James Moore ETD Dissertation Final Word ETD April13 PDF
James Moore ETD Dissertation Final Word ETD April13 PDF
James Moore ETD Dissertation Final Word ETD April13 PDF
by
Doctor of Philosophy
University of Pittsburgh
2012
i
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
by
It was defended on
Committee Members:
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Copyright © by James Harrison Moore
2012
iii
Nathan T. Davis, PhD
This study is a comparative examination of the musical lives and improvisational styles
of jazz trumpeter Clifford Brown, and two prominent jazz trumpeters whom historians assert
were influenced by Brown—Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard. Though Brown died in 1956 at
the age of 25, the reverence among the jazz community for his improvisational style was so great
that generations of modern jazz trumpeters were affected by his playing. It is widely said that
Brown remains one of the most influential modern jazz trumpeters of all time. In the case of
Donald Byrd, exposure to Brown’s style was significant, but the extent to which Brown’s
playing was foundational or transformative has not been examined. With regards to Hubbard,
assertions of his affinity for Brown’s playing during his formative years are well founded, but
how much of Brown’s influence was retained by Hubbard as he developed his own personal
style has been unexamined. This study examines the early life, musical training, significant
professional experiences, and musical influences of Clifford Brown, Donald Byrd, and Freddie
Hubbard to assist in forming a more complete picture of the evolution of their respective
improvisational styles. In order to call into question the extent of Brown’s influence upon Byrd
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and Hubbard I scrutinize the playing of these three men in a comparative manner, focusing on
traditionally analyzed elements such as melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic tendencies as well as
performance elements specific to the trumpet. When one jazz musician is influenced by the
improvisational style of another many of the aforementioned elements may be transferred and
adopted in the formation of style. Therefore, by identifying the elements that make up Clifford
Brown’s modern jazz trumpet style and looking for commonalities and differences among the
three trumpeters, a more complete and accurate understanding of the interrelationships between
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.2.1 Biography..................................................................................................... 10
vi
2.2.2.3 Paris ...................................................................................................... 52
3.1.4 Slurred and tongued pitches in lines that cross register breaks ........... 112
vii
3.2.4 Syncopations .............................................................................................. 137
viii
5.2 DISCOGRAPHY ............................................................................................. 237
ix
LIST OF TABLES
Table 3.2 Phrase table. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You.” ............................ 217
Table 3.3 Phrase table. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight.” ..................................................... 218
x
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 3.3 Tonguing of large intervals. Clifford Brown, "Flossie Lou," measures 25-26. .......... 90
Figure 3.4 Adherence to prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.5 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.6 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.7 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd,
Figure 3.8 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “There
Figure 3.9 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “Each
Figure 3.10 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “I’m
xi
Figure 3.11 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.12 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.13 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.14 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.15 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.16 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.18 Articulation variation “A.” Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 22-23. ............ 102
Figure 3.19 Articulation variation “A.” Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 45-48. ......... 102
Figure 3.20 Articulation variation “A.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 4. ................... 103
Figure 3.21 Articulation variation “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 13-17. 104
Figure 3.22 Articulation variation “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 18. ....... 104
Figure 3.23 Articulation variation “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 16. ............. 105
Figure 3.24 Adapted by the author from a Clifford Brown passages from “Flossie Lou” (alternate
Figure 3.25 Successively tongued eighth-notes. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measure 2. ... 106
xii
Figure 3.26 Successively tongued eighth notes. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Emarcy)
Figure 3.27 Successively tongued eighth notes. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy),
Figure 3.28 Successively tongued eighth notes. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 9-10. 108
Figure 3.29 Successively tongued eighth notes. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another
Figure 3.30 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 1-
6................................................................................................................................................... 109
Figure 3.31 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures
Figure 3.32 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in
Figure 3.33 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in
Figure 3.34 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 52. 111
Figure 3.36 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
Figure 3.37 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
Figure 3.38 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
xiii
Figure 3.39 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,”
Figure 3.40 Crossing register break using a slur. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,”
Figure 3.41 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s
Figure 3.42 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.43 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.44 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.45 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,”
Figure 3.46 Crossing register break using slurred and legato articulated pitches. Freddie
Figure 3.48 Use of ghost notes. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 25-27. ..................... 122
Figure 3.49 Use of ghost notes. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 30-31. .......................... 122
Figure 3.50 Use of ghost notes. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 47. ............................. 122
Figure 3.51 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 17-18. ............ 123
Figure 3.52 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 22-23. ........... 123
xiv
Figure 3.53 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 1-
3................................................................................................................................................... 123
Figure 3.54 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 49-51. .................. 124
Figure 3.55 Eighth-note-based lines with triplet and sixteenth-note figures. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.56 Eighth-note-based lines with triplet and sixteenth-note figures. Donald Byrd, “There
Figure 3.57 Eighth-note-based lines with triplet and sixteenth-note figures. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.58 Use of melismatic tuplet grouping. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in
Figure 3.59 Use of quarter note in eighth-note-based line. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring”
Figure 3.60 Use of quarter note in eighth-note-based line. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
Figure 3.61 Extensive use of quarter notes within eighth-note-based lines. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s
Figure 3.62 Use of quarter-note-based motif. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures
Figure 3.63 Use of quarter notes within the body of eighth-note-based lines. Donald Byrd, “I’m
Figure 3.64 Use of quarter-note-based motif. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 33-
37................................................................................................................................................. 131
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Figure 3.65 Use of repeated quarter notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 1-16. ... 131
Figure 3.66 Sustained pitch at the end of a line. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 13-17.
..................................................................................................................................................... 132
Figure 3.67 Use of dotted quarter/eighth-note figure. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue
Note/Pacific) measures 45-46. The additional staff below shows the rhythmic element. .......... 132
Figure 3.68 Sustained pitch at the beginning of a line. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be
Another You,” measures 7-10. An additional staff below shows the rhythmic element. ........... 133
Figure 3.69 Extensive use of sustained pitches. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 37-43.
Figure 3.70 Extensive use of sustained pitches. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures
19-22. An additional staff below shows the rhythmic element. ................................................. 134
Figure 3.71 Use of sustained pitch at the end of a line. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,”
Figure 3.72 Extensive use of sustained pitches. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 170-180.
..................................................................................................................................................... 136
Figure 3.73 Extensive use of dotted quarter/eighth-note figures. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,”
Figure 3.74 Syncopation within a line. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 1-3. ................. 137
Figure 3.75 Stand alone syncopation. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 42-44. ............... 138
Figure 3.76 Stand alone syncopation. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 48-49. ............... 138
Figure 3.77 Sustained syncopation. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 56-57. 138
Figure 3.78 Sustained syncopations. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud” measures 32-33. .................. 139
Figure 3.79 Syncopation within a line. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 27-29. ........... 139
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Figure 3.80 Syncopations within a line. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 14-18.
..................................................................................................................................................... 140
Figure 3.81 Sustained syncopations. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,”
Figure 3.82 Sustained syncopations. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 65-69. . 141
Figure 3.83 Syncopation within a line. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 27-28. . 141
Figure 3.84 Syncopations within a line. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 1-2........... 142
Figure 3.85 Sustained syncopations. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 5-9. ........ 142
Figure 3.87 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 29-34. .. 144
Figure 3.88 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures
Figure 3.89 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 18-20. .... 145
Figure 3.90 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 16-17. ..... 145
Figure 3.91 Use of multiple eighth-note-triplet turns. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,”
Figure 3.92 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 22-24. ..... 146
Figure 3.94 Use of eighth-sixteenth-note turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures
Figure 3.95 Use of eighth-sixteenth-note turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific)
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Figure 3.96 Use of multiple eighth-sixteenth-note turns. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,”
Figure 3.97 Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 19-20. Note the sixteenth-note turn in
Figure 3.98 Use of eighth-sixteenth-note turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 29-32. 149
Figure 3.100 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 23-25. ...... 150
Figure 3.101 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,”
Figure 3.102 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 11-13. ......... 150
Figure 3.103 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 19-20.
..................................................................................................................................................... 150
Figure 3.104 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 26-28. .... 151
Figure 3.106 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy),
Figure 3.107 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy),
Figure 3.108 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another
Figure 3.109 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures
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Figure 3.111 Use of grace note. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 22-23. .................... 153
Figure 3.112 Use of grace note. Clifford Brown, “Gertrude’s Bounce,” measures 14-15. ........ 154
Figure 3.113 Use of multiple grace notes. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 54-64. ...... 154
Figure 3.114 Use of multiple grace notes. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measures
Figure 3.115 Use of multiple grace notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 34-37.
..................................................................................................................................................... 154
Figure 3.116 Use of grace note. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 34-36. ....................... 155
Figure 3.118 Use of half-valve grace note. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 32-32. .. 156
Figure 3.119 Use of half-valve grace note. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 122-
124............................................................................................................................................... 156
Figure 3.120 Use of half-valve grace note. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 8-9.
..................................................................................................................................................... 156
Figure 3.121 Use of scoop. Kenny Dorham, “An Oscar for Oscar,” measures 2-4. ................. 157
Figure 3.123 Use of plop. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific) measures 16-17.
..................................................................................................................................................... 158
Figure 3.124 Use of plop. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measure 34. ................ 158
Figure 3.125 Use of ornamental alternate fingering. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 23. 159
Figure 3.126 Use of functional alternate fingering. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 45. . 160
Figure 3.127 Use of functional alternate fingering. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another
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Figure 3.128 Use of functional alternate fingering. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another
Figure 3.129 Use of ornamental alternate fingering. Freddie Hubbard “Tadd’s Delight,” measure
1................................................................................................................................................... 162
Figure 3.130 Use of functional alternate fingering. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in
Figure 3.131 Use of functional alternate fingering. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 58-
63................................................................................................................................................. 163
Figure 3.137 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” master take measures 1-
2................................................................................................................................................... 169
Figure 3.138 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific)
Figure 3.139 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measure 24. ........... 169
Figure 3.140 Use of consecutive enclosure figures “A,” or a double enclosure. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.141 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,”
Figure 3.142 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 30-31. ...... 171
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Figure 3.143 Use of double enclosure figure. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures
Figure 3.144 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measures
18................................................................................................................................................. 171
Figure 3.145 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 17-18.
..................................................................................................................................................... 172
Figure 3.146 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 21. .. 172
Figure 3.147 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 25-28.
..................................................................................................................................................... 172
Figure 3.148 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 3. .......... 173
Figure 3.149 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measure 21. .......... 174
Figure 3.150 Multiple use of enclosure figure “C.” Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 14-15.
..................................................................................................................................................... 174
Figure 3.151 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 38-
39................................................................................................................................................. 174
Figure 3.152 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 17. ............ 175
Figure 3.153 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measure
30................................................................................................................................................. 175
Figure 3.154 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measure 41. ............. 175
Figure 3.155 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 5. .... 175
Figure 3.156 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measure 14. . 176
Figure 3.157 Use of enclosure-turn “C.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 14-
15................................................................................................................................................. 176
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Figure 3.158 Use of enclosure-turn “C.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 61. ............... 177
Figure 3.159 Use of G-sharp mixolydian scale with enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Joy
Figure 3.160 Use of material derived from the major scale with passing tone. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.161 Use of material derived from the major scale with passing tones. Donald Byrd,
Figure 3.162 Use of material derived from the major scale with enclosure figure “A” and passing
Figure 3.163 Use of material derived from the major scale with enclosure figure “A” and passing
tones. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 42-44. .................................................. 179
Figure 3.164 Use of material derived from the major scale with passing tone. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.165 Use of material derived from the major scale. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,”
Figure 3.166 Bebop dominant scale in its pure form. ................................................................. 181
Figure 3.168 Use of material derived two bebop dominant scales. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,”
Figure 3.169 Use of material derived from multiple bebop dominant scales. Clifford Brown, “Get
Figure 3.170 Use of material derived from bebop dominant scale with passing tone. Clifford
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Figure 3.171 Use of material derived from bebop dominant scale with enclosure-turn “C.”
Figure 3.172 Use of material derived from G bebop dominant scale. Donald Byrd, “There Will
Figure 3.173 Use of material derived from multiple bebop dominant scales. Donald Byrd, “I’m
Figure 3.174 Use of material derived from multiple bebop dominant scales. Donald Byrd, “I’m
Figure 3.175 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale. Donald Byrd, “Just in
Figure 3.176 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale and enclosure figures “A.”
Figure 3.177 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale and enclosure figure “A.”
Figure 3.178 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale and non-harmonic tone.
Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 50-51. ..................................... 187
Figure 3.179 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale. Freddie Hubbard,
Figure 3.180 Standard combination of chromatic targeting and bebop dominant derived material.
..................................................................................................................................................... 188
Figure 3.181 Use of chromatic scale fragment and G bebop dominant scale. Clifford Brown,
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Figure 3.182 Use of chromatic scale fragment and enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “There
Figure 3.183 Use of chromatic scale fragment. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 31-32.
..................................................................................................................................................... 189
Figure 3.184 Construction of diminished, or, whole-half diminished, scale. ............................. 190
Figure 3.185 Construction of half-whole, or, half-whole diminished scale. .............................. 190
Figure 3.186 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,”
Figure 3.187 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,”
Figure 3.188 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,”
Figure 3.189 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never
Figure 3.190 Use of pitches derived from diminished scale. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be
Figure 3.191 Use of nonharmonic tones. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 34-35.
..................................................................................................................................................... 193
Figure 3.192 Use of pitches derived from diminished scale. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,”
Figure 3.193 Use of single non-harmonic tone. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in
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Figure 3.194 Use of diminished scale fragment. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 148-150.
..................................................................................................................................................... 195
Figure 3.198 Multiple 3 to flat-9 patterns. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” measures 26-27. ..... 198
Figure 3.199 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,”
Figure 3.200 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 59-60.
..................................................................................................................................................... 199
Figure 3.201 Use of partial 3 to flat-9 pattern. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 64-65. 199
Figure 3.202 Use of partial 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measure 11.
..................................................................................................................................................... 200
Figure 3.203 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 6-7...... 200
Figure 3.204 Use 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 83-84. ................ 200
Figure 3.205 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,”
Figure 3.206 Use of 3 to flat-9 fragment. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 135-136. .... 202
Figure 3.207 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 10-15. ...................... 203
Figure 3.208 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 26-30. ...................... 204
Figure 3.209 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown “Daahoud,” measures 13 and 51. ................. 204
Figure 3.210 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 13 and 51 transposed.
..................................................................................................................................................... 205
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Figure 3.211 Multiple recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 5, 21-22, and
Figure 3.212 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown “Gertrude’s Bounce,” measures 17-18 and 48-
49................................................................................................................................................. 206
Figure 3.213 Recurring patterns. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,” measure 2-
Figure 3.214 Recurring patterns. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 8-9 and 90-91.
..................................................................................................................................................... 208
Figure 3.215 Recurring patterns. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 65-68. ....... 209
Figure 3.216 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 1-2 and 28-29.
