Hampton Hawes#Discography
{{Short description|American jazz pianist (1928–1977)}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Hampton Hawes
| image = Hampton Hawes in Japan (1953).jpg
| image_size =
| landscape =
| caption = Hawes in Japan in 1953
| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
| birth_name = Hampton Barnett Hawes Jr.
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1928|11|13}}
| birth_place = Los Angeles, California, U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1977|5|22|1928|11|13}}
| death_place = Los Angeles
| genre = Jazz, jazz fusion, soul jazz, jazz-funk
| occupation = Musician
| instrument = Piano
| years_active =
| label = Vault, Contemporary, Discovery, Fantasy
| associated_acts = Dexter Gordon, Wardell Gray, Jim Hall, Barney Kessell, Charles Mingus, Art Pepper, Shorty Rogers
}}
Hampton Barnett Hawes Jr. (November 13, 1928 – May 22, 1977){{cite book|title=The Guinness Who's Who of Jazz|editor=Colin Larkin|publisher=Guinness Publishing|date=1992|edition=First|isbn=0-85112-580-8|page=192/3}} was an American jazz pianist. He was the author of the memoir Raise Up Off Me,{{cite web|last1=Yanow|first1=Scott|title=Hampton Hawes {{!}} Biography & History {{!}} AllMusic|url=http://www.allmusic.com/artist/hampton-hawes-mn0000558596/biography|website=AllMusic|access-date=6 November 2016}} which won the Deems-Taylor Award for music writing in 1975.
Early life
Hampton Hawes was born on November 13, 1928, in Los Angeles, California.
{{cite web
|url=http://www.ancestry.com
|title= California Birth Index, 1905-1995 [database on-line]
|publisher= The Generations Network
|location= United States
|year=2005
|access-date=2009-10-06
}}
His father, Hampton Hawes Sr., was minister of Westminster Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles. His mother, the former Gertrude Holman, was Westminster's church pianist. Hawes' first experience with the piano was as a toddler sitting on his mother's lap while she practiced. He was reportedly able to pick out fairly complex tunes by the age of three.{{citation needed|date=November 2016}}
Later life and career
Hawes was self-taught;{{cite book |last=Owens |first=Thomas |title=Bebop |url=https://archive.org/details/bebopmusicitspla00owen_905 |url-access=limited |year=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=[https://archive.org/details/bebopmusicitspla00owen_905/page/n168 152]|isbn=978-0-19-510651-0 }} by his teens he was playing with the leading jazz musicians on the West Coast, including Dexter Gordon, Wardell Gray, Art Pepper, Shorty Rogers, and Teddy Edwards. His second professional job, at 18, was playing for eight months with the Howard McGhee Quintet at the Hi De Ho Club, in a group that included Charlie Parker. By late 1947, Hawes' reputation was leading to studio recording work. Early studio dates included work for George L. "Happy" Johnson, Teddy Edwards, Sonny Criss, and Shorty Rogers. From 1948 to 1952, he was recorded live on several occasions at Los Angeles-area jazz clubs including The Haig, The Lighthouse, and The Surf Club. By December 1952, he had recorded eight songs under his own name for Prestige Records with a quartet featuring Larry Bunker on vibraphone.
After serving in the U.S. Army in Japan from 1952 to 1954, Hawes formed his own trio, with bassist Red Mitchell and drummer Chuck Thompson. The three-record Trio sessions made by this group in 1955 on Contemporary Records were considered some of the finest records to come out of the West Coast at the time. The next year, Hawes added guitarist Jim Hall for the All Night Sessions. These were three records made during a non-stop overnight recording session.
After a six-month national tour in 1956, Hawes won the "New Star of the Year" award in Down Beat magazine, and "Arrival of the Year" in Metronome. The following year, he recorded in New York City with Charles Mingus on the album Mingus Three (Jubilee, 1957).
Struggling for many years with a heroin addiction, in 1958 Hawes became the target of a federal undercover operation in Los Angeles. Investigators believed that he would inform on suppliers rather than risk ruining a successful music career. Hawes was arrested on heroin charges on his 30th birthday and was sentenced to ten years imprisonment. In the intervening weeks between his trial and sentencing, Hawes recorded an album of spirituals and gospel songs, The Sermon.
In 1961, while at a federal prison hospital in Fort Worth, Texas, Hawes was watching President Kennedy's inaugural speech on television, and became convinced that Kennedy would pardon him.{{cite web|last1=Gioia|first1=Ted|title=The Jazz Pianist That John F. Kennedy Saved|url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-jazz-pianist-that-john-f-kennedy-saved|website=Daily Beast|date=16 August 2013| access-date=13 March 2018}} With help from inside and outside the prison, Hawes submitted an official request for a presidential pardon. In August 1963, Kennedy granted Hawes Executive Clemency, the 42nd of only 43 such pardons given in the final year of Kennedy's presidency.
