Sunday, March 8, 2015

A00065 - Clark Terry, Master of the Jazz Trumpet



Clark Terry (b. December 14, 1920, St. Louis, Missouri - d. February 21, 2015, Pine Bluff, Arkansas) was a jazz musician who played trumpet and flugelhorn with a rare wit and a sense of melody and harmony that bridged the swing and bop eras.  Terry, who was one of the most expressive of modern jazz trumpeters, was also noted for his humorous singing.  He played trumpet (1942-1945) in the All-Star Fantasy Swing Band at Great Lakes Naval Training Station.  After World War II, Terry was featured in St. Louis with the George Hudson band before he toured (1948-51) with Count Basie's popular band.  While Terry performed in Duke Ellington's band (1951-59), his breadth of inflections and sound colors widened, most notably when he played the role of Puck in Ellington's Shakespearean suite  Such Sweet Thunder.  As the first African American musician to play (1960-72) in the studio band on NBC-TV's The Tonight Show.  Terry became popular by inventing slurred, garbled nonsense vocals, and his 1964 recording "Mumbles" was especially well known.  In addition, he led a quintet with trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, played in Gerry Mulligan's big band, and toured with Thelonious Monk's band.  Though Terry mostly led small combos, he took (from 1978 to 1981) his own Big Bad Band on around-the-world United States State Departmennt tours.  He recorded prolifically throughout his career and appeared on 905 albums as a leader or a sideman. The National Endowment for the Arts designated him a jazz master in 1991, and he received a lifetime achievement Grammy Award in 2010. Terry's autobiography, Clark, was published in 2011.  Though he lost both legs owing to diabetes, he remained an effective teacher, and the 2014 documentary film Keep On Keepin' On explored Terry's mentoring of a student. 

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