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Jay McShann

 

Pianist, bandleader

The venerable Jay McShann was a prominent figure on the Kansas City scene and remains best known as the leader of a band featuring the young Charlie Parker. Oklahoma-born and largely self taught, McShann played with Don Byas in the early thirties before settling in Kansas City in 1936. He helmed one of the most progressive bands of the swing era, providing a home for future bebop pioneer and saxophone virtuoso Parker, but the departure of his star performer and World War II interrupted the band’s momentum. In the postwar period McShann became known primarily as a jazz interpreter of the blues, leading a combo featuring Jimmy Witherspoon.

James Columbus McShann was born on January 12, 1916, in Muskogee, Oklahoma, and was brought up in a devoutly religious household. His father worked for a furniture store that also sold records, giving McShann his first opportunity to hear the blues of Bessie Smith and James P. Johnson. He taught himself to play the blues on the family piano despite his family’s disapproval. In 1931, while still in high school, McShann began playing in a band led by saxophonist Don Byas. He was soon playing in other area bands before moving to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1936.

He quickly established himself within the local musical community—centered around 12th and 18th Streets—and found himself a regular gig playing at the Monroe Inn on Independence Avenue. One night McShann stopped into the Bar Lu-Duc at 12th and Charlotte Street and heard Charlie "Bird" Parker for the first time. Parker’s playing was a revelation, giving McShann the idea of forming a group with him. In 1937 McShann put together a four-piece combo for a gig at Martin’s on the Plaza. Soon he added two new players, including Parker on saxophone. Martin’s was located in Kansas City’s posh Country Club Plaza, catering to an upscale crowd, and McShann’s group was one of the first to break the race barrier. As McShann explained to Down Beat’s Chuck Haddix, "At the time the Plaza didn’t use black bands. We were the first black band to play the plaza."

McShann soon expanded his band to a 12-piece, playing some of the bigger venues in Kansas City, including the Pla-Mor ballroom. In 1940 McShann and seven members of his orchestra recorded some sides at a Wichita, Kansas, radio station. These recordings were not released until the 1970s and feature some of Parker’s earliest recorded output, including "Lady Be Good" and "Honeysuckle Rose." In addition to Parker, these recordings featured mainstays Gene Ramey on bass and Gus Johnson on drums.

Toward the end of 1941 McShann and the band went to Dallas, Texas, for a recording session for the Decca label. McShann intended to record some of the group’s contemporary compositions, including a Parker-penned number called "What Price Love," later named

the "Yardbird Suite." The producer Dave Kapp, however, was interested primarily in blues-based numbers intended for what Haddix described as "the burgeoning race market." McShann complied, laying down a number of blues and boogie woogie tracks. The result was McShann’s most enduring hit, "Confessin’ the Blues," which has remained his signature song. The song sold more than 150,000 copies and the band immediately followed up with more recordings for Decca. Although McShann’s band recorded a variety of tunes that closed the gap between swing and bop, including the first recorded display of Parker’s genius, "Hootie’s Blues," the success of the band’s early titles led to McShann being known primarily as the leader of a blues ensemble.

McShann toured extensively, debuting in New York at the legendary Savoy Ballroom in early 1942. Despite the rave reviews, the United States’ entry into the war made it difficult for new bands to rise to national prominence. Parker’s entanglement in his multiple addictions led to increasingly erratic behavior. To make matters worse, in the fall of 1942 Earl Hines lured five members of McShann’s band, including Parker, to join his own ensemble.

The band recorded one final session in December of 1943, without the saxophone virtuoso. Band members had steadily been peeled off to join the war effort, and in May of 1944 McShann himself was called to serve, effectively ending the band. Upon his discharge, McShann re-formed the group, which played around New York, but the environment had changed during his absence. McShann related to Haddix, "During that little while I was in the army, everything changed. It was a different thing because a lot of the dance halls were turned into bowling alleys." The era of the big band was over and McShann decided to leave New York and head to Los Angeles. "By the time I got to California," he told Haddix, "I decided that I was through with trying to have a big band because it was too expensive, so I formed a small blues combo." In Los Angeles McShann became best known for his association with the jazz-blues vocalist Jimmy Witherspoon, and together they cut a number of sides for the Aladdin and Mercury labels.

McShann returned to Kansas City in 1950 and studied at the Conservatory of Music. He settled into raising a family but also toured regularly with his trio and with small groups. For much of the next two decades McShann worked mainly in the Midwest, but in the late sixties he took the advice of Duke Ellington and began playing in Europe. There he found an eager audience, and for the next 30 years McShann traveled regularly between the United States and Europe, in addition to performing at music festivals worldwide.

