Jul 2, 2:57 PM (ET)
By DEBORAH BAKER
(AP) Herbie Mann is shown playing in Central Park in the Manhattan
borough of New York in this May,...
Full Image
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - Herbie Mann, the versatile jazz flutist who
combined a variety of musical styles and deeply influenced genres such
as world music and fusion, has died. He was 73.
Mann, who had battled prostate cancer since 1997, died late Tuesday,
according to a friend, Sy Johnson. A funeral home in Santa Fe said it
was making arrangements with Mann's family.
Mann had moved to Santa Fe in the late 1980s after spending most of his
life in his native New York City.
Mann always performed different styles, then combined them. He did bebop
and cool jazz, and toured Africa, Brazil and Japan listening for new music.
"I just think he was a wonderful Pied Piper of jazz, drawing our
attention to what's happening around the world and the country," said
Johnson, a New York City composer who had known Mann for some 40 years.
He called Mann "a guy who loved music of all kinds an and eager to
explore it all."
Family of Mann, formed in 1973, played world music before it was called
that. Mann's best-selling "Memphis Underground" was a founding recording
of fusion.
If a genie offered Mann anything he wanted, he said in a 1995 Associated
Press interview, he would choose a big band including three rhythm
sections for straight-ahead jazz, Brazilian music and soul.
"I'd be able to play all that music; I wouldn't have to play any one
thing all the time," he said. "And I would always like to try to evolve
the music to another step. Once you reach the point where you play it
perfectly in a genre, to me it gets boring. Then I want to try to evolve
by combining things."
When he left Atlantic Records in 1979 he started producing his own
records, and later he launched his own label, Kokopelli. In all, he made
more than 100 albums as leader.
(AP) Jazz musician Herbie Mann, shown posing with his flute in New York
on April 11, 1995, who battled...
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Touring, he said, was "a killer, the hours and food. I always thought if
you made good records your records could do the traveling for you."
Album titles reflect Mann's versatility: "At the Village Gate" (1962);
"African Suite" (1959); "Brasil, Bossa Nova & Blues" (1962); "Latin
Mann" 1965; "Memphis Two Step" (1971); and "Eastern European Roots" (2000).
"As much as I love music, I never really thought it was my life. I
thought it was the vehicle I used to express my life," he said.
Born Herbert Solomon in Brooklyn in 1930, he started his career when he
was 15, playing in groups at Catskill Mountain resorts for the summer.
He studied saxophone but preferred flute. In the 1950s, after three
years in the Army playing with the Army Band in Trieste, Italy, Mann
toured France and Scandinavia.
He credited visits to Africa and Brazil in the early 1960s with changing
his musical outlook.
"When I came back (from Africa), I hired (Babatunde) Olatunji, a
Nigerian drummer living here, and we started doing music based on
African motifs," he told the AP.
As for the Brazil tour, he said, "Revelation doesn't touch it. Up to
that point, the ethnic music I had heard had 14 drums playing different
parts but the melodies were very simple. Then I saw the 'Black Orpheus'
movie and heard multiple rhythm parts along with the most beautiful
melodies in the world.
He returned and recorded with Brazilian musicians, including Antonio
Carlos Jobim and a 19-year-old Sergio Mendes.
At 70, he put out a CD called "Eastern European Roots."
"I've played Cuban music, but I'm not Cuban," he told the Rocky Mountain
News. "I've played Brazilian music, but I'm not Brazilian. I've played
jazz, but I'm not African-American. What I am is an Eastern European
Jew. I love all the music I've played, but I wanted something that is
mine. ... I had been writing this music for years, but I never thought
there was a place for me to play it."
"I'm playing better than I've ever played," Mann said in the 1995
Associated Press interview.
"As far as I'm concerned, almost everything I've done in the past has
been on the surface or just a hair below," he said. "Now I'm getting
serious."
His last live gig was May 3 at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage
Festival, where "he got a standing ovation for five minutes," Johnson said.
"He had a lot of plans," Johnson said. "His time may have been limited
and he knew it, but he was a man of energy and an active life that would
constantly churn up things," Johnson said.
Mann is survived by his wife, Susan Janeal Arison; sons Paul Mann of San
Francisco and Geoff Mann of New York City; daughters Claudia Mann-Basler
of Espanola, N.M., and Laura Mann of New York City; his mother, Ruth
Solomon of Hallandale, Fla.; and a sister, Judi Burnstein of Niceville, Fla.
--
Visit me on the web www.joefinn.net
"Pat Smith" <pj...@pacbell.net> wrote in message
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Herbie was one of the few jazz guy names I knew way back when listening
to Ted Nugent and the Amboy Dukes. Sorry to see him go.
Greg
Jeff DeMond
"Pat Smith" <pj...@pacbell.net> wrote in message
news:DxIMa.339$_%1.259...@newssvr14.news.prodigy.com...
I recently found out that some of the best recordings of legendary
guitarist Billy Bean are on albums with Herbie Mann. Listen to the
killer solo here:
http://www.classicjazzguitar.com/albums/artist_album.jsp?album=60
The CD is available on amazon: