Moe Koffman

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Flutist, saxophonist, clarinetist

The much-loved and celebrated Canadian jazz flutist, clarinet player, and saxophonist Moe Koffman had a five-decade career during which he recorded 30 albums and performed for internationally influential audiences such as Princess Margaret, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, and the chancellor of West Germany. He was a featured soloist with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, as well as in the bands of jazz legends such as bebop trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and big band leader Jimmy Dorsey. From 1968-2000, Koffman also played in Canada’s most renowned big band, Rob McConnell & the Boss Band. Unique in his ability to play across musical genres, he was a first-call musician for television soundtracks and commercials, and was known for his cool-toned bop music, as well as his inventive jazz interpretations of classical and pop. "It’s mind-boggling what Moe has done in his career. He’s a brilliant cross-musician who set standards that everybody has had to aim for," keyboardist and longtime collaborator, Doug Riley, told Billboard.

Cited as "one of Canada’s jazz institutions" in his New York Times obituary, Koffman, who died from cancer at the age of 72, left behind a musical legacy. This inheritance includes the 1970s albums which sold more than 50,000 units—Moe Koffman Plays Bach and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons—as well as the 1958 international hit, "Swingin’ Shepherd Blues," a composition which has been recorded by more than 100 artists, including jazz great Ella Fitzgerald. Among his long list of accomplishments, in 1993 Koffman received the Order of Canada, an award presented by the Governor General, in recognition of his great work and enormous contributions to the arts industry. A few years later, in 1997, the outstanding musician was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. On the day he died, Koffman was named—along with pianist Oscar Peterson—as one of the first inductees into the Canadian Jazz and Blues Hall of Fame.

On December 28, 1928, Koffman was born to Polish parents in Toronto, Ontario. His musical schooling began at the early age of nine, when he took up the violin—an instrument that he claimed he was not good at playing. He started playing the alto saxophone at 13, and later studied clarinet and flute, laying the groundwork for the wide scope of musicianship he would demonstrate in the years to come. By the age of 15, he was attending the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, and playing gigs with local dance bands on the weekends.

In the 1940s, the young Koffman became enchanted with a radical new style of jazz called bebop, which employed complicated harmonies and intense rhythms. Bebop founders Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Duke Ellington’s alto saxophonist, Johnny Hodges, were his inspirations. "My first real true love was bebop. I just dug into it with a love and a passion," Koffman told Billboard’s Larry LeBlanc. As a determined teenager, he often brought his saxophone around to various clubs, in search of visiting American jazz players. Once, he even talked his way backstage at Toronto’s Massey Hall in order to perform for saxophonist Illinois Jacquet. Koffman was asked to play a Charlie Parker tune—a request he was happy to oblige.

In 1948, at a mere 20 years of age, Koffman was named Best Alto Saxophonist in the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s (CBC) Jazz Unlimited poll. As a result of this and other acknowledgements he received, Koffman was offered a record contract with Main Stem Records in Buffalo, New York. His first recordings, under the name Moe Koffman and the Main Stemmers, were two bebop 78-RPMs: "Bop Lop" and "Rocking with the Bop."

During the early 1950s, Koffman worked in the United States as a featured soloist in big bands fronted by some of the most influential jazz musicians of the time, including Sonny Durham, Art Mooney, Jimmy Dorsey, and Charlie Barnet. In 1955, Koffman returned to Toronto, where he made his first appearance at the music venue House of Hambourg. He quickly became known as a skilled studio musician with the ability to play across many genres. At the time, he split his career between performing in clubs with the Moe Koffman Quartet and appearing on top Canadian television series, such as CrossCanada Hit Parade and Front Page Challenge. In 1956, Koffman assumed the position of music director for George’s Spaghetti

House, Toronto’s premier jazz club. His dedication helped many new musicians get their first break at the venue until its closure in 1998.

The time between 1957 and 1958 was a magic period during which Koffman got his band a deal with Jubilee Records in New York, and released the international hit composition, "Swingin’ Shepherd Blues" on his first album, Cool and Hot Sax. Koffman brought his group’s 1957 demo tape and a tape player all around the city, until Jubilee’s former producer, Morty Palitz, said he would record the group in a Toronto studio. Koffman’s signature piece, which later received a Broadcasting Music, Incorporated (BMI) award for more than one million performances logged, was originally entitled "Blues A La Canadiana," but was retitled—for the sake of greater appeal—at the RCA Victor Studio in Toronto, during a recording session. The year 1958 saw "Swingin’ Shepherd Blues" reach number 23 on Billboard’s singles charts in the United States and the United Kingdom.

Despite Koffman’s initial hit, his subsequent recordings did not enjoy comparable success. He spent the next four decades recording for various labels, such as GRT Records of Canada and Duke Street, but supported himself mainly by doing concert tours and studio work. In the mid 1960s, he made more than six appearances as a soloist on the popular National Broadcasting Company’s (NBC) Tonight Show, and in 1967, Koffman played with pianist Duke Ellington on Decca’s North of the Border album, which featured compositions by well-known Canadian musicians. The following year, Koffman began his 32-year stint as a player in Canada’s top big band, fronted by Rob McConnell, who had previously been the trombonist for Koffman’s group. In 1969, CBC’s news show, As It Happens, adopted Koffman’s "Curried Soul" as its theme song—a tune which many Canadians still associate with him.