After being released from prison, Hawes resumed playing and recording. During a ten-month tour of Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, Hawes recorded nine albums, played sold out shows and concert halls in ten countries, and was covered widely in the press, including appearances on European television and radio.{{citation needed|date=March 2023}}
Raise Up Off Me, Hawes' autobiography, written with Don Asher and published in 1974, shed light on his heroin addiction, the bebop movement, and his friendships with some of the leading jazz musicians of his time. It won the ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for music writing in 1975. Critic Gary Giddins, who wrote the book's introduction, called Raise Up Off Me "a major contribution to the literature of jazz." The Penguin Guide to Jazz cites it as "one of the most moving memoirs ever written by a musician, and a classic of jazz writing."{{citation needed|date=March 2023}}
Hampton Hawes died unexpectedly of a brain hemorrhage in 1977, at the age of 48.
Style and influence
Hawes' playing style developed in the early 1950s. He included "figures used by Parker and [Bud] Powell (but he played with a cleaner articulation than Powell), some Oscar Peterson phrases, and later, some Bill Evans phrases[...], and an impressive locked-hands style in which the top notes always sang out clearly." He also helped develop "the double-note blues figures and rhythmically compelling comping style that Horace Silver and others were to use in the mid-1950s." His technique featured "great facility with rapid runs and a versatile control of touch."
Hawes influenced a great number of prominent pianists,{{citation needed|date=November 2016}} including André Previn, Peterson, Horace Silver, Claude Williamson, Pete Jolly, and Toshiko Akiyoshi. Hawes' own influences came from a number of sources, including the gospel music and spirituals he heard in his father's church as a child, and the boogie-woogie piano of Earl Hines. Hawes also learned much from pianists Powell and Nat King Cole, among others. By Hawes' own account,{{citation needed|date=November 2016}} however, his principal source of influence was his friend Charlie Parker.
Discography
= As leader/co-leader =
class="wikitable sortable"
! Recording date ! Title ! Label ! Year released ! Personnel/Notes |
1955-06
| 1955 | One track solo piano; most tracks trio, with Red Mitchell (bass), Chuck Thompson (drums) |
1955-06, 1955-12, 1956-01 | Contemporary | 1956 | Trio, with Red Mitchell (bass), Chuck Thompson (drums) |
1956-01
| Everybody Likes Hampton Hawes | Contemporary | 1956 | Trio, with Red Mitchell (bass), Chuck Thompson (drums) |
1956-11
| Contemporary | 1958 | Quartet, with Jim Hall (guitar), Red Mitchell (bass), Eldridge Freeman (drums) |
1956-11
| Contemporary | 1958 | Quartet, with Jim Hall (guitar), Red Mitchell (bass), Eldridge Freeman (drums) |
1956-11
| Contemporary | 1958 | Quartet, with Jim Hall (guitar), Red Mitchell (bass), Eldridge Freeman (drums) |
1957-04, 1957-05 | Prestige | 1958 | Septet, with Curtis Fuller (trombone), Sahib Shihab (alto sax), David Amram and Julius Watkins (French horn), Addison Farmer (bass), Jerry Segal (drums); originally issued with other recordings; reissued as Curtis Fuller and Hampton Hawes with French Horns by Status |
1958-01
| Four! | Contemporary | 1958 | Quartet, with Barney Kessel (guitar), Red Mitchell (bass), Shelly Manne (drums) |
1956-01, 1958-03 | Contemporary | 1999 | Most tracks trio with Paul Chambers (bass), Larance Marable (drums); two tracks trio listing Scott LaFaro (bass), Frank Butler (drums) |
1958-03
| Contemporary | 1961 | Quartet, with Harold Land (tenor sax), Scott LaFaro (bass), Frank Butler (drums) |
1958-11
| Contemporary | 1987 | Trio, with Leroy Vinnegar (bass), Stan Levey (drums) |
1964-02
| Contemporary | 1964 | Trio, with Monk Montgomery (bass), Steve Ellington (drums) |
1965-05
| Contemporary | 1966 | Trio, with Chuck Israels (bass), Donald Bailey (drums) |
1966-04, 1966-05 | Contemporary | 1969 | Trio, with Red Mitchell (bass), Donald Bailey (drums) |
1966-04, 1966-05 | Contemporary | 1973 | Trio, with Red Mitchell (bass), Donald Bailey (drums) |
1967
| Hamp's Piano | SABA | 1969 | also released as Hampton Hawes in Europe (Prestige) |
1968-01
| Key for Two | 1973 | with Martial Solal |
1968-03
| Spanish Steps | 1971 | Trio, with Jimmy Woode (bass), Art Taylor (drums). also released as Blues for Bud |
1968-05
| Victor | 1968 | Solo piano |
1968?
| Jam Session | Columbia | 1968 | with Isao Suzuki (bass), George Otsuka (drums), Shungo Sawada (guitar), Akira Miyazawa (ts), Hidehiko Matsumoto (ts) |
1970?
