Phil Woods

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Saxophonist, clarinetist, composer, bandleader

During a career that has spanned more than 50 years, saxophonist Phil Woods has earned a reputation as a supremely talented bebopper and one of the hardest-working, most prolific musicians in jazz. Long regarded as an heir to legendary saxophonist Charlie "Bird" Parker, Woods has toured and recorded with many of the biggest names in his field and has led his own ensemble, the Phil Woods Quartet (or, at times, Quintet or the Phil Woods Six) since the early 1970s. Although long retired from studio work, he earned a name for himself among a broader audience with his 1977 sax solo on the Billy Joel hit "Just the Way You Are." An Italian record label, Philology, has been named after him and has released as many as 27 of his recordings.

Woods was born on November 2, 1931, in Springfield, Massachusetts, the son of Clara (Markley) and Stanley Woods. He began playing the saxophone at the age of 12 and took private lessons for a time from saxophonist Lennie Tristano. In the summer of 1948 he studied at the Manhattan School of Music, and the following fall he enrolled in the prestigious Juilliard School, where he was required to major in clarinet. He graduated from Juilliard in 1952 and then played briefly in saxophonist Charlie Barnet's dance band. From 1955–56, he played with pianists George Wallington and Friedrich Gulda, as well as with trumpeter Kenny Dorham. In the summer of 1956, he also joined trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie on a U.S. State Department tour of Latin America and the Middle East. Woods later recalled that Gillespie served as a profound influence. "Dizzy is pivotal to the whole core of my being," Woods once told Nat Hentoff in an interview for Jazz Times online. "He used to say, 'I'm a rhythm man. The rhythm is the foundation of the building. If you lose sight of the foundation, the building topples.'"

By the late 1950s Woods was leading his own ensembles, including a quintet with saxophonist Gene Quill, called Phil and Quill, from 1957–58. Another ensemble included keyboardist Herbie Hancock and bassist Ron Carter. Woods toured Europe with arranger/composer Quincy Jones in 1959–60 and the USSR with clarinetist Benny Goodman in 1962. From 1964–67 he taught at Ramblerny performing arts camp in New Hope, Pennsylvania. He also worked as a studio musician in the 1960s and 1970s, lending his sound to recording sessions, television and film soundtracks, and advertising jingles. One of his best-known contributions as a studio musician was his solo on Billy Joel's 1977 hit "Just the Way You Are."

In 1968 Woods moved to France with his wife, Chan Parker, Charlie Parker's widow. He recalled to Ed Berger of Jazz Times that politics, in part, spurred the move. "It was hard to be an American in 1968," he remarked. "Chan was very active and we both felt we had to make a statement. But it wasn't only political dissatisfaction. I was getting sucked into the studio thing and wasn't playing any music." Parker and Woods later divorced and he married Jill Goodwin, the sister of Phil Woods Quartet drummer Bill Goodwin. Soon after moving to Paris, Woods formed the European Rhythm Machine with keyboardist George Gruntz, bassist Henri Texier, and drummer Daniel Humair. He did not escape studio work. During his time in Europe, Woods wrote for Danish and Belgian radio and composed a ballet score for French television.

Woods returned to the United States in the early 1970s, and after forming a short-lived experimental electronic quartet in Los Angeles, he settled in Delaware Water Gap, Pennsylvania, in 1973 and formed the Phil Woods Quartet with drummer Goodwin, pianist Mike Mellilo, and bassist Steve Gilmore. The group has seen some personnel changes, and has at times been the Phil Woods Quintet and the Phil Woods Six, but has remained intact since its formation. Their 1976 album (as the Phil Woods Six with guitarist Harry Leahey and percussionist Alyrio Lima) Live from the Showboat won a Grammy Award in 1977 for Best Jazz Instrumental Group Performance, the first of three for the core ensemble. Woods discussed the advantages of steady ensemble work with Jerry De Muth in a 1979 issue of Down Beat. "I did my share of going out, working with the local rhythm section," he said. "I don't think I'd ever do it again. If I couldn't sustain a group I think I'd go teach…. Otherwise you carry around a little library and you have a rehearsal and it never gets off the ground. That would be such a bringdown after having my own rhythm section. I don't think I could stand it. I played 'Stella by Starlight' enough to last me a lifetime."

