Saturday, December 11, 2021

In Memoriam: Barry Harris

 


We have lost another great of jazz piano, a week before what would have been his 92nd birthday.  Rest In Peace, Barry Harris.  From Bret "Jazz Video Guy" Primack, here is the description of the video and who Barry Harris was.  Note, if you wish to dig this whole performance with Barry and his trio, the link is there in the description for you.  

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Barry Harris Trio. Live at Clasijazz (Almeria, 25/10/2014) featuring Bori Albero on bass and Jimmy Castro on drums. The entire concert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_3SA... Barry Harris, a pianist who carefully preserved the language of bebop throughout a seven-decade career as a brilliant performer and influential teacher, died Wednesday December 8, 2021 at Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen, N.J. He was 91 and lived in Weehawken, N.J. in the home of Pannoica de Koenigswater, the Jazz Baroness and friend to many musicians of the Bebop era. Thelonious Monk spent his final years in the same house, alongside Barry. Mr, Harris had been hospitalized for the last two weeks and died of complications due to Covid. Barry Harris would have turned 92 next week and taught his last class, via Zoom, on Nov. 20. Dr. Barry Harris was an American jazz pianist, composer, and educator who, as a musician, became known for his virtuosity, marked by complex chord structures and speed of play. An exponent of the bebop style that became popular after World War II, he played with Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Yusuf Lateef, Coleman Hawkins, Cannonball Adderley, Dexter Gordon, and Sonny Stitt, among many other musicians. Thelonius Monk, a close friend, and Charlie Parker are considered to be among Harris’s chief influences. Harris began piano lessons at age four, under his mother’s tutelage. He studied classical music throughout his youth until coming under the influence of Parker, whom he first heard in Detroit in the late 1940s. Harris’s family home became a salon for jazz musicians, his mother encouraging his newfound interest. He worked as a sideman, session player, and lead player in Detroit in the 1950s, when he played with such stars as Davis, Parker, and Sarah Vaughan. In 1960 Harris moved to New York, where he played regularly with Adderley and Hawkins. There Pannonica de Koenigswarter—the British scion of the Rothschild dynasty and patroness of the New York jazz scene, which dubbed her the “Jazz Baroness”—befriended Harris and introduced him to many luminaries, including pianist Monk. Harris lived with Monk at Konigswater’s house in Weehawken, New Jersey, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, in the 1970s. In 1982 Harris founded Manhattan’s Jazz Cultural Theatre, a performance venue featuring famed jazz musicians as well as jam sessions and music classes for musicians young and old; he ran it until it closed in 1987. Harris also became renowned as an educator, teaching courses in jazz theory, piano, and voice at several schools and institutions in the New York area and delivering master classes and lectures throughout the world.

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