McShann was elected to the Kansas City Hall of Fame in 1971. In 1978 he was the subject of a documentary, Hootie’s Blues, and he is also featured in the film Last of the Blues Devils. March 3, 1979, was declared "Jay McShann Day" by a proclamation from Missouri’s governor. In addition to these honors, he received the 1982 Jazz Master Award from the Afro-American Museum in Philadelphia, the Kansas City Jazz Heritage Award, and the Jazz Era Pioneer Award from the National Association of Jazz Educators.

After more than 60 years as a professional musician and bandleader, McShann retired from active performing in the late 1990s, leaving behind a formidable legacy.

Selected discography
Jay McShann, Decca, 1954.
McShann’s Piano, Capitol, 1966.
Kansas City on My Mind, Jzm, 1967.
Confessin’ the Blues, Classic Jazz, 1969.
Roll ‘Em, Black & Blue, 1969.
New York: 1208 Miles, Decca, 1969.
The Big Apple Bash, New World, 1971.
Going to Kansas City, New World, 1972.
Man from Muskogee, Sackville, 1972.
Kansas City Memories, Black & Blue, 1973.
Vine Street Boogie, Black Lion, 1974.
Crazy Legs and Friday Strut, Sackville, 1976.
After Hours, Storyville, 1977.
The Last of the Blue Devils, Koch Jazz, 1977.
Kansas City Hustle, Sackville, 1978.
A Tribute to Fats Waller, Sackville, 1978.
Tuxedo Junction, Sackville, 1980.
Swingmatism, Sackville, 1982.
At Cafe Des Copains, Sackville, 1983.
Just a Lucky So and So, Sackville, 1983.
Airmail Special, Sackville, 1985.
Paris All-Star Blues: A Tribute, Music Masters, 1989.
Some Blues, Chi-Sound, 1990.
Hootie & Hicks/Missouri Connection, Reservoir, 1992.
Warm, Snowball, 1996.
Piano Playhouse, Night Train, 1996.
Hootie’s Jumpin’ Blues, Stony Plain, 1997.
Havin’ Fun, Sackvile, 1998.
My Baby with the Black Dress On, Chiaroscuro, 1998.

Sources
Books
Gioia, Ted, The History of Jazz, Oxford University Press, 1997.

Periodicals
Down Beat, October 1997, p. 61; May 2001, p. 42.
Entertainment Weekly, June 14, 1996, p.56.

Online
"An Interview with Jay McShann," Boogie Woogie Press, http://www.colindavey.com/BoogieWoogie/articles/jmi.htm (November 16, 2002).
"Jay McShann," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (November 16, 2002).
"McShann, James Columbus, ‘Jay,’" Club Kaycee, http://www.umkc.edu/orgs/kcjazz/jazzfolk/mcshj_OO.htm (November 16, 2002).
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Biography

The great veteran pianist Jay McShann (also known as Hootie) enjoyed a long career and it is unfair to primarily think of him as merely the leader of an orchestra that featured a young Charlie Parker. He was mostly self-taught as a pianist, worked with Don Byas as early as 1931 and played throughout the Midwest before settling in Kansas City in 1936. McShann formed his own sextet the following year and by 1939 had his own big band. In 1940 at a radio station in Wichita, KS, McShann and an octet out of his orchestra recorded eight songs that were not released commercially until the 1970s; those rank among the earliest of all Charlie Parker records (he is brilliant on "Honeysuckle Rose" and "Lady Be Good") and also feature the strong rhythm section team McShann had with bassist Gene Ramey and drummer Gus Johnson. The full orchestra recorded for Decca on two occasions during 1941-1942 but they were typecast as a blues band and did not get to record many of their more challenging charts (although very rare broadcasts have since surfaced and been released on CD by Vintage Jazz Classics). In addition to Bird (who had a few short solos), the main stars were trumpeter Bernard Anderson, the rhythm section, and singer Walter Brown. McShann and his band arrived in New York in February 1942 and made a strong impression, but World War II made it difficult for any new orchestras to catch on. There was a final session in December 1943 without Parker, but McShann was soon drafted and the band broke up. After being discharged later in 1944, McShann briefly re-formed his group but soon moved to Los Angeles, where he led combos for the next few years; his main attraction was the young singer Jimmy Witherspoon.