Woods began playing clarinet again, in addition to the saxophone, in the late 1970s. In 1978 he helped found the annual Delaware Water Gap Celebration of the Arts. He also continued to teach workshops, although in a 1982 interview with Down Beat's Dan Morgenstern, he had harsh words for university jazz programs. "There's a certain musical need gravitating from the streets to the universities. Jazz is alive and well; why, we have jazz courses in all the schools. It's wonderful. I don't know man—maybe it is and maybe it ain't. And maybe we should examine it. There's an assumption by the jazz departments that there is a jazz business. There's Las Vegas and L.A. They graduate, go out with [trumpter] Maynard [Ferguson] for two weeks, realize it's ridiculous, then go back and teach some more cats to graduate and see how ridiculous it is." Woods told Berger that he tries to engage students in a more useful course of study. "When I go to universities, I always try to tell them the full import of what they're getting into," he said. "If you want to be a jazz musician, you have to be a cultured human being. [Saxophonist] Mr. [Benny] Carter taught me that, and so did Charlie Parker. Know something about the world, about food, wine, speak a language, go to a play, get some pastels and try to draw a stick figure. Don't just say you're 'into Trane, man.'"

Despite health problems, Woods has continued to perform with his ensemble, and he told Berger he intends to keep going for many more years. "Benny Carter has always been my role model, and he played into his 90s," Woods observed.

Selected discography
Pot Pie, New Jazz, 1954.Phil Woods New Jazz Quintet, New Jazz, 1954.Phil Woods Quintet, Prestige, 1954.Phil Woods New Jazz Quartet, Prestige, 1955.Woodlore, Original Jazz Classics, 1955.(With Gene Quill) The Woods-Quill Sextet, RCA, 1956.Altology, Prestige, 1956.(With Phil and Quill) Phil and Quill with Prestige, Prestige/OJC, 1957.Sugan, New Jazz/OJC, 1957.Phil Woods Sextet, Mode, 1957.(With Phil & Quill) Phil Talks with Quill, Columbis, 1957.
Bird Feathers, Original Jazz Classics, 1957.Rights of Swing, Candid, 1960.Greek Cooking, Impulse!, 1966Directly from the Half Note, Philology, 1966.(With European Rhythm Machine) The Birth of the ERM, Philology, 1968.At the Montreux Jazz Festival (live), Verve, 1969.Round Trip, Verve, 1969.(With European Rhythm Machine) Phil Woods and His European Rhythm Machine at the Montreux (live), MGM, 1970.New Phil Woods Quartet, Testament, 1973.Images, RCA, 1975.New Phil Woods Album, RCA, 1975.Floresta Canto, RCA, 1975.Live from the Showboat, RCA, 1976.Song for Sisyphyus, Gryphon, 1977.I Remember, Gryphon, 1978.Phil Woods Quartet, Live (Vol. 1), Clean Cuts, 1979.Crazy Horse, Sea Breeze, 1979.(With Lew Tabackin) Phil Woods/Lew Tabackin, Evidence, 1980.Three for All, Rhino, 1981Birds of a Feather, Antilles, 1981.At the Vanguard (live), Antilles, 1982.Old Dude and the Fundance Kid, Uptown, 1984.Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Rykodisk, 1984.Gratitude, Denon, 1986.Bop Stew (live), Concord Jazz, 1987.Evolution, Concord Jazz, 1988.Little Big Band, Concord Jazz, 1988.Embraceable You, Philology, 1988.Here's to My Lady, Chesky, 1988.Flash, Concord Jazz, 1989.All Bird's Children, Concord Jazz, 1990.Phil's Mood, Philology, 1990.Flowers for Hodges, Concord Jazz, 1991.An Affair to Remember, Evidence, 1993.Ornitology: Phil Salutes Bird, Philology, 1994.Our Monk, Philology, 1994.Alto Summit, Milestone, 1995.Mile High Jazz, Concord Jazz, 1996.Celebration, Concord Jazz, 1997.Souvenirs, Philology, 1997.Just Friends, Philology, 1998.The Rev and I, Blue Note, 1998.Porgy and Bess, Philology, 1999.Balladeer Supreme, Philology, 2001.The Solo Album, Philology, 2001.Americans Swinging in Paris, EMI, 2001.You and the Night and the Music, Venus, 2002.Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, MGM/Verve, 2002.Thrill Is Gone, Venus, 2003.This Is How I Feel About Quincy, Jazzed Media, 2004.Groovin' to Marty Paich (live), Jazzed Media, 2005.Phil Woods: A Life in E Flat (DVD), Jazzed Media, 2005.

