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Louie Bellson (July 2005 Issue) Still Swinging At 80 "Young drummers
should learn the history of the instrument. You have to know where you
came from in order to
know where you're going."
When one of the greatest drummers of all time turns eighty, the celebrations
continue all over the country - and for months.
Louie Bellson marked his birth date of July 6, 1924 with a
three-day
event called the "Welcome Home Celebration" in Rock Falls, Illinois. It
included the placing of a historical marker at
his birth house, a
clinic, and a concert.
In San Jose, California, where Bellson currently lives (he also has
a
residence in Sherman Oaks, California), a huge birthday party and
concert was held. There was also an exhibit and
reception at the River
Music Experience Museum in Davenport, Iowa. And in Sterling, Illinois
there's a tribute exhibit to
Louie that includes the display of the
2003 postal cancellation stamp bearing the drummer's name and image.
Let's
not forget the fact that Bellson's legendary status is
well-represented as part of the Duke Ellington Exhibit at
the
Smithsonian Institution. And, of course, Louie's hand impression has
been forever placed in cement on
Hollywood's RockWalk of Fame. Taken in
total, this is quite an impressive tribute to a drummer who has
become
recognized as a national treasure - and deservedly so.
What an amazing career Louie Bellson has had so
far. He began
professionally at the tender age of seventeen with Benny Goodman, and
early in his career went on to work with
such masters as Tommy Dorsey,
Duke Ellington, and Harry James. In the mid-'50s, Louie served as
drummer and
musical director for the late African-American vocalist,
actress, and UN ambassador Pearl Bailey, who he married during a
time
of extreme racial tension.
Many drummers may not be aware of Bellson's success as a composer.
He
has written or arranged over a thousand pieces. And, of course, Louie's
mark on drumming is deep. Besides his
great technique and
always-musical approach to the drums, Louie is responsible for
designing the first double bass drum
setup and popularizing its use,
pioneering a new approach to drumming.
As for recorded output, Bellson's
discography includes more than two
hundred albums with the true greats of the jazz era'duke Ellington,
Count Basie,
Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Harry James,
Woody Herman, Louie Armstrong, and Lionel Hampton, as well
as legendary
vocalists Mel Torme, Sammy Davis Jr., Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald,
and Tony Bennett. Louie has done so
much in his life - as musician,
performer, composer, arranger, and educator'that it's hard to think of
any other artist
who has come anywhere close to his vast achievements.
Bellson's wife of twelve years, Francine, has
decorated the walls of
their Sherman Oaks home to pay tribute to her husband's career and
contribution to the world.
Photos with great artists, letters from
presidents, and posters of some of his notable performances through the
years give just
a glimpse of a life dedicated to creating and playing
music. It was among these tokens of a rare musical life that MD sat
down with the master.
MD: Please talk about some of your favorite recordings that you played
on.
Louie: Duke Ellington, "skin Deep" and "the Hawk Talks." For me,
to have Duke look at me and say,
"You're a composer as well as a
drummer," was amazing. He had to ask me several times to bring music
in, because
when I joined that band there were two geniuses writing for
it'duke and Billy Strayhorn. What was I doing bringing in
my
music? Finally, Juan Tizol said, "Bring the music in," and Duke said
again, "Bring the music in." I said, "Well,
I'd better or I might lose
my gig."
I brought in those pieces and Duke recorded them right off the bat.
Max
Roach told me a long time ago that he idolized Duke and said how
fortunate I was that he played my music. I said,
"Max, I still
can't get over it." A lot of drummers would give their right hand - or
left hand'to play one number
with someone like Duke or Basie. I still
can't believe it happened to me.
MD: Do you recall recording "skin
Deep"?
Louie: "skin Deep" was very different. In those days it was
difficult to record fast drum and cymbal parts.
When that record came
out, Buddy Rich called me and said, "Where did you record that"? I told
him we did it live in Fresno,
California in an old ballroom. The
quality of the recording turned out so good that when we took it to
Columbia, they said they
couldn't do a better job than that. When Duke
heard it in a playback the night we did it, he said, "that's how
we're
going to do "skin Deep."? [The track can be found on Ellington Uptown.] "The Hawk Talks" was done at a
studio in New York.
MD: Tell us a story about Duke Ellington.
Louie: People would ask what
kind of man he was. Well, he was
the kind of man who had his door open for us all the time. The reason
he had people in his
band for fifty years was because they were like
family. When I joined the band, there was no drum book. I had to just
sit down
and start playing. That was easy for me because, playing in a
jazz band, I could look over at the trombone or trumpet part and
see
where I was.
One time Duke called me to come to New York to play with Leonard
Bernstein's New York
Philharmonic Orchestra. When I got there, there
were a hundred twenty-five musicians all ready to play. There were only
two
players from Duke's regular band'the bass player and me. We were
performing a tune called "The Golden Broom And
The Green Apple,"
twenty-five minutes of music that Duke wrote, and I had nothing to go
by. I was sitting there at the stand,
and Duke came up on the
bandstand, ready to give a downbeat. He looked at me and he could tell
I was worried when I
shrugged my shoulders. He said, "The first part's
in 3/4." I said, "Thanks." That was it. He lowered his hands for
a
downbeat, I started playing, and watched him real close for an hour and
a half.
During the first break, the other
musicians asked if I had memorized
the piece. I told them I had never heard it before in my life. Duke was
a great conductor.
That first day, I took the score home with me and
made a complete drum part. Then, before we finished recording, I
said,
'duke, here's a drum part for whoever comes in after me to play it." He
said, "Now you know why I didn't
write a drum part. I got you to do it
and you're the best." But that experience was one of the most exciting
things that
happened to me in that band.
Robyn
Flans
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