Hi Jazzbuddies,
Passing along some sad news of another loss to the jazz community...
Art Davis, 73; known for mastery of the bass, also was a psychologist
By Jocelyn Y. Stewart, Times Staff Writer
August 4, 2007
Art Davis, the renowned double bassist who played with John Coltrane
and other jazz greats, was blacklisted in the 1970s for speaking up
about racism in the music industry, and then later in life earned a
doctorate in clinical psychology and balanced performance dates with
appointments to see patients, has died. He was 73.
Davis,
a player whom jazz critic Nat Hentoff once described as "an astonishing
player" and "beyond category," died of a heart attack Sunday at his
home in Long Beach, said his son Kimaili Davis.
"He was adventurous with his approach to playing music," said pianist
Nate Morgan, who played with the elder Davis intermittently over the
last 10 years. "It takes a certain amount of integrity to step outside
the box and say, 'I like it here and I'm going to hang here for a
while.' "
Known
for his stunning and complete mastery of the instrument, Davis was able
to genre-hop comfortably. He played classical music with the New York
Philharmonic, was a member of the NBC, Westinghouse and CBS orchestras,
and played for Broadway shows.
The most intense and enriching
experience of Davis' career was his collaboration with John Coltrane.
Described by Hentoff as Coltrane's favorite bassist, Davis performed on
the saxophonist's albums including "Ascension," Volumes 1 and 2 of "The
Africa/Brass Sessions" and "Ole Coltrane." The two musicians met one
night in the late 1950s at Small's Paradise, a jazz club in Harlem,
where Davis was playing with drummer Max Roach. Coltrane invited Davis
to play with him the following morning at one of his legendary grueling
practice sessions.
A few years later, when Coltrane was building
his quartet, he invited Davis to join. By then he had become averse to
touring and so declined, although he periodically played with the
group.
Davis viewed his instrument as "the backbone of the
band," one that should "inspire the group by proposing harmonic
information with a certain sound quality and rhythmic impulses," Davis
said in an excerpt from So What magazine posted on his website. "You
let the bass do the talking. A bassist cannot be satisfied with playing
straight." By following his own advice, Davis' career flourished. He
played with a long and varied list of artists: Thelonious Monk, Duke
Ellington, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Louis Armstrong, Judy Garland, John
Denver, the trio Peter, Paul and Mary and Bob Dylan.
Pianist
Ahmad Jamal once dubbed Davis the "forgotten genius" because the
outspoken bassist had been blacklisted for many years. Davis' decision
to take a stand against racism was born of his experiences in music.
Davis
began studying piano at age 5 in Harrisburg, Pa., where he was born
Dec. 5, 1933. By sixth grade Davis studied the tuba in school simply
because it was the only instrument available, he said.
By 1951
he decided to make music his career but chose the double bass,
believing it would allow more opportunities to make a living. At age 17
he studied with the principal double bassist at the Philadelphia
Orchestra. But when he auditioned for his hometown's symphony, the
audition committee was so unduly harsh and demanding that the conductor
Edwin MacArthur questioned their objectivity.
"The answer was,
'Well, he's [colored]' — and there was silence," Davis recalled in a
2002 article in Double Bassist magazine. "Finally MacArthur burst out,
'If you don't want him, then you don't want me.' So they quickly got
together and accepted me." After high school, Davis studied classical
music on scholarship at the Manhattan School of Music and the Juilliard
School of Music. At night he played jazz in New York clubs.
"It
all sounded good to me — and I felt I could do a number of different
fields," he told Double Bassist. "I was of one the first to switch back
and forth from jazz to classical."
But the switch was not always
an easy one. Davis encountered situations where race was more important
than performance. In the 1970s, his fortunes waned after he filed an
unsuccessful discrimination lawsuit against the New York Philharmonic.
Like other black musicians who challenged job hiring practices, he lost
work and important industry connections.
"As a person, he had
enormous integrity," Hentoff said in an interview this week. "He
wouldn't bend to accommodate bias or the ignorance of some of the
people in the music business."
With less work coming his way,
Davis returned to school and in 1981 earned a doctorate in clinical
psychology from New York University. Davis was for many years a
practicing psychologist while also working as a musician.
"I
went up against the big power people and lost 10 years of my life. I
feel vindicated [through his court case], and I wouldn't be a Dr. Art
Davis if it hadn't happened," he told Double Bassist.
As a
result of his lawsuit and protest, Davis played a key role in the
increased use of the so-called blind audition, in which musicians are
heard but not seen by those evaluating them, Hentoff said.
The
accomplished musician also pioneered a fingering technique for the bass
and wrote "The Arthur Davis System for Double Bass."
Davis
also wore the hat of university professor; for two years he taught at
UC Irvine. Most recently Davis was a part-time music instructor at
Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. He could be regularly heard on
Sundays at the Ritz-Carlton in Laguna Niguel. Among musicians, Davis
was highly respected for his work and his role in the Coltrane legacy.
"And
he always had a great attitude, no matter what kind of music we were
playing or how difficult the circumstances were," said Jan Jordan, the
pianist who played with Davis at the Ritz.
"He always reached out to people in the audience."
In
addition to his son Kimaili of Oak Park, Davis is survived by son
Mureithi Davis of Tustin and daughter Taisha Jack of Culver City.
Davis' wife, Gladys, died in 1995.
--
jocelyn...@latimes.com
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-davis4aug04,0,5873311.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california-Greg