..................................................................................................................................................... 210
Figure 3.217 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures
Figure 3.218 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measure
Figure 3.219 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 73-80. ..................... 211
Figure 3.220 Antecedent/consequent phrase. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 9-12. .... 211
Figure 3.222 Bebop phrase ending. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 13-17. ............... 220
Figure 3.223 Bebop phrase ending. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 6-10. .................... 220
Figure 3.224 Bebop phrase ending. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,”
Figure 3.225 Bebop phrase ending. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 1-3. ..................... 221
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Figure 3.226 Bebop phrase ending. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 3-6. .......... 222
Figure 3.227 Bebop phrase ending. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 26-32. ................. 222
Figure 3.229 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 13-
18................................................................................................................................................. 223
Figure 3.230 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Clifford Brown, “Gertrude’s Bounce,”
Figure 3.231 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,”
Figure 3.232 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 57-
63................................................................................................................................................. 225
Figure 3.233 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight, “
Figure 3.234 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 1-
4................................................................................................................................................... 226
Figure 5.1 Representative Exercises from J.B. Arban’s method book. ...................................... 307
Figure 5.2 Representative Exercises from J.B. Arban’s method book. ...................................... 308
Figure 5.3 Excerpt from J.B. Arban’s variations on the theme from The Carnival of Venice. .. 309
Figure 5.4 Representative examples from Max Schlossberg’s method book ............................. 311
Figure 5.5 Representative examples from Max Schlossberg’s method book ............................. 312
xxvii
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Clifford Brown emerged in the early 1950s as one of the most promising young jazz
trumpeters in the United States. 1 His virtuosic technique, inventive improvisations, and warm
personality quickly endeared him to his peers and contemporaries. His playing has been
lasted barely three years, produced a small yet significant output that would ensure that his
personal style would continue to be modeled by young jazz trumpeters for years to come. He
worked with some of the luminaries of modern jazz, including Tadd Dameron, Art Blakey, and
Max Roach and his importance as a stylist is without question. Brown died suddenly on June 26,
Clifford Brown’s untimely death in 1956 created a vacuum in which the jazz community
and critical establishment searched for an “heir” to his legacy. In this quest to deal with the
collective sorrow that continues to be felt in the wake of an artistic career that was left
unfulfilled, some historians and critics have unwittingly misrepresented the degree to which
Brown influenced specific jazz trumpeters. The two most poignant examples of this
misrepresentation may be found in the way that historians have forced Brown’s influence on the
1
Frank Tirro, Jazz: A History (New York: W.W. Norton & Co. Inc, 1977), 306.
2
Tirro, Jazz: A History, 306.
3
Donald Byrd, telephone interview, Feb. 20, 2010.
4
Nathan Davis, Writings in Jazz (Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co., 2002), 211
5
Mark Gridley, Jazz Styles: History and Analysis (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2000), 212.
1
modern jazz styles 6 of trumpeters Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard.
In an article commemorating the 29th anniversary of the tragic passing of Clifford Brown
that appeared in The Los Angeles Times, jazz critic Leonard Feather stated that “…the premature
posthumous reputation that goes beyond the bounds it might have reached had the artist
survived.” 7 Though Feather was quick to assert that Clifford Brown’s accolades were well
deserved, much mysticism surrounds Brown’s legacy vis-à-vis his influence upon specific jazz
In Jazz Styles: History and Analysis, historian Mark Gridley cites Clifford Brown as an
influential force in shaping the personal styles of several historically significant jazz trumpet
stylists:
The following players were probably influenced directly by Brown: Donald Byrd, Bill
Hardman, Louis Smith, Carmell Jones, and Lee Morgan (although it is also possible that
they sounded like Brown because they, like Brown, were influenced by the same
sources). Freddie Hubbard’s playing also resembled Brown’s at times, but Hubbard
produced such an original style that his early debt to Brown may be difficult to detect in
his later playing. 8
Gridley is not the only historian who makes such an assertion. Jazz historians David
Rosenthal, 9 Scott Yanow, 10 Doug Ramsey, 11 and Henry Martin and Keith Waters 12 put forth
6
I define modern jazz as the style period that encompasses bebop, hard bop, and cool jazz performance practices,
occurring from approximately 1945 through 1965.
7
Leonard Feather, “Remembering Clifford Brown,” Los Angeles Times, June 30, 1985: AC44.
8
Mark Gridley, Jazz Styles: History and Analysis (New York: Prentice Hall, 1976), 161-162.
9
David H. Rosenthal, Hard Bop: Jazz & Black Music 1955-1965 (New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1992). 33. Rosenthal states that Brown’s “influence would be felt through the rest of the decade (1955-65) in young
hornmen like Lee Morgan and Donald Byrd.”
10
Scott Yanow, Trumpet Kings (San Francisco: Backbeat Books, 2001), 195. On Freddie Hubbard, Yanow states
that “the young trumpeter formed his sound out of the Clifford Brown/Lee Morgan tradition, but gradually
developed his own sound.”
2
statements that fortify this narrative that Brown’s influence upon certain jazz trumpeters was
paramount. Further proliferation of this narrative may be found in less scholarly settings:
criticism, informal writings on the World Wide Web, and the collective consciousness of jazz
musicians.
jazz trumpet style is undeniable. In a little more than three short years, Clifford Brown helped to
lay the foundation for changes in the manner in which jazz trumpeters would improvise for
generations to come—synthesizing the styles of Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Fats Navarro,
Idris Suleiman, and Clark Terry while raising the standards of modern jazz trumpet performance
to dizzying heights. His technical prowess and artistry cast a long shadow upon the world of
modern jazz trumpet performance that is still felt today. Brown’s style was transformative for
many of his contemporaries because he rose to prominence in a time when Dizzy Gillespie’s
approach to modern jazz trumpet was, in many ways, the norm. But Brown’s refined lyrical
approach was not the only voice that stood in stylistic contrast to Gillespie’s pyrotechnic and
flamboyant style. Players such as Miles Davis, Art Farmer, Dizzy Reece, Benny Bailey, and Idris
Suleiman were all striving for a more subdued sound during the late 1940s and early 1950s. 13
But it was Brown’s association with Art Blakey and, shortly thereafter, Max Roach that
catapulted him into a position of prominence among these young would-be sound-refiners. His
work with Blakey in particular is important because it positions Brown’s playing as “a paradigm
11
Doug Ramsey, Jazz Matters: Reflections on the Music & some of its Makers (Fayetteville, AR: University of
Arkansas Press, 1989), 207. On Freddie Hubbard, the author states that “He was one of a group of dazzling
trumpeters that included Lee Morgan...and the slightly older Donald Byrd. Like the others, in his developing years,
Hubbard’s playing was modeled off that of Clifford Brown, who was inspired by Fats Navarro.”
12
Henry Martin and Keith Waters, Jazz; the First 100 Years (Belmont, CA: Thomson/Schirmer, 2006), 222. The
authors state that “Freddie Hubbard replaced the impassioned trumpeter Lee Morgan in 1961...” and he was
“...strongly influenced by Hard Bop trumpeter Clifford Brown.
13
Nathan Davis, telephone interview, March 3, 2009. Further confirmation was obtained from Donald Byrd in a
telephone interview that took place on February 21, 2010.
3
for upcoming trumpet players, including all those who succeeded him in Art Blakey’s Jazz
Messengers.” 14
While Brown’s influence is undeniable, the extent of his influence upon Donald Byrd and
Freddie Hubbard, whom many historians have identified as pseudo-disciples of Brown, has not
been examined in a systematic manner. If we are to understand the extent to which Brown’s
personal style informed the styles of Hubbard and Byrd, a truly specific study must be conducted
to achieve an understanding that goes deeper than mere assertions of sonic similarities.
The primary objective of this dissertation is to put to the test critical and historical
assertions that Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard modeled their personal improvisational styles
using, at least in part, the style of Clifford Brown as a template. A secondary objective is to
attempt to achieve a deeper understanding of the styles of Freddie Hubbard and Donald Byrd.
Third is to redefine the manner in which jazz researchers and students of jazz performance
the playing characteristics of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard has been conducted in order to further
understand the forces that contributed of each artist’s approach to jazz trumpet performance.
Second, I have constructed a framework for the analysis of improvised jazz trumpet solos that is
14
Alan Goldsher, Hard Bop Academy (Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corporation, 2002). 13.
4
specific to modern jazz performance practice. Third, I have used this model to examine the
understand the extentof Brown’s influence upon Byrd and Hubbard as well as to identify any
This study will have a number of benefits for the fields of jazz studies and trumpet
performance practice studies. First, it will be the first study of its kind to truly deal with the
perceived lineage of Clifford Brown’s style as it pertains to two players thought to be influenced
by him. While Brown’s overarching influence upon generations of jazz trumpeters is without
question, it is important that we examine the presence of elements of his style, or musical
personality, in those jazz trumpeters who have been said to have been influenced by him. While
jazz critics and journalists have constructed a narrative that places Brown at the pinnacle of
modern jazz trumpet style, this story is vastly over-simplified and misunderstood. Secondly, new
information on Clifford Brown, Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard’s personal approaches to the
trumpet is presented that contributes to the relatively small body of work that exists in this area.
Finally, the analysis framework that I have constructed and applied to the comparative moves us
towards a new model for the completion of similar studies whose aims are to examine one
discussion on musical influence and the formation of personal style in jazz. Throughout most of
its history jazz has been transmitted aurally, either from master to apprentice, or from recorded
model to student listener. 15 This transmission has taken two main forms: transcription of
recorded improvisations into Western musical notation for the purpose of study and analysis; and
15
Even with the proliferation of jazz studies programs in academia, this aural practice still exists, though in many
cases it has become more structured and formalized.
5
the internalization and mimicking of recorded improvisations. Noted historian and
Just as children learn to speak their native language by imitating older competent
speakers, so young musicians learn to speak jazz by imitating seasoned improvisers. In
part, this involves acquiring a complex vocabulary of conventional phrases and phrase
components, which improvisers draw upon in formulating the melody of a jazz solo.
Once youngsters develop a serious interest in jazz...many...memorize solos by singing or
whistling them. 16
While no hard and fast rule exists as to what types of influences a young jazz musician
will seek out, students are most often drawn to models that play the same instrument. Trumpeters
imitate other trumpeters, drummers other drummers, and so on. It is usually later in a player’s
developmental process that the vocabulary of other instrumentalists and vocalists becomes a
themselves, they continue to seek out new and varied sources of influence, accumulating and
information, jazz musicians who are in the process of forming a personal style assimilate other
performance elements that are more physical in nature. Phrasing, vibrato, 18 articulation, 19 and
time-feel 20 are all elements that young players may “pick up” from their models. This is further
16
Paul Berliner, Thinking in Jazz: The Infinite Art of Improvisation (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press,
1994), 95.
17
The unique way in which a jazz musician combines harmonic, melodic, rhythmic, and physical performance
elements into a personal, improvisational style.
18
While vibrato may be created in a variety of ways on the trumpet, most modern jazz trumpeters use a type called
jaw or lip vibrato. By moving lips slightly the pitch is altered and vibrato is produced.
19
Specifically which notes are attacked, or tongued and whether the attack is legato (long, using a “D” syllable) or
staccato (short, using a “T” syllable). Also, which notes are not attacked but are slurred, using only the valves and
height of the dorsal of the tongue to control air to change pitch.
20
A term that refers to a player’s interpretation of rhythmic pulse.
6
reinforced when students of jazz learn a recorded solo and then perform it along with the
recording. The solo itself and the student’s recreation of it both serve as a kind of classroom
where the student learns the essential elements of the language of jazz improvisation. 21
As a player matures and seeks out other influences, a personal style slowly emerges.
However, in many cases the physical performance elements and harmonic vocabulary of a
player’s early model remain a part of their own personal style. This has given rise to a mythology
in jazz studies that musical influence and style formation is linear, or chronological. Indeed,
historians and some jazz educators discuss musical parentage and lineage when constructing a
history of jazz style for a particular instrument, so that, in essence, a canon is constructed for that
instrument that attempts to trace the development of stylistic practices from one player to
another. This has led to a tendency to overlook, or ignore altogether, the stylistic elements that
are transmitted from player to player during the process of style formation. Because of this,
many historical assertions that one player has influenced another are based solely on the fact that
the younger player is thought to “sound like” an older player. But the specific music elements
that produce an overall sonic similarity are seldom discussed and rarely, if ever, examined.
If the field of jazz studies is to truly understand the depth of a historically significant
player’s personal style, we must endeavor to focus our energies on highly specific studies that
examine style based on evidence gleaned from the study of recorded improvisations. Hundreds
of published transcriptions of the recorded solos of great jazz stylists are in print, but few truly
help us to understand the depth of a particular player’s style because they present only harmonic
and rhythmic information. Countless biographies continue to be written that examine the lives of
great jazz musicians within the canon, but few shed light on the transmission of style from one
21
Berliner, Thinking in Jazz, 97.
7
player to another in this supposed lineage. To be sure, biography is an essential tool within the
discipline of jazz studies that helps us to understand musical environment. But biography alone
does little to deconstruct false or misrepresented “bloodlines” within the history of jazz style. In
order to begin to understand the particulars of one player’s influence upon another through the
transmission of style, we must take a different approach; one that examines improvisational style
understanding of the styles of Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard—a number of elements must
first be noted. Very little scholarly activity has been conducted on the early life and musical style
of Donald Byrd. Articles in jazz magazines and publications such as Down Beat, Metronome,
and Cadence exist, as do several published interviews. But with the exception of the work of
Ursula Broschke-Davis, Donald Byrd’s early life and music remain largely unexamined. 22 It is
possible that the field of jazz studies has overlooked Byrd as a subject of scholarly inquiry
because he is still alive and, as such, achieving an historical perspective on the entirety of his
career is difficult to obtain. However, sufficient time has passed since Byrd’s activities as a
modern jazz stylist to allow us to examine his personal style in an historical manner. Discussions
on Byrd among jazz scholars and musicians inevitably turn to the contributions for which he is
most well known: his explorations of jazz funk/fusion. While Byrd received great commercial
success as a result of these endeavors, it has had the effect of overshadowing his modern jazz
style. While Byrd’s influence upon subsequent generations of jazz trumpeters is not as
significant that of Clifford Brown or others, he was celebrated by his colleagues and
contemporaries during the 1950s and 60s as an important member of the jazz community, and his
22
Ursula Broschke Davis, Paris without Regret (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1986).
8
work with some of the most influential ensembles in modern jazz warrants an examination of
both his personal style and his place within the history of jazz trumpet style.