During an extremely productive time, from 1971-79, Koffman recorded nine albums for GRT. Only the 1975 album, Live at George’s, was straight-ahead jazz, the others being contemporary jazz and pop style interpretations of classical music. Although the first two recordings, Moe Koffman Plays Bach and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, went gold in Canada, Koffman’s reputation as a premier jazz musician was negatively impacted by his overlapping success with classical albums.

Koffman’s name as a top jazz musician was restored in the 1980s when he began recording for the independent, Toronto-based label, Duke Street. Among the albums released were One Moe Time, Moe-mentum, Oop-Pop-A-Da—with an appearance by Dizzy Gilles-pie—and Moe Koffman Quintet Plays." The pendulum of opinion [against Koffman] swung the other way, because these recordings were magnificent, straight-ahead jazz albums," CBC Radio Two’s After Hours host, Ross Porter, told Larry LeBlanc in Billboard. In 1981 he was given the Harold H. Moon Award for outstanding contribution to Canadian music.

Throughout the 1990s, Koffman was the musical contractor for Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Toronto runs of the musical shows Phantom of the Opera, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Showboat, and Sunset Boulevard. Webber’s compositions inspired Koffman to produce a 1991 album, Music for the Night; it was a blend of jazz, symphony, and pop style versions of nine Webber favorites. The album featured performances by some of Toronto’s best rhythm section players including Doug Riley, who had collaborated with Koffman on the previous Bach and Vivaldi albums. As the decade unfolded, awards and honors rained down upon Koffman. In 1991, the same year he was nominated for a Juno Award, he received a Toronto Arts Award. Then, in 1993, Koffman won the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (SOCAN) Award for Songwriters, as well as being voted Flutist of the Year at the Annual Canadian Jazz Reports Awards ceremony. In 1993, he was also named an Officer of the Order of Canada, one of the nation’s greatest honors.

Koffman’s thirtieth and last album, Moe Koffman Project, released by Universal in the spring of 2000, is representative of the stylistic blends and musical risks that Koffman’s work has become known for. The bluesy album was an ambitious collaboration for which Koffman employed a group of talented young musicians, one of whom is Riley’s son, Ben, a drummer whom Koffman had known since birth. The older Riley also worked on the project, and was quoted in the Canadian Press,"He [Koffman] was fantastic to work with; he was extremely demanding and a perfectionist, but encouraged total creative freedom from the people that he worked with…. It was like he was a kid again. It was almost as if he knew somehow inside that this was going to be it." Indeed, shortly after finishing recording sessions for Moe Koffman Project, the musician was diagnosed with cancer. Despite the physical struggle he was undergoing, Koffman continued to make public appearances. His last was at the Toronto Jazz Festival in June of 2000. Koffman died from non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma on March 28, 2001, leaving behind his wife, Gisele, his three sons, a stepdaughter, and a few grandchildren.

Selected discography
Hot and Cool Sax (includes "Swingin’ Shepherd Blues"), Jubilee, 1957.
The Shepherd Swings Again, Jubilee, 1958.
1967, Just A Memory (Canada), 1967.
Moe Koffman Plays Bach, GRT, 1971.
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, GRT, 1972.
Master Session, GRT, 1973.
One Moe Time, Duke Street, 1986.
Moe-Mentum, Duke Street, 1987.
Oop-Pop-A-Da, Duke Street, 1988.
Featuring Dizzy Gillespie, Soundwings, 1988.
Music for the Night,1991.
(As sideman with Rob McConnell & the Boss Brass) Play the Jazz Classics, Concord, 1997.
Moe Koffman Project, Emarcy/Universal, 2000.

Sources
Periodicals
Billboard, February 24, 2001, p. 4.
New York Times, April 3, 2001, p. D1.

Online
"Canada’s Swingin’ Shepherd of Jazz," Canada Newswire, http://www.newswire.ca (July 9, 2001).
"Friends Fondly Recall Moe Koffman," JamlMusic Canada Music News, http://www.canoe.ca (July 9, 2001).
  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

Moe Koffman became famous for his 1957 hit recording of "Swinging Shepherd Blues," a catchy flute feature. Otherwise, throughout his career Koffman has been a popular soloist whose music ranges from cool-toned bop to jazz interpretations of more pop-ish material; his commercial successes have sometimes overshadowed his fine improvising talents. Although he has spent most of his life in Canada, Koffman did work with the bands of Sonny Dunham, Ralph Flanagan, Charlie Barnet, Tex Beneke, and Jimmy Dorsey in the U.S. during the first half of the 1950s. Later on, Koffman played at George's Spaghetti House in Toronto for over three decades (one week every month), worked extensively in the studios, and has been with Rob McConnell's Boss Brass since 1972. Few of Moe Koffman's records (the earlier sessions were cut for Jubilee and he made a pair for Duke Street in the mid-'80s) are available. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
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Moe Koffman, OC (December 28, 1928 - March 28, 2001) was a Canadian jazz musician and composer. He played the flute, soprano, alto and tenor saxophone and clarinet. Although some jazz purists did not appreciate his sensitivity to popular tastes, his ability to adapt to changing styles reflected his technical skill as a musician and diverse musical interests.

