[Trombone-l] Maynard
Bill Dinwiddie
billdin at comcast.net
Fri Aug 25 12:41:54 CDT 2006
Maynard Ferguson, 78; Trumpeter, Big Band Leader Achieved Pop Success
By Jon Thurber
Times Staff Writer
Published August 25, 2006
Maynard Ferguson, the big band leader and trumpeter whose screaming,
high-register solos and pop-tinged arrangements thrilled his fans and
sometimes appalled his critics, died Thursday. He was 78.
Ferguson died of kidney and liver failure, brought on by an abdominal
infection, at Community Memorial Hospital in Ventura, said Steve Schankman,
his manager.
An active musician, Ferguson recorded 60 albums in his long career and
generally played about 150 annual engagements up until last year, Schankman
said.
He had a weeklong run at the Blue Note in New York City last month, which he
followed up by recording a new album with his Big Bop Nouveau band. He was
due to begin a tour of Japan with the band in mid-September.
He started experiencing health problems on his return to his home in Ojai,
Schankman said, and was hospitalized as his condition deteriorated.
Schankman said he spoke to Ferguson by phone on Monday and the musician told
him, "Don't cancel anything . we are going to beat this."
Ferguson was nominated for a Grammy award in 1978 for his soaring recording
of Bill Conti's composition "Gonna Fly Now," the theme from the film
"Rocky." The song, on Ferguson's album "Conquistador," was one of his few
chart-hitting recordings. It reached No. 22 on the pop album charts in 1977.
He also made commercially appealing recordings of the Jimmy Webb tune
"MacArthur Park" and the Beatles' "Hey Jude."
His success with pop tunes was unusual for a player who cut his teeth on the
classic jazz ensemble: the big band.
Ferguson was born May 4, 1928, in a suburb of Montreal. A child prodigy,
Ferguson was playing violin and piano at age 4. At 13, he was soloing with
the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. Orchestra. By 16, he was playing trumpet and
leading a dance band that featured a young pianist named Oscar Peterson.
His band was often the opening act for visiting American big bands,
including those led by Count Basie and Stan Kenton. The Americans were
impressed with Ferguson's trumpet.
"I got a lot of offers to go out on the road," Ferguson told The Times some
years ago. "Kenton told me I had a place as a featured trumpet player any
time I wanted it."
By 1949, Ferguson had moved across the border, but Kenton was taking a break
from touring and recording. So Ferguson made his U.S. debut in saxophonist
Boyd Raeburn's big band. He also played in Jimmy Dorsey's band and Charlie
Barnet's band before Kenton went back to work in 1950 with Ferguson in the
trumpet section.
>From 1950 to 1953, Ferguson was arguably the hottest trumpeter in jazz. His
screaming, high-register trumpet was the cornerstone of Kenton's noted brass
section. His dramatic style is featured on the tune "Maynard Ferguson,"
written by Ferguson, Kenton and Shorty Rogers and featured on the
now-classic album "Stan Kenton Presents."
Ferguson was taking individual honors as well as being named best trumpeter
in Down Beat magazine's annual poll for three consecutive years starting in
1950.
After leaving Kenton in 1953, he set out for Hollywood and got a job with
Paramount Pictures playing on soundtracks. But he quickly found that work
unsatisfying and returned to jazz. He led the Birdland Dreamband in New York
and then formed what would be one in a series of 13-piece touring bands
known for their biting brass sections.
His bands also would be known as great training grounds for some noted
players. Over the years, his alumni would include saxophonist Wayne Shorter
and keyboardist Joe Zawinul, who were founding members of Weather Report;
pianist Chick Corea, trumpeter Chuck Mangione and arrangers such as Don
Sebesky and Don Menza.
By 1967, however, big bands took a sharp dip in popularity and Ferguson
disbanded his group.
His life took some sharp turns as well.
He moved his family to India on a spiritual quest and then lived in England.
He began forming bands that used more pop-oriented material. This paved the
way for his success in the 1970s with the theme from "Rocky."
And though this formula proved commercially viable over the next two
decades, it often didn't play well with critics, who faulted the lack of
subtlety in his playing and some dubious material.
Reviewing a 1979 performance at the Roxy, critic Leonard Feather wrote that
"Ferguson's audiences, seeking the ultimate in pyrotechnical displays by a
trumpeter with chops of steel, need look no further. On the other hand,
music lovers searching for taste, dynamic contrast and sensitivity will have
to look elsewhere."
Critics had a generally more sympathetic view of his later ensembles,
notably the Big Bop Noveau band, which focused on straight-ahead jazz.
The spiritual quest Ferguson started in India in the 1960s led him to move
his family to Ojai, then the base of operations for the Indian philosopher
J. Krishnamurti.
Ferguson was also a noted jazz teacher at the high school and college
levels.
He is survived by his daughters Kim, Lisa, Corby and Wilder.
A memorial service, to be held in St. Louis, is being planned for
mid-September. Memorial contributions may be made to the Maynard Ferguson
Scholarship Fund at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
Copyright © 2006, The Los Angeles Times
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