Freddie Hubbard’s life and music have been examined in much greater detail than
Byrd’s. Several DMA theses have been published that examine Hubbard’s post-bop 23 and jazz
rock/fusion styles. However, no study has attempted to examine his modern jazz trumpet
playing. This is lamentable since Hubbard, like Clifford Brown, is considered to be one of the
most influential jazz trumpeters of the second half of the Twentieth century and Hubbard’s
mature modern jazz style is the foundation upon which his post-bop and fusion styles stand. As
This study’s third objective, the undertaking of a comparative analysis of the styles of
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard, is one that is of great significance. By applying the aforementioned
trumpet-specific analysis framework to Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard we can begin to conduct an
honest and accurate examination of their personal, modern jazz styles in a comparative manner. 24
The analysis of harmonic content alone does not paint the most full and accurate picture of a
player’s personal style, nor does it truly go all the way towards achieving an understanding of the
transmission of personal style from model to student. These traits and concepts encompass much
more than harmonic information and extend to those physical elements that have been briefly
mentioned above. Physical performance elements will naturally differ from one instrument to
another and, as such, it is necessary to identify those elements that are specific to jazz trumpet
23
Barry Kernfeld, "Post-bop," In The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., edited by Barry Kernfeld. Grove
Music Online. Oxford Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/J752800
(accessed July 29, 2011). The New Grove Dictionary of Music defines post bop as “any continuation or
amalgamation of bop, modal jazz, and free jazz,” characterizes the term itself as an “attempt to circumscribe the
eclecticism which has characterized jazz from the 1980s onwards.” Among jazz musicians, this term refers to the
combination of the aforementioned styles during the mid 196s through the early 1970s.
24
Berliner, Thinking in Jazz, 135-6. Berliner calls the elements that make up a player’s style the “constellation of
traits and concepts” and define “musical personalities” of jazz musicians.
9
performance practice. These, coupled with an examination of harmonic content, will form a more
accurate picture of personal, modern jazz trumpet style. In the context of this study, an analysis
framework that is constructed around modern jazz trumpet performance practice will provide us
with a foundation upon which to examine and identify the extent to which Brown’s own musical
personality is present in the mature modern jazz trumpet styles of Donald Byrd and Freddie
Hubbard.
1.2 METHODOLOGY
1.2.1 Biography
A great deal of oral history and biographical print material exists on Clifford Brown’s life
and music. This forms the foundation of the biographical sketch of Clifford Brown. In addition,
interviews with leading scholars on Clifford Brown’s life and music have been conducted.
Since the body of biographical material on Hubbard and Byrd is relatively small, primary
source interviews have been conducted with contemporaries and colleagues of Byrd and
Hubbard in an attempt to unearth biographical material on these two players. Where possible,
The focus of all three biographical sketches is on musical training and musical
environment. The influence of early teachers and mentors, exposure to pedagogical methods,
practice habits, early performance experiences, and musical influences have been examined in
10
order to more fully understand the elements that shaped these players’ individual styles.
1.2.2 Analysis
The primary objective of published transcriptions and analyses has been the notation of
an improvised solo, with the chief aim being the presentation of this information in a format that
allows students of jazz to quickly reproduce harmonic and rhythmic content. 25 However, while
transcriptions as they have typically been completed are perfectly suited to understanding
harmonic, melodic, and rhythmic content, they do little to examine performance elements
specific to particular instruments. To that extent, a framework for the analysis of newly
completed transcriptions has been constructed and employed that lends itself to a specific
examination of modern jazz trumpet improvisational style that incorporates harmonic, melodic,
entirety. This framework is necessary because transcription and analysis models used for the
examination of improvised jazz solos focus primarily on harmonic and melodic material. A
trumpet-specific model that embraces the aforementioned elements while allowing us to examine
physical performance practice techniques is needed. These physical elements are often the
hallmark of a jazz musician’s influences. Articulation trends, range preferences, and phrasing
tendencies are some of the most personal elements of a player’s personal style and they are often
adopted from a model. Examining these elements at work in a comparative manner along with
harmonic, melodic, and rhythmic material will allow us to better understand the elements of
25
David Baker, Jamey Aebersold, and Ken Slone are among a host of jazz educator/scholars who have published
collections of transcribed solos intended for study by students of jazz performance.
11
Clifford Brown’s style, and thus his influence upon Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard.
In his seminal work, The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown: A Musical and Historical
Perspective, 26 David Baker constructs a framework for the analysis of modern jazz solos that has
the primary aim of examining and understanding Brown’s harmonic language. 27 Baker discusses
Brown’s preferred tempos, improvisational vehicles 28 (which he calls “tune types), meters, keys,
scales, range, as well as melodic and dramatic devices. Through the presentation of a large
number of transcribed solos and the extraction of key harmonic vocabulary, Baker attempts to
assist the reader—who is most likely to be a student of jazz performance—in understanding and
recreating Brown’s harmonic language for the purposes of personal growth and stylistic
development.
transcribed material and presents a concise overview of Brown’s personal style. What follows is
Brown’s preferred tune types are Standards and jazz originals, while few
26
David Baker, The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown: A Musical and Historical Perspective (Van Nuys, CA: Alfred
Publishing Co., Inc., 1982).
27
Harmonic language refers to the unique way in which a jazz musician uses various types of scales, patterns, and
other harmonic material to create improvised solos.
28
In this case, the improvisational vehicle is the formal structure and chord progression of the composition being
performed.
29
Baker, The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown, 10.
12
Brown’s preferred keys are B flat, E flat, F, A, C, and D with composition
Brown’s scale preferences are major (and derivatives), “bebop scales”, blues
Brown’s range preferences are primarily in the trumpet’s middle and lower
registers 30 with “occasional and dramatic forays into the upper register.” 31
variation “than that of most brass players. His staccato 32 is excellent and
beautifully controlled.” 33
This synopsis of Brown’s musical preferences is an excellent jumping-off point for the
examination of his personal improvisational style. Not surprisingly, subsequent study of the
transcriptions presented by Baker substantiates these findings. However, Baker does not notate,
nor discuss in great detail, the performance elements mentioned above that are related to
Brown’s relationship to the trumpet itself. One reason for this is that close examination of the
30
The B-flat trumpet has five registers, four of which are commonly used in jazz performance. From lowest to
highest they are the pedal, lower, middle, upper, and altissimo registers. The pedal register is seldom used in jazz
performance.
31
Baker, The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown, 11.
32 Using a “T” syllable to attack the note produced a distinct, pointed sound called a staccato attack. A single
staccato attack is short in duration because the player stops his or her air. Multiple staccato attacks are heard as
being detached because of the initial attack but are connected on the same stream of air.
33
Baker, The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown, 11.
34
Pitches in succession that are played on a single breath and not separated by tongued attack.
35
Baker, The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown, 11.
13
transcriptions (which use standard Western rhythmic and pitch notation while presenting the
corresponding chord changes 36 above each measure) quickly reveals much of this information.
For example, it is entirely possible to glance over a number of the transcriptions in the text and
quickly substantiate Baker’s claims on Brown’s range tendencies and scale choices.
Another text, Essential Jazz Lines in the Style of Clifford Brown by Corey Christiansen
and Kim Bock, examines elements of Brown’s style by placing Brown’s improvisational style
within the context of modern jazz harmonic trends and attempt to show the specific ways in
which Brown uses certain techniques. Like Baker, Christiansen and Bock identify a number of
harmonic language preferences that Brown uses frequently. They state that bebop scales are an
important component of Brown’s style and sample passages are presented to illustrate this point,
Like Baker, Christiansen and Bock present these elements (as well as a very brief
example of a typical Brown-like passage that uses the upper, middle, and lower register of the
trumpet) in a concise manner, yet they do not present transcriptions to substantiate their
assertions. While this is disappointing, it is most likely because this particular text is meant as a
tool to assist students of jazz in internalizing and incorporating some of the stylistic elements of
Brown’s playing into their own developing styles. 39 As such, the sample exercises and drills
36
The underlying harmonic material of an improvisational vehicle. The movement of these chords occurs in musical
time.
37
Corey Christiansen and Kim Bock, Essential Jazz Lines, (Pacific, MO: Mel Bay, 2004). Although the authors
state at the beginning of the text that some musical examples are taken from Brown’s solos and others are
approximations composed for exercises purposes, no citation information delineates the two.
38
Christiansen and Bock, Essential Jazz Lines, 5-9.
39
Christiansen and Bock, Essential Jazz Lines. In the beginning of the text, the authors state that the work “is
designed to help you develop your own personal improvising style.”
14
Baker’s model for the analysis of jazz style, centered on what Baker has called the
“common practice” era of bebop or modern jazz aesthetic is a seminal contribution. 40 Its
organization and clarity make it ideal for examining the harmonic, melodic and rhythmic
elements of modern jazz style while its lack of rigidity make it well suited for exploring the
styles of individual players. Baker’s model does not, however, afford us the ability to examine
the physical elements that make a jazz trumpeter’s sound concept unique. This is not to say that
Baker’s model is somehow inadequate or failing, only that it is constructed to embrace the width
and breadth of instrumentalists that jazz students and scholars study. While Baker’s model and
the work of Christiansen and Bock will serve as the foundation for the examination of harmonic
content, elements specific to jazz trumpet performance and style will be examined in greater
40
David Baker, personal conversation, April 26, 2008.
15
2.0 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES
Through an examination of the musical lives of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard we may
achieve a more thorough understanding of the environmental and social forces that combined to
shape each of these players’ styles. To that end, each biographical sketch will examine specific
elements in order to paint an accurate picture of the formative years of each player’s
First, the early life of each player will be examined in order to show how family, home,
and neighborhood life shaped Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard’s relationship to music generally.
While each of these three men came from different social situations, the early exposure to music
within the family unit is an important commonality that laid the foundation for further growth
Second, the educational background of each player will be discussed. These educational
experiences include the influence of early mentors, formal schooling and musical training,
hands-on education that occurred during early professional activities within their respective
regional jazz communities, and other musical ventures that provided these musicians with
important training and skill sets. Exposure to formal training and the structured practices of
Western European musical style provided each musician with important foundational elements.
Further, Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard synthesized many of these trumpet-specific performance
elements into their own personal styles. Further, the specific approaches of the teachers and
16
institutions that afforded this instruction to these three men were important to the stylistic
particulars of each player. Finally, Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard were all immersed in their
respective regional jazz communities and the musical growth that took place in this forum had
Third, a brief discussion of professional activities that are significant to the understanding
of the formation of these players’ modern jazz trumpet styles and careers is presented. These
early professional activities represent important steps towards the development of personal style.
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard were all members of historically significant ensembles within the
modern jazz idiom and the performance practices of these groups were also influential in the
formation of personal style. Lastly, specific musical influences that were instrumental in shaping
17
2.1 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF CLIFFORD BROWN
Because of Clifford Brown’s early and tragic death at the age of 25, much lore surrounds
his life and music. Three scholars, Donald Glanden, Alan Hood, and Nick Catalano have worked
tirelessly to compile and make available biographical material on Brown. Relying heavily on
interviews with primary sources conducted by both Hood and Glanden, Nick Catalano’s
biography of Brown represents the most thorough and significant work on this subject. 41 Their
work, along with publications in journals and periodicals of jazz, has painted an incredibly
Clifford Brown was born on October 30, 1930 in Wilmington, Delaware. One of eight
children born to Joe and Estella Brown, Clifford and his siblings were raised in an environment
of both familial and community love and support in Wilmington’s predominantly black east side.
Joe and Estella created an environment that fostered intellectual and artistic curiosity in the face
of relative poverty. 42
41
Nick Catalano, Clifford Brown: The Life and Art of the Legendary Jazz Trumpeter (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2000).
42
Alan J. Hood, “We Should All Remember Clifford Brown,” Jazz Educators Journal: the magazine of the National
Association of Jazz Educators, 26:3 (January 1, 1994), 18.
18
Clifford’s father, Joe, held a number of jobs and worked as “a fireman
sheriff.” 43
The Browns demanded that their children have high personal standards in the areas of
written and oral communication as well as personal interactions. 44 The Brown children would go
on to achieve significant academic milestones as they grew, with many attending college and
even more graduating with honors from Wilmington’s Howard High School. 45 Brown’s own
skills as a musician and mathematician are reflective not only of these high standards, they speak
directly to Brown’s ability learn and assimilate concepts quickly and thoroughly. 46
The Brown children were also the beneficiaries of Joe and Estella’s discipline in other
areas of life. Clifford in particular, would embrace the studious discipline that was fostered by
his parents and apply it not only to his musical development, but also to his personal growth. By
all accounts, Brown refrained from alcohol or drug use during his life and career. Substance
abuse among modern jazz musicians during the 1940s and 50s was pervasive and Brown’s
avoidance of this practice is noteworthy. His disciplined upbringing was most certainly a
importance in the Brown home, in large part because Joe Brown was an avid musical hobbyist
48
and he passed this passion on to his children. Joe’s attempts at leading a vocal quartet that
consisted of four of his sons, while at times trying and only moderately successful due to the fact
43
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 8.
44
Alan J. Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
45
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 8.
46
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011. In an interview with Alan J. Hood, Brown’s sister Rella stated that
Brown “...learned everything so fast. His nickname was ‘the brain.’”
47
Michael Ullman, “Melodic Trumpet,” The Atlantic 256:6 (December 1, 1985), 93.
48
Yanow, The Trumpet Kings, 73-4.
19
that not all of the children shared their father’s dedication, are perhaps the most poignant
example of the importance of music in the Brown household. 49 Music was also a part of
Clifford’s extended family. Clifford’s aunt Rella was an accomplished concert vocalist, and his
father’s brother Arthur was a successful dance bandleader in New York City. 50
While Joe Brown provided his children with diverse musical experiences and
encouragement, it was Clifford’s decision to take up the trumpet at age twelve that would be
defining. Hinting at things to come, Clifford had experimented with a bugle at the age of five
that belonged to his father. 51 These early experiments, coupled with his father’s guidance, laid
the foundation for young Clifford’s career as a trumpeter. When he was just twelve he made the
transition to the trumpet. Joe and Estella, realizing that Clifford not only showed great interest
but also great initial talent on the horn, were all too happy to encourage him. 52 Clifford, who
showed early interest in jazz, was drawn to a local teacher and musician named Robert “Boysie”
Lowery. 53 Lowery had come up through the territory band circuit and settled in Wilmington
During the late 1940s, Lowery was taking his first steps towards developing “language
and terminology to teach and talk about” modern jazz improvisational “vocabulary.” 55 His
approach was two-fold: First, students worked to develop an aural awareness of functional
49
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 3-4.
50
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
51
Hollie West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” Down Beat 47 (July 1980), 30-1.
52
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
53
L. Feather, New Edition of the Encyclopedia of Jazz, 143-144
54
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 17.
55
Don Glanden, telephone interview, August 8, 2011.
