty," which showcases outstanding scatting. The two men also toured Europe and the United States with the United Nations Orchestra. The 1995 Telarc release Moody’s Party is a live recording of his historic seventieth birthday celebration at New York’s Blue Note. In April of 1996, the prolific artist released his first Warner Bros, album called Young at Heart, a recording that pays tribute to songs associated with Frank Sinatra. While touring extensively, Moody managed to find the time to appear as Mr. Glover in the 1997 film Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. During the latter part of the decade, he received a variety of honors, including his first honorary degree from Florida Memorial College, his induction into the International Jazz Hall of Fame, the 1998 Jazz Masters Fellowship Award from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the release of his Warner Bros. album Moody Plays Mancini.

In the spring of 2000, Moody celebrated his seventy-fifth birthday with another remarkable party, this time at Avery Fisher Hall in New York City with the help of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and notable Gillespie disciples. The audience was packed, and guests Slide Hampton, Jon Hendricks, Annie Ross, Jon Faddis, Kenny Barron, Janis Siegel, and Bill Cosby honored Moody. In conjunction with his birthday, Moody received proclamations from the cities of New York and Newark and was honored by the Congressional Black Caucus. On July 22, 2000, Moody received an honorary doctorate from Boston’s Berklee College of Music, awarded in Perugia, Italy.

Despite all of his accomplishments, Moody is humble, always seeking new knowledge about chords and scales, forever pushing the limits of jazz music. As he told Saxophone Journal,"I’ve had a saxophone for over 50 years, and still can’t play it."

Selected discography

Compilations; as leader; with others
Return from Overbrook(reissue of Flute ’n the Blues and Last Train from Overbrook), Chess, 1996.
James Moody and the Swedish All-Stars Greatest Hits(remastered reissue of James Moody’s Greatest Hits and More of James Moody’s Greatest Hits), Prestige, 1999.

As leader; with others
Young at Heart, Warner Bros., 1996.
Moody Plays Mancini, Warner Bros., 1997.

As sideman; with Dizzy Gillespie
Dizzy Gillespie and His Big Band, GNP/Crescendo, 1948; reissued, 1993.
Something Old, Something New, Verve, 1963; reissued, 1998.

Sources
Books
Holtje, Steve, and Nancy Ann Lee, editors, MusicHound Jazz: The Essential Album Guide, Visible Ink Press, 1998.
Kernfeld, Barry, editor, New Grove Dictionary of Jazz: Volume Two, Macmillan Press, 1988.

Periodicals
Down Beat, June 2001.
New York Times, April 2, 2000.
Saxophone Journal, January 1998.

Online
James Moody Official Website, http://www.jamesmoody.com (June 29, 2001).
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Biography

James Moody was an institution in jazz from the late '40s into the 21st century, whether on tenor, flute, occasional alto, or yodeling his way through his "Moody's Mood for Love." After serving in the Air Force (1943-1946), he joined Dizzy Gillespie's bebop orchestra and began a lifelong friendship with the trumpeter. Moody toured Europe with Gillespie and then stayed overseas for several years, working with Miles Davis, Max Roach, and top European players. His 1949 recording of "I'm in the Mood for Love" became a hit in 1952 under the title of "Moody's Mood for Love" with classic vocalese lyrics written by Eddie Jefferson and a best-selling recording by King Pleasure. After returning to the U.S., Moody formed a septet that lasted for five years, recorded extensively for Prestige and Argo, took up the flute, and then from 1963-1968, was a member of Dizzy Gillespie's quintet. He worked in Las Vegas show bands during much of the 1970s before returning to jazz, playing occasionally with Gillespie, mostly working as a leader and recording with Lionel Hampton's Golden Men of Jazz. Moody, who alternated between tenor (which he preferred) and alto throughout his career, had an original sound on both horns. He was also one of the best flutists in jazz. Moody recorded as a leader for numerous labels, including Blue Note, Xanadu, Vogue, Prestige, EmArcy, Mercury, Argo, DJM, Milestone, Perception, MPS, Muse, Vanguard, and Novus. He died of complications from pancreatic cancer on December 9, 2010 in San Diego, CA. James Moody was 85 years old. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

James Moody (saxophonist)

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James Moody

James Moody performing with Todd Coolman during a jazz festival.
Background information
Born March 26, 1925(1925-03-26)
Savannah, Georgia, United States
Died December 9, 2010(2010-12-09) (aged 85)
San Diego, California, United States
Genres Jazz
Hard bop
Occupations Musician
Instruments Alto saxophone
Tenor saxophone
Flute
Years active 1947–2010
Labels Prestige
Novus
Associated acts Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny Barron, Jon Faddis
Website http://www.jamesmoody.com/

James Moody (March 26, 1925 – December 9, 2010) was an American jazz saxophone and flute player. He was best known for his hit "Moody's Mood for Love," an improvisation based on "I'm in the Mood for Love"; in performance, he often improvised vocals for the tune.

Contents

Biography

James Moody was born in Savannah, Georgia. Growing up in New Jersey, he was attracted to the saxophone after hearing George Holmes Tate, Don Byas, and various saxophonists who played with Count Basie, and later also took up the flute. He joined the US Army Air Corps in 1943 and played in the "negro band" on the segregated base.[1] Following his discharge from the military in 1946 he played be-bop with Dizzy Gillespie[2] for two years. Moody later played with Gillespie in 1964, where his colleagues in the Gillespie group, pianist Kenny Barron and guitarist Les Spann, would be musical collaborators in the coming decades.