| High in the Sky | Vault | 1970 | Trio, with Leroy Vinnegar (bass), Donald Bailey (drums) |
1971-09
| This Guy's in Love with You | Freedom | 1974 | Trio, with Henry Franklin (bass), Michael Carvin (drums); in concert; also released as Live at the Montmartre (Freedom) |
1971-09
| A Little Copenhagen Night Music | Freedom | 1977 | Trio, with Henry Franklin (bass), Michael Carvin (drums); in concert |
1972-06
| Universe | Prestige | 1972 | With Oscar Brashear (trumpet), Harold Land tenor sax), Arthur Adams (guitar), Chuck Rainey (electric bass), Ndugu (drums) |
1973-01
| Prestige | 1973 | Two tracks quartet, with George Walker (guitar), Henry Franklin (bass, electric bass), Ndugu (drums); most tracks sextet, with Oscar Brashear (trumpet), Hadley Caliman (soprano sax, tenor sax) added |
1973-06
| Live at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago Volume One | Enja | 1981 | Trio, with Cecil McBee (bass), Roy Haynes (drums); in concert |
1973-06
| Live at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago Volume Two | Enja | 1989 | Trio, with Cecil McBee (bass), Roy Haynes (drums); in concert |
1973-07
| Prestige | 1973 | Trio, with Bob Cranshaw (electric bass), Kenny Clarke (drums); in concert |
1974-07
| Prestige | 1974 | With Allen DeRienzo and Snooky Young (trumpet), George Bohanon (trombone), Bill Green, Jackie Kelso and Jay Migliori (saxes, flute), Carol Kaye (electric bass), Spider Webb (drums) |
1975-06
| Recorded Live at the Great American Music Hall | 1983 | Duo, with Mario Suraci (bass) |
1976-01, 1976-08 | 1978 | Duo, with Charlie Haden (bass) |
1976-06
| Contemporary | 1994 | Quartet, with Denny Diaz (guitar), Leroy Vinnegar (bass), Al Williams (drums); in concert; |
1976-08
| Contemporary | 1978 | Trio, with Ray Brown (bass), Shelly Manne (drums) |
1977?
| Memory Lane Live | JAS | 1977 | with Leroy Vinnegar (bass), Bobby Thompson (drums), Harry Edison (trumpet), Sonny Criss (as), Teddy Edwards (ts: B2), Joe Turner (vocals: A3,B1) |
Compilations
- The Hampton Hawes Memorial Album (Xanadu, 1982) – rec. 1952–56
- Trio and Quartet 1951-1956 Live and Studio Sessions (Fresh Sound, 2005)[2CD] – rec. 1951–56
= As sideman =
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
With Dexter Gordon
- Blues à la Suisse (Prestige, 1974) – rec. 1973
- The Hunt (Savoy, 1977) – rec. 1947
With Barney Kessel
- Kessel Plays Standards (Contemporary, 1955)
- Let's Cook! (Contemporary, 1962) – rec. 1957
With Art Pepper
- Surf Ride (Savoy, 1956) – rec. 1952–54
- Living Legend (Contemporary, 1975)
- The Early Show (Xanadu, 1979) – rec. 1952
With Shorty Rogers
- Modern Sounds (Capitol, 1951)
- Shorty Rogers and His Giants (RCA Victor, 1953)
{{col-2}}
With others
- Gene Ammons, Gene Ammons and Friends at Montreux (Prestige, 1973)
- Sonny Criss, I'll Catch the Sun! (Prestige, 1969)
- Art Farmer, On the Road (Contemporary, 1976)
- Wardell Gray, Live in Hollywood (Xanadu, 1978) – rec. 1952
- Warne Marsh, Live in Hollywood (Xanadu, 1979) – rec. 1952
- Charles Mingus, Mingus Three (Jubilee, 1957)
- Blue Mitchell, Stratosonic Nuances (RCA, 1975)
- Red Mitchell, Red Mitchell (Bethlehem, 1955)
- Sonny Rollins, Sonny Rollins and the Contemporary Leaders (Contemporary, 1958)
- Bud Shank, Bud Shank – Shorty Rogers – Bill Perkins (Pacific Jazz, 1955)
- Sonny Stitt, So Doggone Good (Prestige, 1972)
{{col-end}}
Bibliography
- Raise Up Off Me: A Portrait of Hampton Hawes by Hampton Hawes, Don Asher, and Gary Giddins
- Hampton Hawes: A Discography by Roger Hunter & Mike Davis. 127pp. Manana Publications, Manchester, England. 1986.
See also
{{Portal|Biography}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/13880327/hampton-hawes Hampton Hawes] at Find A Grave
- [http://www.jazzdisco.org/hawes/dis/c/ Hampton Hawes Discography]
- [https://ethaniverson.com/rhythm-and-blues/hampton-hawes-and-the-low-blues/ "Hampton Hawes and the Low Blues"] by Ethan Iverson
{{Hampton Hawes}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hawes, Hampton}}
Category:African-American pianists
Category:American jazz pianists
Category:American male jazz pianists
Category:Contemporary Records artists
Category:Freedom Records artists
Category:Mainstream jazz pianists
Category:Musicians from Greater Los Angeles
Category:Prestige Records artists
Category:Recipients of American presidential clemency
Category:West Coast jazz pianists
Category:20th-century American pianists
Category:20th-century American male musicians
Category:Black Lion Records artists
Category:Discovery Records artists