20
harmony and “harmonic movement” through specific exercises; 56 Second, students were
encouraged to develop their own improvisational ideas modeled on the recordings of players for
whom they had an affinity—at the same time they were discouraged from exact “copying.” 57
Clifford Brown, was his insistence that his students obtain and use recording devices in order to
engage in regular and constant self-assessment. 58 This is a practice that Brown continued
throughout his life. Many of these tapes have survived and are attainable and providing a glimpse
into Brown’s practice world. Observations of these tapes reveal a number of important elements,
including Brown’s penchant for practicing small bits of harmonic progressions repetitively for a
few minutes. The tapes stop frequently as Brown listened back every couple of minutes for
assessment purposes. 59
Another key element of Lowery’s teaching persona that was elemental to Brown’s
development is the fact that he was a multi-instrumentalist. Lowery passed this on to Brown,
who also studied piano and arranging, though rather informally at first. Soon, however, young
60
Clifford had attained enough proficiency on the piano to play gigs. While this had a practical
application in the way of more gigs, it was also an important part of Brown’s harmonic
development.
multi-instrumentalist would certainly have impacted his teaching. Indeed, a central element of
56
Glanden, telephone interview, August 8, 2011.
57
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011. Brown was constantly told by Lowery not to “copy-cat” his idol, Fats
Navarro. Instead he was told to “find your own ideas.”
58
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
59
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
60
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 47-9. This would prove invaluable during Brown’s long convalescence during 1950-51
while he recovered from the extensive injuries that he sustained in an automobile accident. These injuries left him
unable to play the trumpet for a time, but he was able to continue to practice the piano.
21
Lowery’s instruction and thinking in the area of modern jazz vocabulary, what would later come
to be called chromatic enclosure figures, can be heard in the playing of modern jazz musicians of
every instrumental persuasion. 61 As we will see later in this study, Brown’s use of this technique
in particular would come to define his personal style and Lowery’s teachings in this area are
fundamental. 62
In addition to private lessons in improvisation, Lowery hosted jam sessions at his home.
Taking this a step further, Lowery formed and coached a small, student combo that came to be
called “the Little Dukes.” While Lowery’s individual instruction of Brown was certainly
important, it was his membership in this group that provided a performance outlet for his studies
in improvisation and harmony. Within a few years, Clifford had progressed to the point that he
Given the activity of Lowery’s teaching during Clifford’s junior high school years—it is
rare to find private teachers who invest so much energy in developing and implementing such a
and career entirely to Lowery’s efforts. Indeed, Brown was indebted to Lowery and he was a
great influence upon him. But it is doubtful that Brown would have gone on to achieve the high
praise which history has bestowed upon him if it were not for the mentoring and instruction of
61
While enclosure figures are particularly well suited to performance on the trumpet, they are found in the styles of
Charlie Parker (saxophone), Bud Powell (piano),and J.J. Johnson (trombone)—all leading innovators on their
instruments. These will be discussed in great detail in Chapter 3.0.
62
Glanden, telephone interview, August 8, 2011.
63
West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” 30.
22
Andrews, who was one of two band directors at Wilmington’s Howard High School, was
an organized and thorough bandmaster who insisted on strict adherence to the rules. 64 Andrews,
who had studied at the University of Michigan, exposed the students at Howard High to the
works of Sousa and other great American march composers of the late Nineteenth and early
Twentieth centuries. 65 His influence on Clifford was highly significant because he afforded
Brown the opportunity to undergo formal trumpet training. Andrews introduced Brown to the
Prescott system, which was a third-party companion to the famous cornet method of J.B.
Arban. 66 This highly systematic method of instruction is rarely used by trumpet teachers and
pedagogues today, but during the 1940s and 50s it was quite popular. 67 Using Prescott, technical
studies from Arban’s method books were assigned on a weekly basis with specific requirements
for metronome markings and progress. Andrews told jazz journalist Hollie West that the Prescott
system formed the basis for Brown’s formal instruction on the trumpet, adding that Clifford had
great drive and would often stop by Andrews’s office after the school day and ask for another
lesson. 68
Andrews’s instruction and Arban’s method. For example, Brown was known to practice
extensively from the section of Arban’s method that contains arpeggio exercises. This certainly
account for Brown’s ability to synthesize the harmonic progressions he was practicing under
Lowery’s tutelage in ear training studies with the trumpet itself. Likewise, Brown’s ubiquitous
64
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
65
West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” 30.
66
West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” 30. Brown most likely used one of the earliest edition of Arban’s text. Jean
Baptiste Arban, Complete Celebrated Method for the Cornet: World’s Edition, (New York: Carl Fischer, 1894).
Reprinted as the Complete Conservatory Method for Trumpet (Cornet) or Eb Alto, Bb Tenor, Baritone, Euphonium
and Bb Bass in Treble clef. Edited by Edwin Franko Goldman and Walter M. Smith, (New York: Carl Fischer,
1982).
67
Neil King, telephone interview, August 4, 2011.
68
West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” 30.
23
use of ornamental 69 turns and grace notes in his improvisational style are also directly related to
instruction is Brown’s endurance and consistency of tone quality. Jazz trumpeters experience
strains on their physical endurance during the course of any improvisation because mouthpiece
pressure against the lips tends to increase when improvising. 70 This most often manifests as
missed, or “cracked” notes, and inconsistencies in tone. These elements are heard rarely in
Brown’s playing, both on studio and live recordings, particularly from 1955-56. One key reason
for Brown’s solid endurance and control of tone was his exposure to what Andrews’s called the
“non-pressure system.” 71 Many methods have professed to teach students how to play brass
instruments with no mouthpiece pressure, thereby increasing endurance, but it has been rejected
as impossible to play in all registers with no pressure. Some mouthpiece pressure is required just
to maintain the seal of the embouchure to prevent air from escaping around the mouthpiece. 72
This is important to note because modern trumpet pedagogues are in agreement that the muscles
of the “corners” of the embouchure are the most important stabilizing muscles used in
embouchure formation. By engaging these muscles and keeping them engaged trumpeters are
able to maintain an embouchure seal throughout all registers with less mouthpiece pressure. This
is most surely what Harry Andrews was referring to when he talked of Brown’s exposure to the
69
“Ornaments,” in The Oxford Dictionary of Music Online,
http://oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t237/e7533 (accessed January 21, 2012).
“Embellishments are decorations of a melody as expressed through small notes or special signs.” In the context of
modern jazz, embellishments of eighth-note-based material includes turns, and various types of grace notes.
70
John McNeil, personal interview, October 5, 2009.
71
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011; Catalano, Clifford Brown, 23 (citing West, “Trumpeter’s Training,”
30).
72
Phil Farkas, The Art of Horn Playing, (Miami, FL: Summy-Birchard, Inc., 1956), 65-66.
24
“non-pressure” system. 73 An understanding of the fundamentals of embouchure formation
afforded Brown with the ability to maintain his trumpet playing “health” and stem off the
inevitable inaccuracies and performance related injuries that befall many jazz trumpeters.
Brown’s growth as a trumpet player during his high school years culminated in his
performance of Arban’s variations on the theme from The Carnival of Venice. This work is a
tour-de-force of technical virtuosity in the late-nineteenth century cornet tradition and is one of
the most difficult pieces in traditional trumpet repertoire. More than just a mere attempt at
performing this piece, Andrews himself attested to the fact that Brown performed this piece at a
high level, stating “...and I mean he really played it.” 74 Rich in multiple tonguing passages, 75
large interval leaps, and melismatic cadenzas, 76 this piece requires a highly developed command
rudiments was well suited to Brown’s sense of drive and determination. Brown’s amazing
command of tonguing techniques, his highly developed dexterity and valve technique, great
accuracy and execution, and the ease with which he incorporated ornaments into his
improvisations, are all the result of dedicated, consistent work from Arban’s method and the
73
Bonnie Miltenberger, telephone interview, August 4, 2011.
74
West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” 30.
75
Multiple tonguing involves the use of both “T” or “D” syllables followed by “K” or G” syllables to create note
beginnings, or attacks. The “T” or “D” syllable is used most often in normal trumpet performance and is known as
“single tonguing.” See Appendix B for a complete glossary of specialist terminology.
76 While the term melismatic in the traditional sense refers to “the setting of text characterized by florid groups of
notes called melismas, each of which is sung to one syllable” (see "Melismatic style," Grove Music Online. Oxford
Music Online. 1 Feb. 2012 <http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/18333>.) in the
context of instrumental music it commonly refers to the extensive use of groupings of notes such as tuplets,
sixteenth-notes, or thirty-second-notes. It is often found in cadenzas.
25
Under Andrew’s tutelage Brown would begin to practice diligently hours at a time,
something that he would maintain throughout his life. Indeed, though Brown suffered severe
physical injuries as a result of a near-death automobile accident while he was a college student in
1950, he redoubled his efforts to develop his skills through extensive practice after his
convalescence. 77
The dedication and organization that Brown inherited from both his mentors and his own
strong desire to master both the trumpet and the language of modern jazz would be one of the
defining characteristics of his life and career. It was also one of the elements that most inspired
younger players who came in contact with him personally, to say nothing of the respect and
2.1.2.1 Philadelphia
While Brown and other Howard High School students were holding jam sessions and
playing gigs around Wilmington, the jazz scene in Philadelphia was a mere twenty eight miles to
the north. By the time Brown graduated from high school in 1948 he was beginning to make
regular trips to Philadelphia. Brown continued making these trips when he entered college at
During the 1940s Philadelphia was “second only to New York as a center” for the
modern jazz revolution, 79 and there was a constant exchange of musical talent between the two
77
Hood, “We Should All Remember Clifford Brown,” 20.
78
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 30-1.
79
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 31.
26
cities. Like many young Philadelphia area musicians, Brown was the beneficiary of this
relationship, capitalizing on these elements to spur his personal and professional growth.
One common practice of the day was for established, national-level talents from New
York City to come to Philadelphia and share the bill with local stars. It was in these forums that
Brown was able to spend valuable time with one his heroes, Theodore “Fats” Navarro. 80
Navarro, who would be the only influence Brown would list in his response to Leonard Feather’s
questionnaire in The Encyclopedia of Jazz, made frequent trips to Philadelphia to perform and
But it was not only Navarro with whom Brown would interact with in a substantive
manner. The now famous Heath brothers (South Philadelphia natives Jimmy, Albert, and Percy),
Red Rodney (whom Brown famously dropped in on at his South-Philadelphia residence, asking
for lessons from “the man who plays with Bird”), Dizzy Gillespie (Brown filled in on third
trumpet on a gig in Philadelphia when Benny Harris could not be found), and a whole host of
others all became aware of Clifford’s ability and prowess through the Philadelphia jazz scene.
the development of Clifford Brown and the city would play an important role in his life and
82
career. He would eventually make his home there with his wife and, later, his newborn son.
Brown found work with a regional Rhythm and Blues band led by Chris Powell. The fact
that Brown first latched onto to such a group speaks both to his level of versatility and the
relationship between Rhythm and Blues and modern jazz—a contributing factor to what would
80
Marc Crawford, “Benny Remembers Clifford,” Down beat (Oct. 12, 1961), 23.
81
West, “Trumpeter’s Training,” 30. Navarro was to remark after one of these performances “...that boy sure does
like my playing.” Also see Hood, “We Should All Remember Clifford Brown,” 20.
82
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 28-39.
27
eventually become known as hard bop. Brown’s early professional work with Chris Powell’s
group eventually gave way to an even more fruitful association with noted modern jazz
composer, arranger, and pianist, Tadd Dameron. Brown’s early work with Dameron would both
reinforce the early influence of Fats Navarro (who had worked extensively with Dameron from
1945 through his death in 1950) and expose him to a musician who would have a formative
surrounding region following his graduation from high school and matriculation at Delaware
State that Brown would finally perform with the leading innovators of modern jazz. Clifford sat
in with Dizzy Gillespie’s big band in 1948, shared the stage with Charlie Parker at Music City 84
and other venues in Philadelphia, and led a sextet of his peers that opened for Parker, Navarro,
Gillespie, and various other groups of national prominence. 85 In all of these interactions,
Brown’s talent and abilities received praise from the highest sources. But it was not only praise
that Brown received that was significant—it was mentorship. The young man who had so
impressed the leading innovators of modern jazz would soon be catapulted into the spotlight by
his association and professional activities with three “giants” of modern jazz: Tadd Dameron, Art
Blakey, and Max Roach. Through his association with these bandleaders Brown would widen his
83
Many musicians who were active during the 1950s and 1960s point to Suleiman’s style as a precursor to Clifford
Brown’s. While relatively close in age, Suleiman was already an established national-level professional when
Brown had the chance to record with him in 1953.
84
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 65. Music City was a jazz venue and music education center in Philadelphia that hosted
jam sessions and performances. Leading innovators in jazz who were performing in Philadelphia during the 1940s
and 50s were routinely invited (and often, accepted these invitations) to attend these sessions and rub elbows with
up-and-coming talent. The Clef Club, the successor to Music City, is still a vital part of the jazz community in
Philadelphia.
85
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 42-3.
28
2.1.3 Significant professional experiences
After making his mark on the regional jazz community of Philadelphia, Brown toured
briefly with Chris Powell’s Rhythm and Blues group. While his work with this group gave
Brown valuable experience “on the road,” it left him slightly unfulfilled artistically. Though
Powell’s group was by all accounts made up of excellent musicians, it was not a jazz ensemble
that provided creative space to someone of Brown’s talents. 86 Rather, Powell’s group was a tight,
well-rehearsed show-band. As such, when Brown was asked to join Tadd Dameron’s group in
Atlantic City in 1953, he jumped at the chance to tour with a group that would afford him the
Dameron had been one of Brown’s early cheerleaders, due in no small part to the fact that
Brown’s style was similar to Fats Navarro. Brown was to record and work with Dameron for
only a brief time (May to August of 1953), but it was significant for two reasons: it represented
Brown’s first steady professional employment under the leadership of an established modern jazz
innovator; and it allowed Brown to have meaningful interactions with other young modern jazz
luminaries. 88 Dameron’s compositional style, part of the quickly evolving tradition of modern
jazz, was tailor made to Brown’s already highly developed sense of harmonic sensitivity and
inventiveness. 89
Brown joined Lionel Hampton’s orchestra in August of 1953 at the start of a two-month
European tour. In addition to it being Brown’s first trip abroad, the tour would yield a number of
86
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 66-7.
87
Hood, “We Should All Remember Clifford Brown,” 20.
88
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 75.
89
The teachings of Boysie Lowery were certainly of help to Brown, particularly during these very early professional
opportunities in the jazz world because they helped him develop aural and improvisational instincts that allowed him
to negotiate complicated and intricate harmonic progressions.
29
recordings made in spite of a ban on such practices that was handed down by Hampton. In
clandestine recording sessions organized by Quincy Jones and others, Brown and his cohorts cut
records in France and Sweden that would help to propel the careers of many of the musicians
On his return from Europe Hampton fired the musicians who had violated his recording
ban. 91 Brown, whose brief time in Hampton’s band had served to set him on the path towards
international recognition, was in high demand in New York and Philadelphia. Almost
immediately, Brown was asked to join a new group that drummer Art Blakey was forming. 92 The
quintet, which included pianist Horace Silver, bassist Curly Russell, and alto saxophonist Lou
Donaldson, rehearsed and worked around New York City in preparation for a live recording at
Birdland in February of 1954. 93 The recording, released by Blue Note Records, was the final
rung on the ladder towards national prominence that Brown had been quickly climbing.