In 1948 he recorded his first session for Blue Note Records, the first in a long recording career playing both saxophone and flute. That same year he relocated to Europe, where he stayed for three years, saying he had been "scarred by racism" in the U.S.[1] His European work, including the first recording of "Moody's Mood for Love", which became a hit in 1952,[3] saw him add the alto saxophone to his repertoire and helped to establish him as recording artist in his own right, and were part of the growth of European jazz. Then in 1952, he returned to the U.S. to a recording career with Prestige Records and others, playing flute and saxophone in bands that included musicians such as Pee Wee Moore and others. In the 1960s, he rejoined Dizzy Gillespie. He later worked also with Mike Longo.[4]

In a 1998 interview with Bob Bernotas, Moody stated that he believed jazz has definite spiritual resonance.[4]

The James Moody Quartet (with pianist Renee Rosnes, bassist Todd Coolman, and drummer Adam Nussbaum) was Moody's vehicle later is his career.. Moody played regularly with Dizzy Gillespie Alumni All-Stars and the Dizzy Gillespie Alumni All-Stars Big Band and also often collaborated with former Gillespie alumnus, the trumpeter-composer-conductor Jon Faddis; Faddis and Moody worked in 2007 with the WDR Big Band in Cologne, Germany under the direction of Michael Abene.

On November 3, 2009, Moody appeared live in an interview conducted in both Italian and English (Moody spoke Italian) with the jazz aficionado, Nick "The Nightfly", on Radio Monte Carlo's late-night "Monte Carlo Nights" program. The chat featured an amiable Moody talking about his career.

Moody was married to Linda Moody; they resided in San Diego. He was an active member of the Bahá'í Faith.[4] In 2005, the Moodys established the Moody Scholarship Fund[5] at the Conservatory of Music at Purchase College-State University of New York (SUNY Purchase); the first Moody Scholars, named in 2007, are saxophonist Andrew Gould and trumpeter Maxilmilien Darche. Moody was an NEA Jazz Master and often participated in educational programming and outreach, including with the International Association for Jazz Education, or IAJE.

On November 2, 2010, Moody's wife announced on his behalf that he had pancreatic cancer, and had chosen not to have it treated aggressively. Moody died in San Diego, on December 9, 2010, of complications from pancreatic cancer.[2]

He was divorced twice, and is survived by his wife of 21 years, the former Linda Petersen McGowan; three sons, Regan, Danny and Patrick McGowan; a daughter, Michelle Moody Bagdanove; a brother, Louis Watters; four grandchildren; and one great-grandson.[6]

Two months after his death, Moody won the Grammy Award posthumously for Best Jazz Instrumental Album for his album Moody 4B.

Discography

As leader

  • 1949: James Moody's Greatest Hits
  • 1951: More of James Moody's Greatest Hits
  • 1955: Wail, Moody, Wail (Prestige Records, produced by Rudy Van Gelder)
  • 1955: Moody's Mood For Blues
  • 1956: Moody's Mood for Love
  • 1956: Hey It's James Moody
  • 1959: James Moody (Argo Records)
  • 1959: Flute 'n' the Blues
  • 1962: Another Bag (Argo)
  • 1963: Comin' On Strong (Argo)
  • 1965: Cookin' the Blues (Cadet Records, with Bernard McKinney, Howard McGhee, Eddie Jefferson)
  • 1969: The Blues and Other Colours
  • 1969: Don't Look Away Now
  • 1970: Teachers (Perception Records)
  • 1971: Heritage Hum (Perception)
  • 1973: Feelin' It Together
  • 1973: James Moody Sax & Flute Man (Jewel Record Corp)
  • 1991: "Moving Forward" (Novus)
  • 1997: Moody Plays Mancini (Warner Bros. Records)
  • 1999: James Moody And The Swedish All-Stars (Concord Records)
  • 2004: Homage
  • 2005: The World is a Ghetto (Fuel 2000 Records)
  • 2009: "Moody 4A (IPO)
  • 2010: "Moody 4B" (IPO)

As sideman

With Dizzy Gillespie

  • The Cool World (Philips, 1964)
  • Dizzy Goes Hollywood (Philips, 1964)
  • Swing Low, Sweet Cadillac (Impulse!, 1967)
  • Dizzy Gillespie's United Nations Orchestra - Live at the Royal Festival Hall (1989) Moody solos on "Kush" and "Night in Tunisia"
  • The Dizzy Gillespie Alumni All-Stars - Dizzy's World directed by Jon Faddis (1999)
  • The Dizzy Gillespie Alumni All-Star Big Band - Things to Come (2001)

With Milt Jackson

With Charles Mingus

With Bobby Timmons

With Tubby Hayes

With Roberta Gambarini

  • "Easy To Love"-(Groovin' High/Kindred Rhythm, 2006) Moody plays tenor sax and sings with Roberta on "Lover Man" and "Centerpiece,"

References

  1. ^ a b Moody’s Mood for Bop by Patrick Ambrose The Morning News
  2. ^ a b George Varga, Obituary Sign on San Diego (December 9, 2010). Retrieved March 26, 2011
  3. ^ Allmusic biography
  4. ^ a b c Bob Bernotas, Interview with James Moody MelMartin.com (1999) Retrieved, March 26, 2011
  5. ^ "The James Moody Scholarship at Purchase College" Purchase College-State University of New York. Retrieved March 26, 2011
  6. ^ Peter Keepnews, Obituary The New York Times (December 10, 2010). Retrieved March 26, 2011

External links


 
 
Related topics:
The Moody Story [Trip] (1951 Album by James Moody)
Young at Heart (1996 Album by James Moody)
Warner Jams, Vol. 2: The Two Tenors (1997 Album by Various Artists)

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