Sources
Periodicals
Down Beat, January 11, 1979; January 1982.
Jazz Times, June 2005.

Online
"Phil Woods," Grove Online, http://www.grovemusic.com (September 14, 2005).
"Phil Woods," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (September 14, 2005).
"Phil Woods: The Irrespressible Spirit of Jazz," JazzTimes, http://www.jazztimes.com (August 31, 2005).
  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

One of the true masters of the bop vocabulary, Phil Woods has had his own sound since the mid-'50s and stuck to his musical guns throughout a remarkably productive career. There has never been a doubt that he is one of the top alto saxophonists alive, and he has lost neither his enthusiasm nor his creativity through the years.

Woods' first alto was left to him by an uncle, and he started playing seriously when he was 12. He gigged and studied locally until 1948, when he moved to New York. Woods studied with Lennie Tristano, at the Manhattan School of Music, and at Juilliard, where he majored in clarinet. He worked with Charlie Barnet (1954), Jimmy Raney (1955), George Wallington, the Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra, Buddy Rich (1958-1959), Quincy Jones (1959-1961), and Benny Goodman (for BG's famous 1962 tour of the Soviet Union), but has mostly headed his own groups since 1955, including co-leadership of a combo with fellow altoist Gene Quill in the '50s logically known as "Phil & Quill." Woods, who married the late Charlie Parker's former wife Chan in the 1950s (and became the stepfather to singer Kim Parker), was sometimes thought of as "the new Bird" due to his brilliance in bop settings, but he never really sounded like a copy of Parker.

Woods popped up in a variety of settings in the 1960s -- on Benny Carter's classic Further Definitions record, touring Europe with the short-lived Thelonious Monk Nonet, and appearing on studio dates like the soundtracks to The Hustler and Blow Up. Always interested in jazz education (although he believes that there is no better way to learn jazz than to gig and travel constantly), Woods taught at an arts camp in Pennsylvania in the summers of 1964-1967. Discouraged with the jazz scene in the U.S., he moved to France in 1968. For the next few years, Woods led a very advanced group, the European Rhythm Machine, which leaned toward the avant-garde and included pianist George Gruntz. Their recordings still sound fresh and exciting today, although this venture would only be a detour in Woods' bebop life. In 1972, he returned to the U.S. and tried unsuccessfully to lead an electronic group that featured keyboardist Pete Robinson.

In 1973, Woods formed a quintet with pianist Mike Melillo, bassist Steve Gilmore, drummer Bill Goodwin, and guitarist Harry Leahey that had much greater success. Their recording Live at the Showboat officially launched the band, which today, after a few personnel changes, still tours the world. After Leahey left in 1978, it was known as the Phil Woods Quartet until trumpeter Tom Harrell (1983-1989) joined; his spot has since been assumed by trombonist Hal Crook (1989-1992) and trumpeter Brian Lynch. Pianist Melillo went out on his own in 1980, and his successors have been Hal Galper (1980-1990), Jim McNeely (1990-1995), and Bill Charlap; Gilmore and Goodwin have been with Woods since the group's start. Not just a bebop repertory band, Woods' ensembles have developed their own repertoire, taken plenty of chances, and stretched themselves while sticking to his straight-ahead path.