Unfortunately the quintet’s lifespan was short and, despite the success of the live
recording, Blakey “was not at a point where he could network his way around the country’s jazz
clubs. As a result” the bands members began searching for other opportunities. 94 For Brown, the
next opportunity came when he was called by drummer Max Roach and invited to travel to Los
Unlike Blakey, who would rise to national and international prominence just a few short
years later, Roach was already in a position within the international jazz market to assemble
national tours and attract the attention of both audiences and recording labels. Roach, who was
90
Mike Nevard, “An Appreciation of the Late Clifford Brown,” Melody Maker 31 (July 7, 1956), 5.
91
Hood, “We Should All Remember Clifford Brown,” 21.
92
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 98.
93
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 104.
94
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 104.
30
among the first generation of drummers to assimilate Kenny Clarke’s innovative style, was
The association between Brown and Roach would become legendary because of the
inventiveness of the group’s arrangements and the cohesiveness with which the group
performed. What is perhaps most notable is that the veteran Roach thought so much of Brown’s
abilities that he offered him the position of co-leader. While Brown’s work with Dameron and
Blakey had been in the role of a sideman, his work with Roach allowed him to blossom as an
Brown traveled to Los Angeles with Roach and the two “set up an apartment together” in
which they could work on musical concepts, compositions, arrangements, and hold rehearsals. 95
These collaborative planning sessions took place before the formation of the ensemble itself.
Brown’s propensity for organization and thoroughness in practicing was surely at work here as
well.
For almost two years the Clifford Brown-Max Roach Quintet would make records that
were consistently praised by critics and musicians alike. Brown, already a rising star, would
become one of the most influential members of the national jazz community. The quintet’s
membership, once established in late 1954, would remain relatively consistent until Brown’s
death in 1956. 96 Studio and live records were made that presented material that refined the
freewheeling, jam session oriented performances of early modern jazz (bebop) into a more
arranged and organized affair. In much the same way as Dameron’s nine and ten piece groups
had done just a few years earlier, Brown and Roach were working towards deliberate musical
95
Catalano, Clifford Brown, 108.
96
The one exception to this statement is the replacement of tenor saxophonist Harold Land with Sonny Rollins in
late 1955. Rollins addition, while celebrated highly by historians, should not overshadow the work of Land, whose
contributions to the group during its formative stages is highly significant.
31
aesthetics—dynamic control and contrast, interesting arrangements, and complex harmonic and
melodic ideas. 97
Brown’s association with Roach largely defines his brief professional career. Since his
life and work were cut short, the arc of Brown’s career ended. In contemporary jazz circles,
Brown’s work with Roach and company is the most discussed of his contributions to jazz
trumpet style, though his work with Blakey is also mentioned frequently by admires and jazz
musicians alike.
Clifford Brown was able to formulate a highly individual sound at a relatively young age,
leading many to overlook his musical influences. As mentioned, his primary sound model on the
trumpet was Fats Navarro. Since Brown was able to form a personal relationship with Navarro,
sharing the bandstand with him from time to time, it is appropriate to give this influence a place
Gillespie, so it is even more significant that Brown chose Navarro as a model for his own style.
Also, as was the case with many budding modern jazz musicians during the mid to late 1940s,
the harmonic language of Charlie Parker was a source of continual inspiration and influence.
Brown encountered other musicians on his career path who would shape his sound as
well. As has been mentioned, Brown’s brief time with Tadd Dameron placed him in a section
with Idrees Suleiman. Suleiman shared stylistic similarities with Brown in large part because
97
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011. Saxophonist Harold Land relayed to Hood that the group was always
concerned with dynamics and contrast.
32
they both shared an affinity for the jazz trumpet style of Fats Navarro. 98 But Suleiman was
farther along on his developmental journey than Brown and their interactions had an impact on
Clifford.
Another trumpeter whose style Brown admired was Clark Terry. 99 Terry was an
established veteran of the Count Basie and Duke Ellington organizations and, in addition to
being a consummate professional, was also one of the leading trumpet innovators in modern jazz.
Terry’s great contribution to modern jazz trumpet style was his widely varied types of
articulation colors, something that Brown would put to great effect in his own style.
Also of great importance to Brown’s early professional playing was the influence of so-
called “popular” trumpet stylists. Harry James and Rafael Mendez, two trumpeters whose music
often skirted the boundary between jazz and light-classical styles, were both favorites of
Brown. 100 Mendez in particular was to have a profound influence on Brown and elements of his
highly virtuosic tonguing abilities and ornamental techniques are heard in Brown’s playing. 101
While Brown certainly had his pulse on the trumpet world, both jazz and popular, it was
his overall command of modern jazz improvisational vocabulary that speaks directly to his
influences because Clifford Brown was truly the first trumpet player to synthesize the harmonic
devices used by all modern jazz musicians (Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, Tadd
98
Nathan Davis, telephone interview, July 22, 2011. Also Curtis Fuller, telephone interview, February 18, 2010.
99
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
100
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
101
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011.
33
2.1.5 Conclusions
Brown’s position as one of the most influential jazz trumpeters of all time is the result of
his upbringing, education, professional experiences and musical influences. He was able to
synthesize the harmonic language of modern jazz with an understanding of trumpet technique
rooted in the assimilation of Nineteenth century cornet style. Underlying this was a discipline
and dedication to personal practice and self-improvement that bordered on the obsessive. The
fruits of Brown’s labors were rewarded, albeit in a largely posthumous manner, by his musical
Brown’s improvisational style and trumpet playing have stood the test of time. Even
while he was still alive, his technical virtuosity and highly original harmonic and melodic
vocabulary caused many established jazz trumpeters to reexamine their own approaches. Some
younger trumpet players who were still in the developmental stages of the formation of their
styles would be heavily influenced by Brown’s approach. Even today, nearly sixty years after
Brown’s passing, his solos and recordings are still studied by students of jazz trumpet and Brown
has assumed a place among the canon of jazz soloists alongside Gillespie, Parker, Monk, Bud
Powell, and many others. Brown had a direct influence on Lee Morgan and Marcus Belgrave,
two trumpeters who knew him on a personal level and received private instruction from him.
Trumpeter Don Cherry also interacted with Brown during his own developmental years and talks
specifically of Brown’s suggestions on the use and implementation of the studies from the Arban
method. 102
102
Alan J. Hood, unpublished lecture notes.
34
Over time, historians and critics have posited that a “school” of trumpet playing that is
within the style of Clifford Brown has come into existence and many players throughout the
music’s history have been placed within this lineage. Although Clifford Brown was a direct
influence on many musicians’ styles and lives, many of the trumpet players listed as being
influenced by Brown are done so inaccurately. This is not to diminish the importance of Brown’s
style to the jazz trumpet tradition, rather it is to say that historians and critics have been swept up
by the “over romanticized cult” of a trumpeter whose life and art were cut short.
The mourning of the loss of Clifford Brown is still felt today in large part because the
narrative is so tragic: A brilliant young star with strong family commitments and a nearly
spotless lifestyle taken away from the jazz world. But we must endeavor to put aside the
collective grief that is still felt and examine Brown’s influence on other jazz trumpet players
through the objective lens of scholarship. Adopting such a stance is in no way dishonorable to
Brown’s legacy. Indeed, forming a more accurate picture of Brown’s influence on other jazz
trumpet players only strengthens the depth of our knowledge of his contributions.
Donald Byrd was an integral member of some of modern jazz’s most historically
significant ensembles. A prolific and versatile musician who ascended to a position of great
importance within New York City’s modern jazz community after the death of Clifford Brown in
1956, Byrd appeared on many of the genre’s most significant recordings on the Transition,
Riverside, Prestige, and Blue Note labels. While his position as an early pioneer of fusing jazz
with funk and rock elements is both well established and well documented, his approach to
35
modern jazz trumpet style has been largely unexamined and, at times, relegated to a position of
103
relative unimportance when compared to some of his contemporaries. Histories of jazz tout
the explosive, virtuosic style of a young Freddie Hubbard, the harmonically advanced
melodicism of Booker Little, and the aggressive and soulful style of Lee Morgan, but these
works overlook the importance of Donald Byrd to modern jazz trumpet style.
of Fats Navarro’s linear concepts, Clifford Brown’s enclosure-oriented approach, Miles Davis’s
dark tone and propensity for economy, as well as influences from his formative years in Detroit’s
thriving jazz scene that are largely undocumented. Byrd’s conservatory training and studies with
prominent traditional 104 trumpet pedagogues adds yet another unique element to his personal
style, one that fuses economy with elegance and belies an incredibly consistent technical
proficiency. However his position in the larger scheme of jazz trumpet lineage is somewhat
difficult to pin down. Cited by some as a direct disciple of Brown and Navarro and placed
alongside Hubbard, Morgan, and Booker Little in terms of the general chronology of the
evolution of modern jazz trumpet style, the elements of Byrd’s performance and recording career
suggest that there is more to this player’s musical makeup than a mere branch on the jazz
103
Cookin’: Hard Bop and Soul Jazz 1954-65 (Edinburgh: Canongate, 2002), 202. In an otherwise excellent chapter
that discusses some of the particulars of Byrd’s hard bop career, author Kenny Mathieson posits that while Byrd was
an important figure within the community of hard bop musicians in New York City during the 1950s, “he was never
really innovative or strikingly original” though he “was able to deliver consistently fluent, imaginative and well-
rounded improvisations within that idiom.”
104
I use the term “traditional” in place of “classical” since trumpet teaching and performance practice within the
Western Art music tradition runs the gamut from Baroque through late Nineteenth/early Twentieth century wind
band repertoire.
105
John McNeil, The Art of Jazz Trumpet (New York: Gerard & Sarzin, Inc., 1999), 22.
A number of “jazz trumpet family trees,” most notably the example found in John McNeil’s The Art of Jazz
Trumpet, place Byrd in such a position.
36
It is lamentable that Byrd’s contribution to modern jazz trumpet style has gone largely
unexamined by jazz scholars and historians. Indeed, Byrd’s modern jazz trumpet style is one that
evolved steadily towards a highly personal voice, resulting in a maturity and sense of self-
identity that led him to come into his own as a pioneer and innovator.
like a “who’s who” of modern jazz luminaries. Byrd recorded and worked in groups led by Art
Blakey, Horace Silver, Hank Mobley, Kenny Clarke, George Wallington, Max Roach, Sonny
106
Rollins and John Coltrane among many others. Byrd’s work in groups with Gigi Gryce and
Pepper Adams represent his most important contributions to the modern jazz lexicon. 107 In the
post-Clifford Brown years Donald Byrd was highly sought after. He also typifies the type of
player that formed the backbone of the modern jazz sub-genre that would come to be known as
hard bop—coming to New York City from a vibrant jazz community (Detroit) with considerable
skills and blossoming alongside other young African American musicians. Byrd was always
acutely aware of his musical environment and constantly drew inspiration from those around
him. 108 What truly makes Byrd unique is that his stylistic maturity occurred relatively quickly
over a five-year period and he was able to form a distinctly individual voice that was both
historically informed and adaptable to many different musical situations. In short, Donald Byrd
106
McNeil, The Art of Jazz Trumpet, 22.
107
Mathieson, Cookin’: Hard Bop and Soul Jazz, 2.
108
Melvin Williams, telephone interview, February 3, 2010
37
2.2.1 Early Life
Interviews and articles from major jazz publications provide us with glimpses of his life and
career, but little work has been done to sketch a detailed picture of his formative years.
and, as a result, serves as the primary source for understanding Byrd’s early life. 110
Donald Byrd was born Donaldson Touissant L’Ouverture Byrd in Detroit, Michigan on
December 9, 1932. His father, Elijah T. Byrd was a Methodist minister who worked for the city
of Detroit as a garbage collector and his income allowed the family to live in a relatively
integrated neighborhood. 111 Broschke Davis characterizes Byrd’s childhood as “secure” and
states that he was not “alienated from his family or community.” 112 He received love and
support from his mother, Cornelia, whose passion for jazz and other forms of secular African
113
American expression was passed on to young Donald. His father was stoic in his wish for his
children to better themselves and pushed them to succeed and excel in both academics and the
arts. 114
Byrd’s upbringing reflected his family’s respected social status within their community,
his parents’ structuring of his early childhood, and his intellectual curiosity. It is this curiosity
that would drive Byrd to pursue further formal training once he took up the trumpet, something
that would set him apart from many of his contemporaries or, as he called them, “street” trained
109
Ursula Broschke Davis, Paris without Regret (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1986).
110
Davis, Paris without Regret, 96.
111
Davis, Paris without Regret, 99; also Williams, telephone interview, February 3, 2010.
112
Davis, Paris without Regret, 99.
113
Davis, Paris without Regret, 99; also Williams, telephone interview, February 3, 2010.
114
Davis, Paris without Regret, 99.
38
“musicians.” Byrd received a cornet at the age of ten and began experimenting with the
instrument. 115
According to Melvin Williams, Byrd had an affinity for classical trumpet repertoire and
performance at a relatively early age but because of racial suppression he was not afforded the
opportunity to follow this career path. While Byrd’s first love in these years was jazz, his studies
in the areas of traditional trumpet, in addition to his friendships with some of Detroit’s young
classical and orchestral players, marked a desire to understand his physical relationship with the
trumpet in a more formal manner. 116 As Broschke Davis points out, it is this confluence of
influences that helped to shape Byrd and foretold of the path that he would take as a jazz
musician. Formal study on the trumpet began when Donald reached the age of eligibility to enter
high school.
Education and academic rigor have been important parts of Byrd’s development for his
entire life. At a time when many African American jazz musicians were not afforded the
opportunity to receive advanced training in music due to racism, segregation, and financial and
economic disparity, Byrd’s pursuit of a Bachelor’s Degree in Music from Wayne State
University is quite notable, though it would be only one of many advanced degrees that he would
pursue and complete. It is the first in a series of ventures into academic situations as well as
structured study in Western European art music that would continue to have an influence on his
115
Donald Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
116
Williams, telephone interview, February 3, 2010.
39
There was never any question among members of the Byrd household that young Donald
would receive formal training. His father was highly educated by any standard, having earned
multiple degrees in theology from Alcorn College, the Theological Seminary in Grambling,
...my father being a Methodist minister and playing piano, there was only three of us in
my family, two girls. That was it, I was trained to go to the best schools. You know...the
high school I went to, Cass Tech, and all of the musicians that came out of there. 118
Byrd attended Detroit’s Cass Technical High School, a prestigious, integrated magnet
school with an exceptionally strong music curriculum. Music students at Cass Tech were
engaged in rigorous studies in traditional music performance as well as theory and harmony. A
typical day for a Cass Tech music student included multiple rehearsals, counterpoint instruction,
theory and harmony, and ample amounts “rest periods” where young musicians could practice
and interact with one another. 119 In addition to this, members of the Cass Tech Band were under
the direct tutelage of the school’s strict bandmaster, Harry Begian. 120 Begian, who would go on
to become a highly celebrated high school and collegiate bandmaster, teacher, and pedagogue,
was a significant force in young Byrd’s musical life. 121 However, the musical fare at Cass
Technical High School was strictly Western European-based. Though many young African
American musicians attended Cass Tech, jazz music—specifically modern jazz—was frowned
upon.
