17 June 2006
14,350
Andrew Hill, 75, Jazz Artist Known for His Daring Style, Dies

By BEN RATLIFF
Published: April 21, 2007
Andrew Hill, a pianist and composer of highly original and sometimes opaquely inner-dwelling jazz whose work only recently found a wide audience, died yesterday at his home in Jersey City. He was 75.


The cause was lung cancer, said his wife, Joanne Robinson Hill.

It took almost 40 years for Mr. Hill’s work to be absorbed into jazz’s mainstream. From the first significant album in his discography (“Black Fire,” 1963) to the last (“Time Lines,” 2006), his work is an eloquent example of how jazz can combine traditional and original elements, notation and pure improvisation, playing both outside and inside strict time and harmony.

Mr. Hill was born in Chicago in 1931 — not Port-au-Prince, Haiti, as his early biographical information read, and not in 1937, as he often stated. He started playing music at 7, by learning the accordion; beginning at 10, he said, he taught himself how to play piano.

He eventually played be-bop with local musicians in Chicago, and worked on the road with Dinah Washington, Johnny Hartman and Dakota Staton. He got a chance to play with Charlie Parker at the Greystone Ballroom in Detroit in 1954. A job with Roland Kirk (later Rahsaan Roland Kirk) brought him to New York in the early 1960s.

In those years Mr. Hill was perceived as a kind of extension of Thelonious Monk, 20 years after Monk’s emergence. Both were brilliant composers, and played in a style suited to their own writing. And both careers benefited from the enthusiasm of Alfred Lion, from Blue Note Records, who was so enthusiastic about Mr. Hill that he recorded five albums’ worth of material in eight months.

Those five albums were “Black Fire,” “Smokestack,” “Judgment,” “Point of Departure” and “Andrew!!!,” and much of Mr. Hill’s reputation rests on them. With some of the best musicians at the time — Joe Henderson, Kenny Dorham, Roy Haynes and others — the records occupied an area between hard bop and abstract jazz. Some of the music was structured strangely, yet there was a strange emotional resonance in the writing, a cloudy romanticism.

Mr. Hill was unsuccessful in finding much of an audience for his work after the mid-1960s, and found it hard to maintain bands or work in clubs. But he was also committed to the idea that the jazz bandleader could live as a composer, not just a nightclub entertainer. He sought arts grants and worked increasingly as a solo performer on the college circuit.

He lived in upstate New York during the early 1970s, and then in California; in the 1980s, he recorded for the Soul Note label in Milan.

In 1989 he was signed again to Blue Note, which had been recently resurrected by EMI, making the albums “Eternal Spirit” and “But Not Farewell,” and beginning a renewal of interest in his early work. That same year, after the death of his wife Laverne, he moved to Oregon to teach at Portland State University until 1996, when he returned to the New York City area, and re-entered the map of jazz. His wife Joanne Robinson Hill survives him.

In his remarkable final decade, Mr. Hill led several bands, including a sextet, a big band and a quartet including the trumpeter Charles Tolliver. He made three new albums, all well received. In 2003 he received the Danish JazzPar Award, the biggest international honor in jazz.

Finally he was signed for the third time to Blue Note, recording “Time Lines.” Much of his early recorded work came out on CD, including 11 albums recorded for Blue Note during the 1960s that had never been released. At last, his challenging music was being performed or adapted by other musicians.

Mr. Hill’s last performance was at Trinity Church in Manhattan on March 29. On May 12 he is to receive an honorary doctorate posthumously from Berklee College of Music.
 
10 July 2006
5,257
Θεσσαλονίκη
Με την ελάχιστη γνωριμία που έχω με τον Hill (από την επανέκδοση (2004) του Passing Ships του 1969) ξεχώρισα τα Noon Tide(5/5) και Plantation Bag(5/5).
Προτείνει κάποιος, κάποιον εξίσου καλό δίσκο του?
 
17 June 2006
14,350
Πρόσεχε πάντως.

It took almost 40 years for Mr. Hill's work to be absorbed into jazz's mainstream

Οπως και νά'χει το "Point..." είναι μέσα στα 10 καλύτερα Blue Notes που βγήκαν στα 60ς.
Αυτό, από μόνο του, κάτι λέει...;)
 

Δημήτρης Ν.

AVClub Fanatic
17 June 2006
10,209
Θεσσαλονίκη
Ο πιό απροσπέλαστος μουσικός - συνθέτης της τζαζ που έχω συναντήσει . Αδυνατώ να τον παρακολουθήσω , αδυνατώ να τον αντιληφθώ , αδυνατώ να βρώ έστω και ένα σημείο επαφής μαζί του . Βέβαια , όπως διαβάζω πιό πάνω , έχω καιρό μπροστά μου , αφού απαιτούνται περί τα 40 χρόνια για να γίνει κατανοητός :confused: :nounder:
 

Δημήτρης Ν.

AVClub Fanatic
17 June 2006
10,209
Θεσσαλονίκη
Ο πιό απροσπέλαστος μουσικός - συνθέτης της τζαζ που έχω συναντήσει . Αδυνατώ να τον παρακολουθήσω , αδυνατώ να τον αντιληφθώ , αδυνατώ να βρώ έστω και ένα σημείο επαφής μαζί του . Βέβαια , όπως διαβάζω πιό πάνω , έχω καιρό μπροστά μου , αφού απαιτούνται περί τα 40 χρόνια για να γίνει κατανοητός :confused: :nounder:

Πάλι μεγάλη κουβέντα είπα , αντί να φάω μεγάλη μπουκιά ....
Τελικά μάλλον χρειάζονται λιγότερο από 40 χρόνια. Τον τελευταίο καιρό απολαμβάνω ιδιαίτερα το Grass Roots και το Smoke Stack του μακαρίτη και αν και πάντοτε ιδιοσυγκρασιακά , εν τούτοις είναι άκρως ενδιαφέροντα και προσπελάσιμα . Απλώς θέλουν λίγη προσπάθεια παραπάνω