Woods contributed the famous alto solo to Billy Joel's hit recording of "Just the Way You Are" and has been one of Michel Legrand's favorite artists, guesting with Legrand on an occasional basis; he has made dozens of rewarding recordings himself through the years. He debuted as a leader in 1954 and has since recorded for Prestige, Savoy, RCA, Mode, Epic, Candid (the brilliant The Right of Swing in 1961), Impulse, MGM, Verve, Embryo, Testament, Muse, Omnisound, Enja, and Chesky, and has recorded with his Quintet/Quartet for RCA, Gryphon, Adelphi, Clean Cuts, SeaBreeze (two sets adding Chris Swansen's inventive synthesizer to the band), Red, Antilles, Palo Alto, BlackHawk, Denon, and quite extensively for Concord. Some key sets include 1960's Rights of Swing on Candid, 1974's Musique Du Bois on 32 Jazz, 1981's Birds of a Feather from Antilles, and 2002's Americans Swinging in Paris from EMI.

An Italian label, Philogy (which has some broadcasts and live performances from Woods' bands), is named after the popular and still brilliant altoist. Still going strong well into the 21st century, Woods cut a live session with the Los Angeles Jazz Orchestra in 2005 that was released by Jazz Media in 2006. American Songbook, which features Woods' treatment of pop and jazz standards, appeared from Kind of Blue later that same year. In 2009, after years of attempting to secure the rights to interpret the work of writer A.A. Milne, Woods released Children's Suite -- a tribute to Milne's classic book Winnie the Pooh. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
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Phil Woods

Phil Woods in 1978.
Background information
Birth name Philip Wells Woods
Born (1931-11-02) November 2, 1931 (age 80)
Springfield, Massachusetts, USA
Genres Bop
Hard Bop, Post-bop
Occupations Bandleader, composer
saxophone player
Instruments Alto saxophone
Soprano saxophone
Clarinet
Labels Philology
Associated acts Quincy Jones, Buddy Rich, Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, Wes Montgomery, Gene Krupa, Benny Goodman, Billy Joel, Steely Dan, Paul Simon and Aretha Franklin

Philip Wells Woods (born November 2, 1931) is an American jazz bebop alto saxophonist, clarinetist, bandleader and composer.

Contents

Biography

Woods was born in Springfield, Massachusetts. He studied music with Lennie Tristano, who influenced him greatly, at the Manhattan School of Music and at The Juilliard School. His friend, Joe Lopes, coached him on clarinet as there was no saxophone major at Juilliard at the time. Although he did not copy Charlie "Bird" Parker, bop's greatest saxophonist, he was known as the New Bird, a label which was also attached to other alto players such as Sonny Stitt and Cannonball Adderley at one time or another in their careers.

After moving to France in 1968, Woods led The European Rhythm Machine, a group which tended toward avant-garde jazz. He returned to the United States in 1972 and, after an unsuccessful attempt to establish an electronic group, he formed a quintet which was still performing, with some changes of personnel, in 2004. As his theme, Woods uses a piece titled "How's Your Mama?"

In 1979, Woods made the recording, More Live, at the Armadillo World Headquarters in Austin, Texas. Perhaps his best known recorded work as a sideman is a pop piece, his alto sax solo on Billy Joel's "Just the Way You Are." He also played the alto sax solo on Steely Dan's "Doctor Wu," from their critically acclaimed 1975 album Katy Lied, as well as Paul Simon's 1975 hit, Have a Good Time.

Although Woods is primarily a saxophonist he is also a fine clarinet player and solos can be found scattered through his recordings. One good example is his clarinet solo on Misirlou on the album Into The Woods (see discography below).

Phil Woods married Chan Parker, the widow of Charlie Parker, and was stepfather to Chan's daughter, Kim.

Woods, along with Rick Chamberlain and Ed Joubert founded the organization Celebration of the Arts (COTA) in 1978 late one night in the bar at the Deerhead Inn in Delaware Water Gap. The organization would eventually become the Delaware Water Gap Celebration of the Arts. Their initial goal was to help foster an appreciation of jazz and its relationship to other artistic disciplines. Each year, the organization hosts the Celebration of the Arts Festival in the town of Delaware Water Gap in September.

Phil Woods A Life in E Flat-Portrait of a Jazz Legend is a documentary film released in 2005 by Jazzed Media. Directed by Rich Lerner, and produced by Graham Carter, the film offers an intimate portrait of Woods during a recording session of the Jazzed Media album This is How I Feel About Quincy.