McShann was in obscurity for the next two decades, making few records and mostly playing in Kansas City. In 1969 he was rediscovered and McShann (who had first sung on records in 1966) was soon a popular pianist/vocalist. Sometimes featuring violinist Claude Williams, he toured constantly, recorded frequently, and appeared at many jazz festivals, being active into the mid-'90s. Jay McShann, who recorded through the years for Onyx (the 1940 radio transcriptions), Decca, Capitol, Aladdin, Mercury, Black Lion, EmArcy, Vee Jay, Black & Blue, Master Jazz, Sackville, Sonet, Storyville, Atlantic, Swingtime, and Music Masters among others, was a vital pianist and an effective blues vocalist who keept a classic style alive. A live album, Hootie Blues, recorded in 2001 in Toronto and released in 2006 by Stony Plain, showed that McShann could still bring it at the age of 85. He died at the age of 90 on December 7, 2006. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Jay McShann

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Jay McShann

Jay McShann at The Edinburgh Jazz Festival, c. 1995 Photo: Phil Wight
Background information
Birth name James Columbus McShann
Also known as Hootie
Born January 12, 1916(1916-01-12)
Muskogee, Oklahoma, United States
Died December 7, 2006(2006-12-07) (aged 90)
Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Genres Blues
Swing
Jazz
Jump blues
Bebop
Occupations Musician, Bandleader, Composer, Soldier
Instruments Vocals, Piano
Years active 1931–2006
Labels Vee-Jay Records

Jay McShann (January 12, 1916 – December 7, 2006) was an American Grammy Award-nominated jump blues, mainstream jazz, and swing bandleader, pianist and singer.

During the 1940s, McShann was at the forefront of blues and hard bop jazz musicians mainly from Kansas City. He assembled his own big band, with musicians that included some of the most influential artists of their time, including Charlie Parker, Bernard Anderson, Ben Webster and Walter Brown. His kind of music became known as "the Kansas City sound"[1][2]

McShann died on December 7, 2006, at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City.[3] Jay McShann was survived by his companion of more than 30 years, Thelma Adams (known as Marianne McShann), and three daughters - Linda McShann Gerber, Jayne McShann Lewis, and Pam McShann.

Contents

Biography

Nicknamed "Hootie",[4] McShann was born James Columbus McShann in Muskogee, Oklahoma. Musically, his education came from Earl Hines' late-night broadcasts from Chicago's Grand Terrace Cafe: "When 'Fatha' [Hines] went off the air, I went to bed".[5] He began working as a professional musician in 1931, performing around Tulsa, Oklahoma and neighboring Arkansas.

Orchestra

He moved to Kansas City, Missouri in 1936, and set up his own big band, which featured variously Charlie Parker (1937–1942), Al Hibbler, Lawrence Anderson, Ben Webster, Paul Quinichette, Bernard Anderson, Gene Ramey, Jimmy Coe, Gus Johnson (1938–1943),[6] Harold "Doc" West, Earl Coleman[7] and Walter Brown, among others. His first recordings were all with Charlie Parker, the first as 'The Jay McShann Orchestra' on August 9, 1940.[8]

Although they included both swing and blues numbers, the band played blues on most of its records; its most popular recording was "Confessin' the Blues." The group disbanded when McShann was drafted into the Army in 1944 and, the big band era being over, he was unable to successfully restart it when he got out.

Smaller groups

After World War II McShann began to lead small groups featuring blues shouter Jimmy Witherspoon. Witherspoon started recording with McShann in 1945, and fronting McShann's band, and had a hit in 1949 with "Ain't Nobody's Business." As well as writing much material, Witherspoon continued recording with McShann's band, which also featured Ben Webster, until 1951, whence McShann then played in obscurity until 1969.

McShann later became popular as a singer as well as a pianist, often performing with violinist Claude Williams. He continued recording and touring through the 1990s. Well into his 80s, McShann still performed occasionally, particularly in the Kansas City area and Toronto, Ontario where he made his last recording ['Hootie Blues'] in February 2001 after a recording career of 61 years.

Influence

On one of their earliest albums, Five by Five (a UK EP) and 12x5 (a US LP) (both 1964), The Rolling Stones recorded a cover of "Confessin' the Blues", a song McShann had co-written with Walter Brown in the 1940s.

Crime-fiction writer Elmore Leonard featured McShann as a character in his 2005 novel, The Hot Kid.

Honors

Discography

References

  1. ^ ^ Kansas City has the blues and all that jazz
  2. ^ see Kansas City Jazz on Wikipedia
  3. ^ Obituary in The Independent
  4. ^ Scott Yanow at allmusic
  5. ^ jaymcshann.com > about Jay McShann
  6. ^ Obituary: Gus Johnson, 1913—2000, "A Sensitive Drummer in Many Contexts"
  7. ^ Feather, Leonard & Gitler, Ira The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz Oxford University Press US, 2007 ISBN 019532000X, 9780195320008 at Google Books
  8. ^ TJD Jazz Discography: Tom Lord: 'Jumpin' at the Woodside' was their first
  9. ^ Discogs

External links


 
 
Related topics:
Call Me Baby (1991 Album by Jimmy Witherspoon)
Genius of Jazz Guitar (1981 Album by Al Casey)
Hootie's Jumpin' Blues (1997 Album by Jay McShann)

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