12.29.2008, 08:36 PM | #1 |
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Jazz great Freddie Hubbard dead at 70
Grammy-winner's style influenced a generation of trumpeters Michael Ochs Archives / Michael Ochs Archives via Getty Grammy-winning jazz musician Freddie Hubbard, whose style influenced a generation of trumpeters, has died at age 70. He suffered a heart attack last month. He is shown here around 1970. LOS ANGELES - Freddie Hubbard, the Grammy-winning jazz musician whose style influenced a generation of trumpet players and who collaborated with such greats as Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, died Monday, a month after suffering a heart attack. He was 70. Hubbard died at Sherman Oaks Hospital, said his manager, fellow trumpeter David Weiss of the New Jazz Composers Octet. He had been hospitalized since suffering the heart attack a day before Thanksgiving. A towering figure in jazz circles, Hubbard played on hundreds of recordings in a career dating to 1958, the year he arrived in New York from his hometown Indianapolis, where he had studied at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music and with the Indianapolis Symphony. Soon he had hooked up with such jazz legends as Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley and Coltrane. "I met Trane at a jam session at Count Basie's in Harlem in 1958," he told the jazz magazine Down Beat in 1995. "He said, `Why don't you come over and let's try and practice a little bit together.' I almost went crazy. I mean, here is a 20-year-old kid practicing with John Coltrane. He helped me out a lot, and we worked several jobs together." In his earliest recordings, which included "Open Sesame" and "Goin' Up" for Blue Note in 1960, the influence of Davis and others on Hubbard is obvious, Weiss said. But within a couple years he would develop a style all his own, one that would influence generations of musicians, including Wynton Marsalis. "He influenced all the trumpet players that came after him," Marsalis told The Associated Press earlier this year. "Certainly I listened to him a lot. ... We all listened to him. He has a big sound and a great sense of rhythm and time and really the hallmark of his playing is an exuberance. His playing is exuberant." Hubbard played on more than 300 recordings, including his own albums and those of scores of other artists. He won his Grammy in 1972 for best jazz performance by a group for the album "First Light." As a young musician, Hubbard became revered among his peers for a fiery, blazing style that allowed him to hit notes higher and faster than just about anyone else with a horn. As age and infirmity began to slow that style, he switched to a softer, melodic style and played a flugelhorn. His fellow musicians were still impressed. "The sound he gets on just one note. I know he does all the flashy stuff and the high stuff and it's all great but ... he'd play `Body and Soul' on the flugelhorn and it was just that much better again than everyone around him," trumpeter Chris Botti said in an interview earlier this year. always a sad day, and 70 is such a relatively young age |
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12.29.2008, 08:51 PM | #2 |
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shit, i've been listening to his solo on eye of the hurricane constantly for weeks
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12.29.2008, 09:07 PM | #3 |
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Wow. That's Leonard Hubbard's dad, too. Y'know, the bass player for The Roots? Sad.
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12.29.2008, 09:21 PM | #4 |
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Additional musical death: The singer for the count five (he also wrote psychotic reaction)
Yeah thatuy doesn't deserve his own thread thus i mentioned it here since we were on the subject. Sorry I'm distracting from this thread. Sad loss..
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12.30.2008, 10:40 AM | #5 |
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sorry to hear the news.
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12.30.2008, 10:41 AM | #6 |
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A Sonny Rollins/Freddie Hubbard bootleg is up at bigozine2.com to comemorate.
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12.30.2008, 11:34 AM | #7 |
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I am going home and playing all my jazz shit that freddie blew on. that is a LOT.
VSOP with herbie hancock free jazz with ornette coleman art blakey jazz messengers records with wayne shorter fuck so much music http://fuppets.blogspot.com/2008/12/...bbard-rip.html
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12.30.2008, 01:55 PM | #8 |
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that version of "moanin'" on yr blog is fucking mesmerizing, rob. Thanks for that.
Sad loss indeed. :7( |
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12.30.2008, 02:22 PM | #9 |
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the man played with all the greats. No one lives forever, but it is still very sad to see people who broughtme much joy pass on.
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12.30.2008, 04:28 PM | #10 |
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yeah, he was one of the greats alright. I played trumpet for about two years, still pissed i got off track with it. But he and Miles were the guys i was most impressed with. I have some raw old footage of him with Ron Carter and Herbie jamming..
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12.30.2008, 09:52 PM | #11 |
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now playing:eric dolphy-out to lunch
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12.31.2008, 01:44 AM | #12 | |
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Quote:
Excellent. Need to put that on, it's been a while. Right now it's a little Hub-Tones action. The man was so integral to the 60's modal thing, and pushed it into more of the mainstream.
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