Awards

In 2007, Phil received a "Jazz Master" award from the National Endowment of the Arts.

Grammy awards

Woods' recordings have been nominated for seven Grammy awards and have won four.

  • 1975 Images: "Best Large Jazz Ensemble Performance".[1]
  • 1977 Live from the Show Boat: "Best Instrumental Jazz Performance, Individual or Group".[1]
  • 1982 More Live: "Best Instrumental Jazz Performance, Individual or Group".[1]
  • 1983 At the Vanguard: "Best Instrumental Jazz Performance, Individual or Group".[1]

Discography

As leader

Phil Woods, 1983
Phil Woods, Oslo 2007
  • 1954: Pot Pie (Prestige/OJC)
  • 1955: Woodlore (OJC)
  • 1956: Pairing Off (OJC)
  • 1957: Four Altos (Prestige Records 7116) - with Gene Quill, Hal Stein, Sahib Shihab
  • 1957: Sugan (OJC)
  • 1961: Rights Of Swing (Candid)
  • 1967: Greek Cooking (Impulse!)
  • 1969: Round Trip (Verve)
  • 1971: Phil Woods and his European Rhythm Machine at the Frankfurt Jazz Festival (Embryo Records)
  • 1974: Musique du Bois (Muse Records)
  • 1975: Images
  • 1976: The New Phil Woods Album
  • 1976: Altology (Prestige)
  • 1977: Live from the Show Boat
  • 1977: Summer Afternoon Jazz (Hindsight Records)
  • 1979: Phil Woods Quartet Live (Clean Cuts)
  • 1980: Phil Woods/Lew Tabackin (Evidence)
  • 1982: Live from New York (Palo Alto Records)
  • 1982: More Live
  • 1983: At the Vanguard
  • 1984: Integrity (Red)
  • 1984: Heaven (Evidence)
  • 1986: Dizzy Gillespie Meets Phil Woods Quintet (Timeless) - with Dizzy Gillespie
  • 1987: Bop Stew; Bouquet (Concord)
  • 1988: Evolution; Here's To My Lady (Concord)
  • 1988: Embracable You (Philology)
  • 1989: Flash (Concord)
  • 1989: Here's to My Lady (Chesky)
  • 1990: All Bird Children; Real Life (Concord)
  • 1990: Phil's Mood (Philology)
  • 1990: My Man Benny, My Man Phil, with Benny Carter (Musicmasters)
  • 1991: Flowers For Hodges (Concord)
  • 1991: Full House (Milestone)
  • 1991: Real Life, The Little Big Band (Chesky)
  • 1994: Just Friends; Our Monk (Philology)
  • 1995: Plays The Music Of Jim McNeely (TCB)
  • 1996: Mile High Jazz Live In Denver (Concord)
  • 1996: Astor and Elis (Chesky)
  • 1996: The Complete Concert (JMS) with Gordon Beck
  • 1996: Into The Woods (Concord CCD-4699)
  • 1997: Celebration! (Concord)
  • 1998: The Rev And I (Blue Note Records)
  • 2006: Pass the Bebop (Cowbell Music) with Benjamin Koppel and Alex Riel Trio
  • 2006: Song for Sysiphus (Passport Audio)

As sideman

With Manny Albam

With Gary Burton

With Ron Carter

With Lou Donaldson

With Bill Evans

With Dizzy Gillespie

With Stephane Grappelli

  • Classic Sessions: Stephane Grappelli (1987)

With Milt Jackson

With Billy Joel

With Quincy Jones

With Nellie McKay

With Thelonious Monk

With Oliver Nelson

With Lalo Schifrin

With Shirley Scott

With Clark Terry

With Ben Webster

Notes

References

  • Gonzalez, Henry (1990). The Armadillo Years: A Visual History
  • Nisenson, Eric (1996). Round About Midnight — A Portrait of Miles Davis (2nd ed.). Da Capo: Printing Press. ISBN 0-306-80684-3.

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Mentioned in

Kaleidoscopin' (1988 Album by Larry Nozero)
Jazz Sahib (1957 Album by Sahib Shihab)
The Jazz at the Maintenance Shop (Album by Phil Woods Quartet)