Born Morris Koffman in Toronto, he began his musical studies in his native city with Gordon Delamont. He attended the Toronto Conservatory of Music, now the Royal Conservatory of Music of Toronto, where he was a student of Samuel Dolin but later dropped out of school to perform in dance bands. In 1950, he moved to the United States, where he played with big bands including those of Sonny Dunham and Jimmy Dorsey. In 1955, he returned to Toronto where he formed a quartet and later a quintet. He recorded Swinging Shepherd Blues in 1958 which helped establish his reputation as a flautist and ranked him alongside Herbie Mann and Yusef Lateef and later Jeremy Steig as great influential jazz flute players. "Swinging Shepherd Blues" was a hit in the United States, reaching #23 on the Billboard pop chart.

Koffman was inspired by Rahsaan Roland Kirk to play multiple instruments at once; and had a modified set of straps to hold a tenor and an alto saxophone so that he could put forward incredible chords and improvise at the same time. One of the more famous session musicians in Toronto, he appeared in countless commercials, background music, and film and TV soundtracks. Most work on bass flute in Canadian soundtracks from 1950 to 1990 in Toronto sessions was done by Koffman on this rare instrument. Koffman was also an exponent of circular breathing techniques for his large volumes of sound, and joined fellow Canadian Maynard Ferguson and new age multi-instrumentalist musician Ron Allen in this talent.

During the 1970s, Koffman recorded several popular albums with arrangements of works by classical composers including Bach, Mozart and Vivaldi. He also was a guest performer with a number of symphony orchestras across Canada.

He performed with Dizzy Gillespie and Peter Appleyard during the 1980s. He often performed with Rob McConnell's Boss Brass. From 1956 to 1990, Koffman booked performers for George's Spaghetti House in Toronto, where he performed weekly. His compositions "Curried Soul" and "Koff Drops" have been used as the opening and closing themes respectively for the CBC radio show As It Happens for over 30 years, and are consequently probably his best-known recordings.

Koffman died of cancer in Orangeville, Ontario in 2001 at the age of 72. He had been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma about a year earlier. Some of his music for Duke Street Records remains unreleased; however Music for the Night was released and re-issued in 2007, and Devil's Brew was re-issued in 2009.

He was appointed to the Order of Canada in 1993 and inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 1997. In 2002, Moe Koffman was a MasterWorks honouree (video clip) by the Audio-Visual Preservation Trust of Canada.

Contents

Discography

Singles:

  • "Pixies Three"
  • "Swinging Shepherd Blues"

LPs:

  • Hot And Cool Saxophone (1957) (Jubilee)
  • The Shepherd Swings Again (1958) (Jubilee)
  • Moe Koffman The Swinging Shepherd Plays For Teens (1962) (Ascot)
  • Tales Of Koffman (1962) (UA)
  • The Moe Koffman Quartet (1963) (CTA)
  • Moe Koffman (1967) (Universal)
  • 1967 (1967) (Just A Memory)
  • Moe Koffman Quartet (1967) (CBC/RCI)
  • Moe Koffman Goes Electric (1967) (Jubilee)
  • Turned On Moe Koffman (1968) (Jubilee)
  • Moe's Curried Soul with Doug Riley & Lenny Breau (1969) (Revolver)
  • Moe Koffman Plays Bach (1971) (GRT)
  • The Four Seasons (1972) (GRT)
  • Master Session (1974) (GRT)
  • Solar Explorations (1974) (GRT)
  • Swinging Shepherd (1975) (Universal)
  • Live At George's (1975) (GRT)
  • Jungle Man (1976) (GRT)
  • Museum Pieces (1977) (Janus)
  • Things Are Looking Up (1978) (GRT)
  • Back To Bach (1979) (Anthem)
  • Project (1980) (Universal)
  • Moe-Mentum (1986) (Universal)
  • One Moe Time (1986) (Duke)
  • Oop.Pop.A.Da featuring Dizzy Gillespie (1989) (Universal)
  • Music For The Night arranged by Doug Riley (1991) (Universal)
  • Collection (1993) (Universal)
  • Devil's Brew (1996) (Universal)

See also

References

External links


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Neil Swainson (Jazz Artist, '70s-'90s)
Moe-Mentum (1987 Album by Moe Koffman)
Bernie Senensky (Jazz Artist, '70s-2000s)
Ed Bickert (Jazz Artist, '50s-'90s)
Reggae (1974 Album by Herbie Mann)