Bud Powell on View

Date: 
06/21/2012
Contributor: 

You may be in the mood today for something less white heat than what Bud Powell’s playing typically brings to mind, in which case be sure to take a look at this footage once the temperature drops, but this might be just the cool you need.  Here’s the great pianist in a series of gigs filmed in Paris and Copenhagen between 1959 and ’62.  By then, some of Bud’s creative fervor had subsided, but there’s plenty of beauty and proficiency in these performances filmed at the Club Saint-Germain and Blue Note in Paris and Café Montmartre in Copenhagen. 

(Bud Powell, photo by Robert James Campbell)

The Saint-Germain set features Bud with bassist Pierre Michelot and drummer Kenny Clarke playing “Crossing the Channel” and “Blues in the Closet,” and trumpeter Clark Terry and saxophonist Barney Wilen join them for “No Problem,” “Pie Eye,” “52nd Street Theme,” and “Miguel’s Party.”

At the Blue Note, Bud opens with a thrilling trio workout on “Get Happy,” followed by his original “John’s Abbey;" saxophonist Lucky Thompson and guitarist Jimmy Gourley are then featured on “Anthropology,” which fades after a brilliant exchange of fours between LT and Klook. 

Bud sounds even more engaged with the “Anthropology” he plays in Copenhagen with the teenaged bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen and drummer Jorn Elniff.  The footage concludes with “’Round Midnight,” which brings to mind Bud’s role in bringing his friend Thelonious Monk’s original to the attention of Cootie Williams when Bud was with the trumpeter’s orchestra in 1944.  Take a listen to what it sounded like on its premier recording

The camera work at the Blue Note and Montmartre is especially valuable for the perspective it gives of Bud’s finger work at the keyboard.  Pianist Lennie Tristano, who praised Powell without reservation, said that Bud taught him the importance of expressing feelings.  In Eunmi Shim’s biography Lennie Tristano: His Life and Music, she quotes from an interview that Lennie gave his student Jon Easton: “I played opposite Bud a lot.  It began to get into my own feeling and my own approach to the keyboard, which is to say that you not only transmit what you hear but what you feel at the most profound level. Which means, your fingers have to reproduce not only sounds but feelings.”

  (photo by Herman Leonard)

Powell was one of the most influential yet tragic figures of modern jazz, the pianistic counterpart to Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.  Mental illness, alcohol abuse, electroshock and drug (mis)treatments, all perhaps stemming from a severe beating by Philadelphia police when he was around 20, hampered his career.  His life became increasingly chaotic and his playing more erratic throughout the ‘50’s, and in 1959 he moved to France. His years abroad are perhaps the best-documented of his life, particularly through the writings of his devoted admirer Francis Paudras, whose book Dance of the Infidels  served as the basis for the celebrated film, ‘Round Midnight, in which Dexter Gordon played a composite of Powell and Lester Young. 

Powell returned to his native New York City in 1964, and died there two years later at the age of 41.  In 1979, Bill Evans said of him, “If I had to choose one single musician for his artistic integrity, for the incomparable originality of his creation and the grandeur of his work, it would be Bud Powell. He was in a class by himself.”  See for yourself:

 

 

Comments

Bud Powell

Tom ,thank you sharing  this  great video to see all these greats performing was magic.Hearing them  on  d isc is  onething but seeing them  is  another

 

bud powell

Thanks Tom for this blog  and the video.   Great opportunity to see  Powell.

Tom!  These are phenomenal

Tom!  These are phenomenal takes of Bud, flawless technique, flow of ideas, spirit feel...Wonderful to see so much of him.  I'm very grateful to have just seen these performances.  Klook was terrific, reminding me of why he was the first of the great so-called bebop drummers.  Damn!!  He could push the time along, but never rushed.   And Clark & Barney & Lucky & Jimmy Gourley & Pierre & Orsted...   Just transcendent.  Bud was one of the all time greatest, no question, & these takes help confirm this..Thanks so much for sending this along.  I loved the club scenes in Copenhagen particularly, &  that you could see Bud vocalizing, but couldn't hear him! 

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