Copyright 2005-2022 - JazzStandards.com
All Rights Reserved
Permission & contact information

Jazz Standards.com : Jazz Standards : Songs : History : Biographies
Home Overview Songs Biographies History Theory Search Bookstore Articles About

Biographies

Reading and Viewing

Peter Pullman

Wail: The Life of Bud Powell

Peter Pullman, LLC


Alan Groves, Alyn Shipton

The Glass Enclosure: The Life of Bud Powell

Continuum International Publishing Group


Francis Paudras

Dance of the Infidels: A Portrait of Bud Powell

Da Capo Press


Bud Powell

The Bud Powell Real Book: C Instruments

Hal Leonard Corporation


Bud Powell

The Bud Powell Collection: Piano Transcriptions (Artist Transcriptions)

Hal Leonard Corporation


Bud Powell

Bud Powell Classics

Hal Leonard Corporation


Evan Sarzin

Bud Powell: Originals & Standards

Gerard & Sarzin Publishing Company


Carl Smith

Bouncing With Bud: All the Recordings of Bud Powell

Biddle Pub. Co.


Clifford J. Safane

Bud Powell (Jazz Masters)

Amsco Music


Bud Powell

Live in Europe

MSI:GAMBIT

DVD


Louis Armstrong, Chris Barber, Stefano Bollani, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington

Play Your Own Thing - A Story of Jazz in Europe

EuroArts/Medici Arts

DVD

Listening

Bud Powell

Amazing Bud Powell, Vol. 1

2001 Blue Note 32136


Quintet, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Max Roach

Jazz at Massey Hall

Ojc


Bud Powell

The Scene Changes

Blue Note Records


Bud Powell

Jazz Giant

Polygram Records


Bud Powell

Bouncing with Bud

Delmark


Bud Powell

Live in Lausanne 1962

Stretch Records


Bud Powell

The Genius of Bud Powell, Vol. 1

Polygram Records


Bud Powell

The Amazing Bud Powell, Vol. 2

Blue Note Records

Biography

Bud Powell

Earl Rudolph Powell

Pianist, Bandleader, Composer

(1924 - 1966)

The music of pianist Earl “Bud” Powell profoundly echoes a life that was unique in jazz history. Its daring, headlong improvisatory solos, often embedded in his stirring, original compositions, describe an arc of ecstasy and discord that his erratic private life closely limned. His name forever associated with the immediate-postwar, modernist movement, bebop, which challenged swing music, Powell nonetheless lived a life that no other musician ever had.

Born in Harlem in the midst of its cultural renaissance, and having taken formal lessons before he was six years old, he could mimic Fats Waller’s playing at age ten and was working professionally at fifteen. On record with a famous big band before he was twenty, by twenty-four he led his own trio on a number of record dates that put forward the progressive ideas defining piano modernism. His 1949 output stood beside that of alto saxophonist Charlie Parker, whose antisocial antics he matched offstage, and whose virtuosity he rivaled onstage.

But before Powell turned twenty-seven, his pre-eminence on his instrument notwithstanding, his erratic behavior got him involuntarily hospitalized--off the music scene for a crucial year and a half--just as bebop was gaining wide acceptance. (It was his third such confinement.)

Upon his release, he was welcomed back to his nightly piano-bench perch at the legendary nightclub, Birdland. Initially full of energy and eager to display his ideas--he was all but the house pianist there for 1953--his audiences soon began to turn from him, their having noticed his slurring of notes, which were accompanied by odd facial gestures and other tics.

But, again, his career arc proved to be unique: He didn’t flame out quickly or dramatically, as had Parker and another bebop genius whom he played alongside, trumpeter Fats Navarro. Powell’s decline was slow and intermittent and, after relocating to Europe in 1959, he played well often enough to fill nightclubs in Paris and Copenhagen for a few years.

This convinced Powell’s old manager to bring him back for a return engagement, at Birdland in fall 1964. His dissipations and illnesses, however, soon caught up with him again. So, though his career’s decline lasted two and a half times as long as had its peak, he was still only forty-one when he died, in Brooklyn, in 1966.

Peter Pullman
Wail: The Life of Bud Powell
in paperback and ebook
Order at www.BudPowellBio.com

Editors note: Streaming versions of both of the author’s one-hour presentations on Bud Powell may be found at WBGO’s Jazz from the Archives. (Dan Morgenstern is the show’s host.)

Copyright 2005-2020 - JazzStandards.com - All Rights Reserved      Permission & contact information

Home | Overview | Songs | Biographies | History | Theory | Search | Bookstore | Articles | About