117
Davis, Paris without Regret, 100.
118
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
119
Curtis Fuller, telephone interview, January 29, 2010.
120
Tom Erdmann, “M+M=A: An Interview with Donald Byrd,” ITG Journal 28/3 (March, 2004), 32.
121
Erdmann, “M+M=A: An Interview with Donald Byrd,” 32.
40
The teachers were pretty good. They expected a lot from you, you had to come ready to
play and be prepared. They were very supportive. But there was no jazz! If you came
with some bebop shit, it was “see ya later,” and you were out the door for the day! 122
Despite this, many of those who attended Cass Tech during the 1940s and 1950s would
go on to build successful careers in jazz, both in Detroit and, later, New York City. The climate
among Detroit’s young, up-and-coming jazz musicians was one of curiosity and studiousness.
Many of the young brass players in Detroit’s jazz community, including Byrd, had studied with
members of the Detroit symphony orchestra in addition to the informal apprenticeships that they
We used to talk to each other about being ‘with-it’ with regards to classical studies. We’d
say ‘I just played such-and-such from the Blasevich (trombone method)’ and push each
other, you know? Donald was always on top of his studies, too. He was always working
on becoming a better player, but you know, a lot of us were into it that way. 123
Byrd’s showed a particular interest in traditional trumpet technique and repertoire and
gravitated not only towards older, accomplished orchestral players in Detroit, but also to
There was a young classical player in Detroit who was like Wynton Marsalis would be
later. He was a real virtuoso, you know – played all the trumpets like C, E-flat, and
Piccolo. He and Donald were acquaintances and Donald always spoke very highly of his
abilities and really respected him. 124
122
Fuller, telephone interview, January 29, 2010.
123
Fuller, telephone interview, January 29, 2010.
124
Williams, telephone interview, February 6, 2010.
41
Jazz trumpeter Jimmy Owens, a long time friend and former student of Byrd substantiates
this facet of Byrd’s musical background. In early lessons with Byrd, Owens recalls, “Donald was
always concerned with sound, he really preached that. When I went to him I put my Harmon
mute in my horn and Donald said ‘take that mute out so I can hear your sound!’” 125
Nathan Davis recalls a similar occurrence that he observed during his time playing with
Byrd:
Donald always practiced sound. He wanted to have a strong, ‘Mack-truck’ if you can call
it that, kind of a sound on trumpet. And it was like that...Donald had that strength...he
always listened to classical trumpet players and he wanted that depth. When we would
get together he would talk as much about classical music and classical trumpet players as
jazz players. 126
While studying with Byrd, a typical weekly practice assignment for Owens included
heavy doses of flexibility drills from Max Schlossberg’s Daily Drills and Technical Studies for
Trumpet 127 as well as the first three studies from Herbert L. Clarke’s Technical Studies for the
Cornet 128 “particularly the chromatic studies.” 129 Both of these books contain exercises that
synthesize technical studies with tone building exercises, drills to improve the student’s
negotiation of register breaks, 130 all the while improving breath control. Though these lessons
occurred from 1959 through 1961, when Byrd was already a fully formed modern jazz trumpet
stylist, his use of these methods in his own teaching is representative of their place in his own
125
Jimmy Owens, telephone interview, February 19, 2010.
126
Nathan Davis, telephone interview, February 20, 2010.
127 Schlossberg, Daily Drills, 59-69.
128 Clarke, Technical Studies, 5-13.
129
Owens, telephone interview, February 19, 2010.
130
See section 3.1.3 for a discussion of register breaks on the trumpet.
42
stylistic development and the impact that his studies with traditional trumpet teachers had on his
later development.
Curtis Fuller remembers another manifestation of Byrd’s diligent attention to tone and
breath control:
With Donald his sound was so big, and you could see his breathing through his clothes.
You could tell when he had taken a big whiff of air. He was always on top of his
breathing and his sound and control were always very good. He could play long phrases
that just never seemed to end. 131
Byrd’s independent nature and sense of self-reliance carried him through high school,
where he finished his course work in music, but did not graduate, dropping out because of an
issue with an English course. 132 Byrd chose instead to focus exclusively on playing trumpet for
the next twelve months. The jazz community in Detroit would provide ample opportunities for
Byrd to hone his skills as a budding jazz musician during his hiatus from formal schooling.
2.2.2.1 Detroit
In the 1950s smaller U.S. cities boasted thriving jazz communities that produced
homegrown talents who were more or less fully formed as professional practitioners of jazz
music by the time they migrated to New York City. Among these cities, Detroit and its jazz
community served as an important crucible for young talent, many of whom made the jump to
national prominence by relocating to New York City. Additionally the reciprocal was true, and
Detroit was a favorite touring stop for prominent jazz artists from New York. No less than Miles
Davis spent a number of months there in the early 1950s, playing with local talent such as the
131
Fuller, telephone interview, February 16, 2010.
132
Davis, Paris without Regret, 101.
43
Jones brothers (Hank, Thad, and Elvin), Paul Chambers, Barry Harris and a host of others. Davis
experienced first hand the level of talent that Detroit’s jazz musicians possessed.
Miles used to stand under the air conditioner in the Blue Bird Inn sweating and dealing
with tears because Thad Jones was so bad. He was all over Miles’s shit. And Clare
Rocquemore was up over his ass. Cats in Detroit could really play. 133
Detroit during the early to mid-1950s was an important proving ground for many
musicians who would become important figures in modern jazz and subsequent stylistic shifts in
jazz in the years to come. 134 Beginning in the Late 40s and into 1950, Byrd was recognized by
older Detroit musicians as a rising star with much promise. This is due in no small part to
Donald’s desire to be a part of what was happening, even before he was legally allowed to do so.
We were too young to get into the clubs, I was just thirteen or fourteen and Donald
couldn’t have been much older than that. We certainly weren’t old enough to buy a beer.
A lot of the clubs would have sections for kids to come in and sit and just listen, like
Birdland used to have. Other times Donald would stand outside while the music spilled
out onto the street. He’d be standing on his tiptoes trying to hear Thad Jones! 135
Fuller also remembers that those young musicians who showed such interest and promise
were permitted by the musicians and club owners to sit in for a few tunes early in the evening
133
Fuller, telephone interview, February 16, 2011.
134
Williams, telephone interview, February 6, 2011.
135
Fuller, telephone interview, February 16, 2011.
136
Fuller, telephone interview, February 16, 2010.
44
And in Detroit you had the Jones boys and all of that stuff, Thad and everybody...and you
had a night club...the Blue Bird. And Miles used to hang out there and the owner liked
jazz. And we used to hang around the back door and crack the door so we could listen.
And also we’d sit at the front window where the bandstand was and we could listen
there. 137
Clubs in African American communities like the Blue Bird Inn in Detroit’s West Side,
138
the Double V Bar and Club Deliese in the upper middle class neighborhood of Constant
Gardens, El Sino in Paradise Valley, and numerous venues along Woodward Avenue provided
The Blue Bird Inn and the El Sino Club were of particular importance to Detroit’s
fledgling modern jazz community. Wardell Gray and Charlie Parker both sat in with local
musicians at the Blue Bird Inn in 1949 and Parker headlined at the El Sino with his group in
1947. In June of 1947, Dizzy Gillespie’s first big band opened at the El Sino with notable Detroit
American population as more whites migrated outside of the city. New jazz venues that would
prove significant to local modern jazz musicians sprang up as the city’s African American
population continued to increase. While the Blue Bird Inn remained the city’s most vital jazz
establishment, clubs such as Baker’s Keyboard Lounge, The Rouge Lounge, The West End
137
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
138
Lars Bjorn and Jim Gallert, Before Motown: A History of Jazz in Detroit 1920-60 (Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 2001), 62. “Double V” was a rallying cry in African American working class society, standing for
“Double Victory” – victory of Fascism abroad and racial inequality at home.
139
Bjorn and Gallert, Before Motown, 74-75.
140
Bjorn and Gallert, Before Motown, 97-98.
45
Hotel, Klein’s, Shangri-La, the Roosevelt Lounge and Larry’s Show Bar hosted a mix of regular
One notable venture/venue that Detroit boasted during this time was the World Stage.
Formed by guitarists Kenny Burrell as a performers’ collective, the World Stage afforded
performance opportunities to some of Detroit’s young, modern jazz musicians. They found a
home in Detroit’s Highland Park neighborhood, near Wayne University. Regular performances
and jam sessions were a staple of this organization’s operations. In an interview with Art Taylor,
The World Stage...was supported heavily by the community...One hundred and fifty
people would have been a large crowd, because the place wasn’t big. It was just as if you
were in Carnegie Hall. It was the same kind of reverence, the same sort of atmosphere. 142
Byrd was beginning to work in many groups that performed in these venues by the
beginning of the 1950s and after he returned to Detroit following military service, including the
World Stage. He had already become an important young voice on the Detroit jazz scene and in
addition to working and playing with local musicians, he was often given the opportunity to sit-
Byrd’s collaborators during this period in the early 50s were fellow Detroiters Pepper
Adams, Kenny Burrell, and Doug Watkins. Byrd, Watkins, Adams and other Detroit musicians
worked to help each other gain valuable exposure and professional opportunities, they lived in
141
Bjorn and Gallert, Before Motown, 106-113.
142
Arthur Taylor, Notes and Tones: Musician to Musician Interviews (New York: DaCapo Press, 1982), 221
143
Davis, Paris without Regret, 103; also Williams, telephone interview, February 6, 2010.
46
the same neighborhoods (in some cases the same apartment building), and formed ensembles that
While members of Detroit’s modern jazz community made the move to New York City at
different times and under different circumstances, Byrd’s first extended stay in the city was the
Like many young musicians during the post World War Two era, Donald Byrd served in
the US military. Byrd left Detroit after his year away from school and enlisted in the Air Force in
1951 in anticipation of being drafted and was stationed in upstate New York. He was soon
assigned to the US Air Force Band at the Newport Airfield, the airfield that served West Point. 145
During this period, racial integration among military units across the different branches of
I was a member of the Army band in Florida that Cannonball (Adderley) was in charge
of...it was an all black band. I believe that Donald’s band was integrated, though. 146
Byrd confirms this, stating that an African American warrant officer named Julius
Walker told him that he needed “to get [his] shit together and go back to school.” 147 Byrd cites
Walker’s prodding as one of the main reason for his enrollment at the Manhattan School of
Music.
144
Williams, telephone interview, February 6, 2010.
145
Davis, Paris without Regret, 103.
146
Fuller, telephone interview, February 16, 2010.
147
Davis, Paris without Regret, 103102-103.
47
Many of Byrd’s band mates were graduates of colleges and conservatories in New York,
including the Manhattan School and Julliard, which further enticed Byrd to venture into
academia. 148
I was stationed in the band in Newburg, New York, the airfield for West Point...When I
was in the Air Force, we played the Air Force shows on channel 5 and I was allowed to
go to Manhattan School of Music and I used to stay with my uncle, my mother’s oldest
brother, in Harlem. And so I got a chance to be in New York City from playing in the Air
Force Band, and with my living with my uncle and going to Manhattan School of Music,
I was in the right place at the right time. 149
Byrd relayed to Broschke Davis that he was able to matriculate without providing high
school transcripts by putting off submission and promising school officials that transcripts were
forthcoming. “I finished two and a half years of college before I finished high school,” he
recalls. 150
Byrd pushed himself further, breaking into the New York City jazz scene in addition to
his Air Force duties and his formal schooling at Manhattan School. Staying with his uncle in
Harlem, he began performing with many of New York’s most important modern jazz musicians,
including Lou Donaldson, Art Taylor, Charlie Rouse Thelonious Monk, Horace Silver, and
Sonny Rollins. “All of them were there, and I worked with all of ‘em on my free nights.” 151
Byrd’s ability to manage his three worlds—full-time service in the U.S. Air Force, full-
time undergraduate, and later graduate study at the Manhattan School of Music, and building a
reputation among New York’s jazz luminaries by sitting-in and performing professionally—is an
indication of not only his personal drive for self-betterment, but also his organized, focused
148
B. Korall, "Donald Byrd - Campus Catalyst," Downbeat 38, no. 19 (1966). 19.
149
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
150
Davis, Paris without Regret, 102.
151
Davis, Paris without Regret, 102.
48
demeanor. Also of note is Byrd’s avoidance of substance and drug abuse. Like Clifford Brown,
Byrd was a disciplined, clean living musician. At a time when drug and alcohol abuse was still
rampant among jazz musicians of every race and creed, Byrd was a notable exception, reflecting
both his upbringing and the impact that Detroit’s studious community of young jazz musicians
I never got involved in drugs or alcohol; I wouldn’t do anything like that. And even if I
did word would’ve gotten around and it would’ve gotten to my father and that would’ve
been my ass! 152
Byrd relayed to Broschke Davis that he deliberately kept his “worlds” separate and made
sure that he was keeping up with both his obligations to the jazz community and his work at
school.
Most of the time, I never hung out with anyone, because I was sort of unique. So when
they were fucking around getting high and bullshitting all day, I was in school. I had to
do my homework, I had to go home. That’s the way it was. I always had two sets of
friends. Cats that I knew at college, they would not have shit to do with that scene;
nightclub cats would not have anything to do with the academic cats. I was always caught
between school and the street musicians. 153
In addition to affording him with steady income and relative security while pursuing a
professional and academic career, the Air Force band experience also gave Byrd valuable
exposure to performance situations that instilled in him the need for musical versatility and
flexibility.
152
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
153
Davis, Paris without Regret, 104.
49
With the band, which played for many of the Air Force propaganda shows, I got the
chance to play behind such notables as Mel Torme and Nat Cole – it helped to round me
out. You had to have your reading and your musicianship together to play those shows
and I was lucky that I always kept that stuff together. 154
Byrd’s thirty-month tour of duty with the US Air Force represents a turning point in his
musical and professional life. It provided the impetus for the continuation of his formal training
and accruement of academic credentials, something that would have a continual effect on his
personal improvisational style. Additionally, it gave Byrd a level of confidence in his ability to
adapt to a variety of musical situations. Most crucially, Byrd’s US Air Force assignment placed
him near the heart of New York City’s thriving jazz scene and allowed him to lay the foundation
of his career as a nationally recorded and sought after modern jazz trumpeter.
