While Rich was unquestionably one of jazz's great drummers, IMO
his
talent was greatly compromised by not only his attitude toward his
musicians, but his rather narrow view of what constituted jazz.
In his
world, big band was it.
Roger>
A story about Rich I always found amusing came from the days
in Tommy Dorsey's band.
A new reedman, just joining the band during a performance
noticed Buddy, sitting back with his arms crossed, drum
sticks in his hands. It was a ballad the band was playing,
(Dorsey was famous for his ballad work) and the new guy,
surprised, asked Buddy why he wasn't playing.
Truculently he responded "I don't do ballads, man!"
Fred D.
> Truculently he responded "I don't do ballads, man!"
What, no "colorful" adjectives? Oh, I guess he had to wait till he
fronted his own band to do that.... the guy swore like a sailor....
Roger>
Truculently he responded "I don't do ballads, man!"
Fred D.
> Supposedly when he went into the hospital for his bypass surgery, a nurse
> was taking his medical history. She asked if he had any allergies and he
> replied "Country and Western." He was a character and an artist, sort of
> the Keith Moon of jazz. The world will go a long time before another one
> quite like him comes around again.
>
>
I remember Buddy once on the tonight show, when Johnny asked him if he could
twirl his stick and toss it in the air and catch it like the drummer for the
Rollin Stones he said "No...but he (the Stones drummer) can't play".
Terry
"Steve Harnar" <Chefo...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:c9.19da9ce...@aol.com...
The phone rings at Buddy Rich's house. His widow answers, and the guy on
the other end says, "Hi, I'm a horn player who used to play with Buddy. Is
he in?" Buddy's widow hesitates for a second, then explains, "No, haven't
you heard? Buddy died." A week later the phone rings again, and again
Buddy's widow answers. The same guy says, "Hi, I used to play with Buddy.
Can I speak with him?" Once again Buddy's widow says, "I'm sorry, Buddy's
dead." Another week goes by, the phone rings again, and the same guy asks
to speak with Buddy. Buddy's widow says, "Why do you keep calling? I've
told you, Buddy's dead." The horn player replies, "I know, but I just enjoy
hearing it."
>
> Supposedly when he went into the hospital for his bypass surgery, a nurse was
> taking his medical history. She asked if he had any allergies and he replied
> "Country and Western." He was a character and an artist, sort of the Keith
> Moon of jazz.
Great story! Good to hear the man had a sense of humor, to offset how
surly he was in the name of perfectionism....
-----Original Message-----
From: Blues Music List [mailto:BLU...@LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU]On Behalf Of
RB
Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2001 11:34 AM
To: BLU...@LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU
Subject: Re: Buddy Rich