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Malachi Thompson

 
Artist: Malachi Thompson
Malachi Thompson

Similar Artists:

Worked With:

Sonny Seals, Steve Wagner, Robert G. Koester, Kirk Brown, Harrison Bankhead, Steve Berry, Paul Serrano

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: August 21, 1949, Princeton, KY
  • Died: July 16, 2006, Chicago, IL
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Trumpet, Leader
  • Representative Albums: "Lift Every Voice," "Buddy Bolden's Rag," "Blue Jazz"

Biography

An excellent if underrated trumpeter, Malachi Thompson has played in free settings and recorded abstract tributes to jazz's possible founder, Buddy Bolden. Thompson grew up in Chicago. After hearing Count Basie's Orchestra at a concert when he was 11, he persuaded his parents to get him a trumpet. By 1969, Thompson was a member of the AACM and working in diverse settings ranging from free jazz to R&B. After gaining a college degree at Governor's State University, he moved to New York in 1974. As a freelancer, Thompson worked with the Sam Wooding big band, Sam Rivers, Joe Henderson, Kalaparusha McIntyre, Jackie McLean, David Murray, and many others. He was a co-leader of Brass Proud (1975-1980), an important part of Lester Bowie's Hot Trumpeter Repertory Company, and later on a member of Brass Fantasy. Thompson spent periods of time living in New York, Washington D.C., and Vienna, Austria. Although knocked out of action for a few years by lymphona in the late '80s, he survived the bout. In the 1990s, Thompson headed the Freebop Band and Africa Brass, having relocated back to Chicago. An adventurous player with a strong sense of jazz's history, Malachi Thompson has led recording sessions for RA (1972 and 1981) and regularly for Delmark since the mid-'80s. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Malachi Thompson
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Malachi Richard Thompson (August 21, 1949, Princeton, KentuckyJuly 16, 2006), was an American avant-garde jazz trumpet player.

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Biography

Malachi Thompson moved to Chicago as a child and credited his interest in the trumpet to hearing Count Basie's band at the Regal Theatre when he was 11 years old. Thompson worked in the rhythm and blues scene on Chicago’s South Side as a teen. In 1968, he joined the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), spending some time in the AACM big band.[1] Thompson performed and toured with the Operation Breadbasket Big Band, which was affiliated with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.[2]

Thompson worked with saxophonists Joe Henderson, Jackie McLean, Frank Foster, and Archie Shepp among other musicians while living in New York City. He formed his Freebop band in 1978, and eventually relocated to Washington, D.C. Thompson also worked with Lester Bowie's Hot Trumpets Repertory Company and formed Africa Brass, a group inspired by traditional New Orleans brass bands. [3]

Thompson graduated from Governor's State University in 1974 with a degree in music composition.

With a goal of preserving the Sutherland Theater on Chicago's South Side, Thompson founded the Sutherland Community Arts Initiative, a non-profit corporation, in 1991. He also wrote incidental music for a play about the theater.[4]

Informed in 1989 that he suffered from T-cell lymphoma and had one year to live, Thompson claimed he was healed by radiation and reading about jazz. He died in Chicago, Illinois from a relapse of his cancer in 2006.

Discography

As leader

  • New Standards (Delmark Records)
  • Lift Every Voice (Delmark)
  • The Jaz Life (Delmark)
  • Spirit (Delmark)
  • Timeline (Delmark)
  • 47th Street (Delmark)
  • Freebop Now! (Delmark)
  • Rising Daystar (Delmark)
  • Talking Horns (Delmark)
  • Blue Jazz (Delmark)
  • Legends and Heroes (RA)
  • The Seventh Son (RA)
  • Malachi Thompson/Africa Brass, Buddy Bolden's Rag (Delmark)
  • Malachi Thompson/Africa Brass, No Smoking, Littering, Radio Playing (compilation) (NORU4)

As sideman

  • Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy, Works (ECM)
  • Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy, Twilight Dreams (Virgin)
  • Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy, I Only Have Eyes for You (ECM)
  • Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy, Avant Pop (ECM)
  • Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre, Ram's Run (Cadence)
  • Shamek Farrah, La Dee La La (RA)
  • Errol Parker, Tentet (Sahara)
  • Archie Shepp, Attica Blues (Blue Marge)
  • Mustafa, Polygamy (Fatima)
  • Hubert Eaves, Esoteric Funk (Inner City)
  • Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre, Kwansa (Baystate)
  • Roland Alexander, Live at the Axis (Kharma)
  • Gil Scott-Heron, The Baron (Soundtrack) (Arista)
  • Quincy Jones, Save the Children (Soundtrack) (Capitol)

References

  1. ^ AllAboutJazz.com obituary and discography, posted July 19, 2006
  2. ^ The Guardian (UK), obituary, September 9, 2006, by Peter Vacher
  3. ^ The Guardian (UK), obituary, September 9, 2006, by Peter Vacher
  4. ^ The Guardian (UK), obituary, September 9, 2006, by Peter Vacher

Further reading

  • Thompson, Malachi, "The Evolution of Jazz and the Survival of Our Democratic Society," All About Jazz, November 1, 2004 link to article

External links


 
 
Learn More
The Seventh Son (1972 Album by Malachi Thompson)
Frequency (Jazz Band, 2000s)
Spirit (1983 Album by Malachi Thompson)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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