Though Byrd returned to Detroit briefly following his military service in 1954, he moved
back to New York City after completing his undergraduate work at Wayne University. Upon
arriving in New York City permanently in 1955, Byrd was finding work with fellow Detroiters in
various situations. While he worked to raise his level of visibility among the jazz community in
New York, he embarked on another course of study of the Manhattan School of Music that
would result in his earning an MA in music. While in at the Manhattan School he furthered his
training in traditional trumpet technique and repertoire, studying with William Vachianno. 155
By the time Donald was an established presence within the jazz community, he had a
fully formed set of values and opinions on both the role that traditional trumpet materials and
repertoire should play in the developing jazz trumpeter’s studies, and the need for further
research and composition of new material for traditional trumpet. In an article that he penned for
154
Davis, Paris without Regret, 104.
155
Davis, Paris without Regret, 104.
50
Down Beat magazine in January, 1961, Byrd discusses issues in trumpet pedagogy that have
implications for jazz trumpet performance practice, something that trumpet pedagogues today are
still reluctant to address. Byrd states that a dialogue between jazz and traditional trumpet players
should exist and that he “established relationships with many symphony trumpet players
throughout the country.” 156 He routinely attended their performances and, according to Byrd,
many of them “reciprocated.” Byrd advocated for shared practice sessions and musical
interactions with these musicians as a means for what he refers to as “mutual enrichment.” 157
Perhaps the most poignant example of Byrd’s highly developed approach to trumpet playing, one
that is surely reflective of the high level of precision and consistency in his improvisational
language, follows:
If I were to make one specific criticism of trumpet teaching today and of trumpet players,
it would be that not enough is taught about, and the musicians do not know enough about,
the physiological and psychological considerations that are part of playing...Most
exercise books available today cover only the mechanics of the instrument. They make no
mention of the kinesthetic problems of the player. 158
Byrd calls for balanced performance and balanced practice, sighting the ever-changing
nature of professional playing situations for jazz players as a call for greater awareness of a brass
player’s musical health. Byrd further calls for an avoidance of the “distinction between the jazz
trumpet player and the classical trumpet player” in favor of an approach that is more holistic. He
states that brass players “are all products of environment. If the young trumpet player spends too
156
Donald Byrd, "Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters," Downbeat 28, no. 18 (1961). 48-49.
157
Byrd, “Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters,” 48.
158
Byrd, “Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters,” 48.
51
much time at sessions” without proper balanced practice, there are physical as well as musical
ramifications. 159
Byrd’s article is significant on a number of levels. First, and perhaps most obviously, it
shatters the notion long held by many traditional brass pedagogues that jazz and traditional
trumpet playing are entirely separate entities. Second, the solicitation of Byrd’s thoughts by the
publishers speak to the level of respect that he garnered outside of the jazz community,
something that was surely a result of his academic credentials as well as his ability as a trumpet
technician. 160 Third, Byrd’s call for integration and cross-fertilization among jazz and classical
styles foretold of the elevation of jazz as an Art music that would eventually be valued as an
equal to “classical styles.” Perhaps most importantly, this provides us with an in-depth look at
the results of Byrd’s devotion to both continuing education and his embracement of traditional
trumpet studies as a means for furthering his expressive and creative abilities as an improviser,
something that was instilled in him by his teachers at Cass Technical High School, the
Manhattan School of Music, and his interactions with young traditional trumpet players in
2.2.2.3 Paris
Although many jazz musicians have performed in Paris frequently, Donald Byrd actually
had two main stints of residence in Paris, France, one in 1958 and a second in 1963. According
to Broschke Davis, Byrd’s father had always dreamed of traveling to Europe because it
represented a place where African Americans were treated far better than they were at home.
159
Byrd, “Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters,” 49.
160
Byrd, “Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters,” 48. In a print-relief subtitled “About the Writer,” Byrd’s
position within the jazz trumpet community is summarized, as well as his level of knowledge on traditional trumpet
repertoire. His academic accomplishments and credentials are also touted.
52
Donald wished to “fulfill” his father’s dream of seeing Europe and experiencing what it had to
offer in terms of cultural and social climate. 161 Byrd’s first trip to Europe was with close musical
associates Walter Davis, Art Taylor, Bobby Jasper—a Belgian who joined the group in Europe—
and fellow Detroiter Doug Watkins. The quintet toured the European festival and club circuit and
performed often at Paris’s famed nightclub Chat Qui Peche. Byrd had been asked to go to Paris
the preceding year by drummer Kenny Clarke, who had relocated to Paris permanently in 1956
after performing there quite frequently from 1940 through the 1951, when he traveled there with
Byrd’s two trips to Paris are defined by distinctly different motivations. While his first
trip was as a bandleader and performer, his second sojourn was primarily as a student. It was
Byrd’s close friend and musical colleague Claire Fischer who made him aware of the great
composition teacher Nadia Boulanger and suggested that he attempt to study with her if he found
That’s where I played with Nathan, in Paris. I had been there before, but the second time
I went I went to study with Nadia Boulanger...to study composition. It was kind of like
when I was in New York in school. I had my studies with Nadia and then I was playing
with Kenny Clarke and Nathan. 164
Byrd’s time in Paris represents yet another facet of his strive for self-improvement and
artistic growth. He left behind an extremely successful career as a New York based modern jazz
trumpeter in order to pursue composition studies with one of the world’s most respected
teachers. After completing his studies with Ms. Boulanger, Byrd returned to New York with
161
Davis, Paris without Regret, 106-107.
162
Byrd, “Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters,”48-49.
163
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
164
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
53
another level of versatility that would shape his artistic endeavors, chiefly his compositional
explorations into jazz-funk fusion. While these musical developments fall outside of the scope of
this dissertation, it is important to note that the impetus for these developments in Byrd’s career
As mentioned, Donald Byrd was a versatile sideman, an able collaborator, and was in
great demand as both a participant on many recordings and a regular member in working hard
bop groups during the 1950s through the early 1960s. Byrd’s discography indicates that he is one
of the most recorded jazz trumpeters in modern history and he was highly in-demand by his
colleagues on New York’s jazz scene. Trumpeter Jimmy Owens, whom Byrd taught and
mentored for many years, recalls that Donald was very busy during the late-1950s and early-
1960, participating in recording sessions, rehearsals, and live performances almost daily. 165
This status as an able sideman who was dependable and artistic is at once an indication of
the regard that his fellow musicians has for his ability to adapt to a variety of musical situations.
Byrd came back to New York City in 1955 after briefly returning to Detroit to complete
course work at Wayne State University, and began working in a quintet led by pianist George
Wallington. His first recording from this period is a date with the Kenny Clarke Septet recorded
166
in June of 1955 followed by a live date with Wallington’s quintet. During 1955 alone Byrd
participated in several recording sessions, some studio dates and others live sessions. One
notable recording is Byrd’s first record as a leader, recorded on the Transition label and most
165
Owens, telephone interview, February 19, 2010.
166
http://jazzdisco.org/donald-byrd/discography/, accessed on July 6, 2011.
54
likely taking place at Detroit’s World Stage. This is one of only two recording sessions that he
participated in that took place in Detroit, with the second occurring in May of 1956, again for the
Transition label and most likely taking place at the World Stage. 167
Byrd was a prolific recorder and appeared much as a sideman throughout much of his
modern jazz career. During his first year of full-time residence in New York City in 1956 Byrd
was recorded twenty nine times. Personnel from these mid-1950s recordings, most of whom
performed with Byrd regularly around New York City, are a mix of musicians from different
geographic locations, but the Detroit presence remained strong. From 1955 through 1956, Byrd
was working and recording with groups that included fellow Detroiters Paul Chambers, Frank
Foster, Hank Jones, Doug Watkins, Tommy Flanagan, Kenny Burrell, and Barry Harris. It is
remarkable that Byrd was able to re-inject himself into the New York jazz scene with such
speed, but the support network of Detroit musicians, coupled with Byrd’s work in New York
creative studio recordings that featured Gryce’s adept arranging and compositional skills. Byrd
made eleven records with Gryce’s Jazz Lab during 1957 while still recording and working with
George Wallington, his first regular ensemble gig in New York City.
In addition to regular engagements and recordings with Wallington, Byrd replaced Kenny
Dorham in the second version of the Jazz Messengers before joining Horace Silver’s quintet.
Byrd made three records with Silver’s group in 1956. Byrd’s membership in these two groups is
167
http://jazzdisco.org/donald-byrd/discography/, accessed on July 6, 2011. This recording took place on May 7,
1956.
168
Mathieson, Cookin’: Hard Bop and Soul Jazz, 203-4.
169
Williams, telephone interview, February 6, 2010.
55
significant because Silver and Blakey would each continue to lead ensembles that would be
associated with hard bop and act as “finishing schools” for subsequent generations of jazz
musicians within the modern jazz tradition. 170 Because Byrd was one of the first trumpet players
to hold positions in two of modern jazz’s most important ensembles, his influence is significant.
Byrd himself sums up this element of his career path, stating that much of his life is characterize
by “being in the right place, at the right time, and doing the right things.” 171
During these early years of Byrd’s career the elements of his training at Cass Technical
High School, the influence of the jazz community of Detroit, and Byrd’s own considerable
At the age of only twenty-three, Byrd already had a unique, individual voice on the
trumpet. Melvin Williams discusses an element of Byrd’s personality that contributed to this
Donald had big ears, he heard everything. He always paid attention to what other people
were playing and could play stuff back to them. He really paid attention to all the music
that was happening around him – other trumpet players, saxophone players, classical
musicians. All of that stuff was really important to him. 172
Nathan Davis remembers a similar trait of Donald Byrd’s that sheds light onto his level
I remember that Stanley Turrentine was going to come to town (Paris)...and no matter
who it was, whether it was Stanley or anybody, but I remember him (Donald) playing a
170
Post bop is a term used to describe a subgenre of jazz generally thought to have grown out of hard bop. While it
retained much of the rhythmic drive and energetic performance practice of hard bop, its harmonies were more
dissonant and complex.
171
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
172
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
56
couple of licks, I remember him talking about it...teaching me...he said you have to get
another guy’s shit and then play it and have it down so much that when he comes on the
bandstand you play it right back at him. And that unnerves him because he knows his
baddest shit, you got it. 173
Through the veneer of this competitive spirit we are given a glimpse of Byrd’s aural and
cognitive skills in the realm of jazz improvisational vocabulary. The ability to hear and distill a
particular player’s personal style down to its core ideas was certainly a major force behind
Byrd’s quick maturity and highly personal style. Since he was able to quickly hear and
understand that which happened around him he was able to learn and at the same time fuse
In Hard Bop Academy, jazz critic Alan Goldsher discusses the performers that were a
part of Blakey’s many versions of the Jazz Messengers organization. In his brief discussion of
Donald Byrd, he quotes contemporary trumpet and former “Messenger” Brian Lynch:
His attention to detail and to ensemble playing was really important to the Jazz
Messengers. He’s an important figure in terms of his excellence and his
consistency...Donald was someone who kept up with developments in the language; his
playing and writing always was undergoing changes. 174
Byrd’s work during his first few years as a full-fledged member of the New York modern
jazz community certainly embodies this “attention to detail” in that his playing and contributions
were at a consistently high level of technical proficiency and artistic expression. Kenny
Mathieson posits that Donald Byrd was “an automatic first call” because of his educational
173
Nathan Davis, telephone interview, March 1, 2010.
174
Goldsher, Hard Bop Academy, 13.
57
background and training and his “excellent technical command of his instrument.” 175 As a
sideman Byrd was proving himself to be highly reliable, both musically and professionally.
Donald Byrd drew heavily on the work of three trumpet players while forming the
foundation of his style: Fats Navarro, Clare Rocquemore, and Thad Jones. The recordings of Fats
Navarro served as important sources of harmonic language and articulation style, influencing
Byrd’s approach to both jazz improvisation and the trumpet itself. 176 In much the same manner,
personal interactions with Detroit trumpeter Thad Jones were highly significant, as Byrd himself
has stated. Jones possessed a thorough command of trumpet technique as well as a highly
personal style. Byrd’s trips to the Blue Bird Inn and other Detroit jazz venues to hear and sit in
with Jones were significant. Finally, the playing of Clare Rocquemore, whom Curtis Fuller
describes as the “one of the best young players in the mid-West” was such a presence on the
Detroit jazz scene in the early 1950s that national level artists sought him out when they came to
town. Byrd was heavily influenced by Rocquemore’s technical virtuosity and sound. 177
By Byrd’s own admission, Clifford Brown had a profound impact on his music and
career. The two were close to each other in age, with Brown being only three years his senior,
and they interacted in various forums and jam sessions during Byrd’s early years in New York
City while assigned to the Air Force band as well as in Detroit. 178 In an open letter written to
commemorate the death of Clifford Brown, Byrd stated that Brown’s influence upon him was of
175
Mathieson, Cookin’: Hard Bop and Soul Jazz, 201.
176
Nathan Davis, telephone interview, February 2, 2010.
177
Byrd, telephone interview, February 21, 2010.
178
Erdmann, “M+M=A: An Interview with Donald Byrd,” 30.
58
a nature that inspired him to reach for greater heights as both a musician and a person. He further
stated that following Brown on stage and posthumously into positions in groups that Brown had
In addition to the impact of other trumpeters, Byrd’s stylistic development is also a result
of significant influences that were a part of the fabric of Detroit’s jazz community. According to
Curtis Fuller, the improvisational language of modern jazz piano players was highly influential
in the development of not only Byrd, but also that of other Detroit jazz musicians.
In Detroit everyone was trying to play like piano players, too. Very clean, long lines, 180
and all of that. There were, of course, great piano players in Detroit like Hank Jones,
Tommy Flannigan, and Barry Harris who were heavily influenced by bebop pianists like
Bud Powell. But the rest of us were trying to play like that, too. 181
But, as we will see in the following analysis of Donald Byrd’s modern jazz trumpet style,
only a few elements of Brown’s style were present in early recordings made by Byrd. Further,
recordings of Byrd’s mature style from the late 1950s and early 1960s show that most of these
179
Donald Byrd, Tempus Fugit (http://cliffordbrown.net/quotes/byrd.html), accessed March 16, 2011: Reprinted
from www.blackbyrd.com.
180 Shelton G. Berg, Alfred’s Essentials of Jazz Theory: A Complete Self-Study Course for All Musicians (Van
Nuys, CA: Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., 2006), 7. Jazz educator Shelton Berg defines a “line” as “a melody of one
measure or longer and moving in eighth-notes or faster values.”
181
Fuller, telephone interview, February 16, 2011.
59
2.2.5 Conclusions
Donald Byrd’s success as a modern jazz trumpeter was the result of the confluence of
events and experiences that occurred in his early life as well as his educational experiences,
Byrd’s career success is the result of several factors. First, his studious upbringing and
the support afforded him by his parents, including their insistence on a reliance on education and
academic rigor, shaped Byrd’s views on continued learning and instilled in him a work ethic that
would allow him to quickly rise to the top of the New York City jazz community upon his
permanent arrival. His formal music training at Cass Technical High School, Wayne State
University, and the Manhattan School of Music shaped his relationship to the trumpet itself.
Further, this training exposed Byrd to the teachings and methods of significant traditional
trumpet pedagogues, something that Byrd used to form his personal sound and maintain a
Detroit and its jazz community were important to Byrd’s stylistic development because
he was able to interact with his idols and mentors and sit in with well-established local musicians
of a very high caliber. Byrd was also able to grow and develop alongside members of a peer
group, most of whom would eventually relocate to New York City and would continue to
Byrd’s professional activities are notable as well. His Air Force band experience, his
studies with Nadia Boulanger in Paris, and his professional experiences in bands led by Art
Blakey and Horace Silver provided him with a diversified skill-set that allowed him to operate in
60
Though Byrd’s influence on subsequent generations of jazz trumpeters is relatively small,
his place of prominence among jazz musicians in New York following the death of Clifford
Brown makes him a significant historical figure. His ventures into jazz-funk fusion during the
late 1960s and through the 1970s would provide him with a high degree of financial success, but
it was his eventual entry into academia as a teacher of jazz performance and scholar that would
define his later career. His most significant contributions to jazz trumpet style were the result of
his “being in the right place at the right time.” Byrd was positioned to fill the void left by
Clifford Brown’s death in 1956 and for a nearly four-year period he was one of the most
recorded trumpeters in modern jazz. However, it was not mere chance that allowed Byrd to be a
highly sought after performer during these years. Rather, in addition to being in the right places
at the right times, Byrd also had the foresight and discipline to do the right things.
Frederick Dewayne Hubbard was one of the most influential jazz trumpeters of the
second half of the Twentieth century. His discography spans five decades and the width and
breadth of stylistic genres under the umbrella of jazz in which he performed and recorded is
staggering. He was an accomplished performer of modern jazz’s two most significant offshoot
genres; hard bop and post bop as well as an early experimenter in free-jazz circles. He was one
of the earliest musicians to fuse rock and jazz in a meaningful way, following Miles Davis and
Donald Byrd and his studio work and collaborations with artists from outside the jazz idiom are
notable. His place within the pantheon of jazz trumpet luminaries has always been one of high
esteem, and his influence is said to be heard in the playing of many of today’s most visible and
61
recorded jazz trumpeters. Players such as Tom Harrell, Wynton Marsalis, Terence Blanchard,
Nicholas Payton, John Swana, Scott Wendholt, Tim Hagans, Marcus Printup, Sean Jones,
Jeremy Pelt, and Christian Scott have all spoken publicly or in print of Hubbard’s influence on
Hubbard’s command of the technical, physical, and harmonic aspects of modern jazz
trumpet performance practice was amazing and he is considered one of the most exciting jazz
trumpeters of all time. By his own admission, his style was informed in its early stages by Chet
Baker and, to a much larger extent, Clifford Brown. Perhaps for this reason most jazz trumpeters
believe Hubbard to be one of the torch bearers of the Brown lineage, although his
contemporaries—Lee Morgan and Booker Little—were more firmly set within this style of
playing for the majority of their careers. But while Morgan and Little retained the
characteristically detached, highly defined approach to tonguing that one hears in the playing of
Clifford Brown, Hubbard moved away form this, incorporating the smoother, more legato
approach 182 of Donald Byrd into his playing as well as the more intervallic style of Kenny
Dorham. Much like Clifford Brown, Hubbard spent time practicing with and assimilating the
language of saxophonists, pianists, guitarists, drummers, and other instrumentalists, giving his
Hubbard’s work with John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman on some of the earliest
recordings of free jazz further distinguishes him from his contemporaries and he was able to
adapt his personal style to fit a variety of performance situations. While heavily involved in New
York City’s modern jazz community and recording activities in the early 1960s, he was also
active on the free-jazz scene. Conversely, his membership in one of the most celebrated versions
182
Legato pitches, or legato attacks, are created on the trumpet by using a “D” consonant within the oral cavity to
produce a smooth, long note-beginning.
62
of Art Blakey’s jazz messengers from 1961-1965 marks him as a key contributor to the modern
Hubbard was energetic, highly competitive with other trumpeters, and musically
adventurous. Like Clifford Brown and Donald Byrd, he rose to national prominence after
achieving regional success within a vibrant modern jazz community (Indianapolis). But, unlike
Byrd, Hubbard’s accomplishments and career have enjoyed wide critical and historical
examination.
Freddie Hubbard was born Frederick Dewayne Hubbard April 7, 1938 in Indianapolis,
IN. The youngest of six children, Hubbard was raised by a single mother who was supported and
was nurturing.
Freddie was the baby. His mother would spoil him. She was a very warm person who
would have a lot of us over and cook for us. They lived in a small, attic apartment that
overlooked the Polk’s milk company...where Wes Montgomery worked. 183
Music was an important part of young Freddie’s early life, though not in a structured,
formal manner. Rather, his early experiences with music were largely vicariously attained
through his older siblings. The Hubbard family was active in the Eastern Star Baptist church, an
African American congregation located on 22nd and Columbia Avenue. Hubbard’s two older
sisters were both very active in church musical activities, with Haddie singing in the choir and
183
Larry Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
63
Mildred serving as both a choir member rehearsal pianists. Freddie’s older brother, Earmon, was
also a pianist who studied privately and was a great admirer of Bud Powell. 184 Freddie and his
siblings were close and it was in this environment that he would receive some of his earliest
exposures to music performance. Most of the Hubbard children participated in band activities in
junior and senior high school and young Freddie experimented with the trumpet. Freddie’s older
brothers and one of his three sisters studied trumpet and played in the school band. 185
Freddie’s first trumpet was actually a gift from a friend, Albert Moore. Moore, a neighbor
of Hubbard’s, was given a professional level trumpet by his father. “Albert’s family was fairly
186
middle...in income and his father would by him whatever he had a daily hankering to.”
Though Moore struggled with the trumpet, Hubbard had a natural ability for tone production on
the instrument. Moore quickly lost interest in the trumpet as a discipline and was given
Hubbard’s earliest exposure to jazz came from his brother Earmon, who actively
mentored Freddie and his young friends in basic harmony, chord progressions, and aural
awareness. Hubbard quickly developed perfect pitch. 187 Hubbard was exposed to recordings of
modern jazz innovators such as Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, and Bud Powell.
My brother was a jazz pianist, and he played the music every day. All I heard was Charlie
Parker, Bud Powell, and Dizzy Gillespie. When I woke up in the morning, he had
Parker’s “K.C. Blues” on. I used to ask him: “What kind of music is this?” I was into the
more diddy-bop thing...to try to relate suddenly to modern jazz at thirteen or fourteen—
well, you’re still very young. By hearing this music constantly—it amazed me how the
184
David Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011.
185
Ira Gitler, “Focus on Freddie Hubbard,” Down Beat 29 (January 18, 1962), 22.
186
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
187
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
64
were able to create. That’s the reason I got into it—even before I learned how to read
music. 188
As Hubbard began to meet other young people who were interested in music he found
support groups within the African American community in Indianapolis. Young players such as
trumpeters David Hardiman and Virgil Jones, saxophonist James Spaulding, and bassist Larry
Ridley soon found each other through mutual friends and acquaintances and formed a tightly knit
Hubbard attended Indianapolis PS (public school) 26 for elementary through junior high.
The school’s bandmaster, James Compton, provided Hubbard with early instruction on the E flat
mellophone, alto horn, tuba, and trumpet. 189 Ultimately, it was Compton who convinced the
young Hubbard that his instrument of choice should be the trumpet, telling him that he had “a
Outside of his musical studies at PS 26, Hubbard and other likeminded young jazz
students found many opportunities to strengthen their musical foundation. Upon entering senior
high school, the pace of Hubbard’s musical development began to increase. One notable
association for Hubbard came in the form a support group that was formed under the auspices of
the Indianapolis Music Presenters, a regional affiliate of the National Association of Negro
Musicians, Inc.
188
Les Tomkins, “Freddie Hubbard Speaks his Mind,” Crescendo International 11 (1973), 20-22.
189
Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011. Also see Tom Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie
Hubbard,” ITG Journal 26/2 (January, 2002), 16.
190
Freddie Hubbard, audio recording of master class at the Navy School of Music, October, 2008.
65
David Hardiman’s mother had a music club, called the Tempi Music Club and we used to
hang there and have meetings. We were very fortunate to have people around us that
were very caring and helpful. 191
Hardiman himself recalls that his mother was the senior sponsor of the group and that its
primary goal was to promote education among young African American musicians from the
community. Further, Hardiman recalls that the organization attempted inspire young African
American musicians to pursue careers in music through concert sponsorship and community
outreach. 192
The Tempi Music Club served as an important forum where these young African
American music students were exposed to formal training in theory and harmony as well as
being afforded the opportunity to receive lessons from members of the Indianapolis Symphony
Orchestra. This was a notable achievement for Mrs. Hardiman considering the social and
economic challenges that African Americans faced in the 1950s. Hubbard was a frequent visitor
to Tempi Club Meetings during his junior and senior high school years along with David
Hardiman, Virgil Jones, Larry Ridley, James Spaulding, Earmon Hubbard, and many other
When it came time for Hubbard to enter senior high school, he was fortunate to be able to
attend Arsenal Technical High School. A recently integrated, multi-facility campus located at
1500 East Michigan Street in the very heart of the city, the school enjoyed more funding and had
better facilities than the city’s African American senior high school, Crispus Attucks High
191
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
192
Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011.
66
School. 193 The school boasted multiple band, orchestral, and choral ensembles and Hubbard was
a member of the schools marching and concert bands where he played horn, trumpet, and tuba. 194
Hubbard himself attributes the uniquely round, full tone that he would become famous for to his
I had a big sound because I played tuba in high school. I played French horn, and E flat
alto horn, and that enabled me to open up my embouchure a little more than if I had only
played trumpet, which was good in the sense that it allowed me to get a big sound. 195
Although attending Arsenal Tech provided Hubbard with excellent musical training and
performance outlets, Hubbard was keenly aware of the fact that, as an African American, he was
I went to a mixed high school outside my own neighborhood. You might say I was
transplanted. I was integrating a high school for the first time and growing up with
Caucasians which was quite a different experience...A lot of times, I would be the only
Negro kid in a class, and the vibrations I felt, I think, made me sort of a rebel...so I didn’t
dig a lot of subjects...because of the teaches and the kids. 196
Hubbard, along with brother Earmon, bassist Larry Ridley, saxophonist James Spaulding,
and drummer Otis Appleton formed a quintet that began to play social events, senior high
dances, and the like. The group’s repertoire was a mix of material gleaned from the recordings of
Chet Baker and Gerry Mulligan, the Clifford Brown – Max Roach quintet, and Charlie Parker.
193
Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011.
194
Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011.
195
Hubbard, audio recording of master class, October 2008.
196
Dan Morgenstern, “Toward Completeness,” Down Beat 76 (December, 2009), 36. This article was reprinted and
originally appeared in the December, 1966 issue of Down Beat.
67
We’d play little teenage dances, and our big hit would be playing Avery Parish’s “After
Hours.” We’d call that dance “belly rub,” you know, and get the ladies up to dance with
the fellas. 197
Upon graduation from Arsenal Tech, Hubbard matriculated at the Jordan Conservatory of
rewarded with a scholarship to study horn rather than trumpet, though he was able to receive
trumpet instruction from Max Woodbury, then principal trumpet with the Indianapolis
addition to structured breathing exercises, Woodbury’s students were exposed to the tone
building studies found in Max Schlossberg’s Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet 198
as well as the flow studies found in H.L. Clarke’s Technical Studies for the Cornet. 199
Additionally, Woodbury was a proponent of pedal tones as a means for developing depth of tone
Like Clifford Brown and Donald Byrd, Hubbard’s exposure to Western European
trumpet methods would be a defining factor in his overall relationship to his instrument,
something that would continue to shape his sound and playing concepts for the length of his
career.
I’m a bebopper, I like Bird, Dizzy, but when you start including classical music into your
music it makes it cleaner and makes it sound better, but it detracts a little bit from the
197
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
Max Schlossberg, Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet (New York: J.F. Hill &
198
68
overall feel. Most jazz cats, technique is a little different, you have to have a
looseness. 201
the Indianapolis jazz scene that was along Indiana Ave. He attended jam sessions, went to
concerts where he heard such greats as Art Blakey, Dizzy Gillespie, and Thelonious Monk, and
However, Hubbard did not remain at Butler for long, and he was soon expelled from the
conservatory for playing jazz in the practice rooms. His close friend Larry Ridley, who had also
gone to Butler after graduating from Crispus Attucks Senior High, recalls “they kicked Freddie
out for playing Donna Lee and practicing bebop. I was next, it didn’t take them long to bounce
Though his formal training may have ended, Hubbard would insert himself even further
2.3.2.1 Indianapolis
Hubbard was mentored by a number of musicians who were active in the Indianapolis
jazz community. He began sitting in with guitarist Wes Montgomery and his brother, pianist
Monk Montgomery, while still in high school. 203 The Montgomery brothers performed in and
around Indiana Avenue, a main artery that ran through the largely African American section of
the city. There were multiple bars, clubs, and live music venues located on Indiana Avenue
201
Hubbard, audio recording of master class, October 2008.
202
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
203
Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011.
69
204
during the 1940s and 50s, though most of them have since been removed. In addition to
venues that presented the performance of local jazz musicians on a regular basis, many national-
It was an environment where a lot of the greats came through because Indianapolis was a
hub between the south, west, east and north. It allowed the musicians to be in Chicago
and then come to Indianapolis. We were all influenced by this. It was similar to
Philadelphia and New York. Of course New York City was “the big apple” and it’s what
everyone aspired to. 205
Hubbard, Ridley, Spaulding, Earmon Hubbard, and drummer Paul Parker found work at
206
many local venues, including an establishment called George’s Bar. The young musicians,
whose group was called the Jazz Contemporaries, played as frequently as six nights per week,
giving them the opportunity to hone their skills as jazz musicians while at the same time
providing them with valuable experience as young professionals. Larry Ridley recalls:
We were working six nights a week, a couple of matinees, and we were drawing in
customers. We thought we were halfway big time. I mean, we were playing on the strip.
We had an opportunity to be around the scene. 207
In an interview with Dan Morgenstern Hubbard himself recalled the atmosphere of the
Indianapolis jazz scene during the months when he and his comrades were performing regularly.
I’ll never forget the club called George’s Bar in Indiana Ave., a street where everybody
would come out on weekends in their best attire and go from club to club. That was the
thing. A few of the guys and Spaulding and myself formed a group called the Jazz
Contemporaries. We’d rehearse and rehearse, and finally we got the job at George’s Bar,
204
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
205
Hardiman, telephone interview, September 3, 2011.
206
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
207
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
70
and all the musicians, like James Moody and Kenny Dorham and many others, would
come by and listen when they were in town. That was an inspiration. 208
The modern jazz community in Indianapolis consisted of two generational groups that
coexisted and supported one another. Hubbard, along with those young musicians previously
mentioned, were preceded by a group of older jazz musicians who were among the first
Indianapolis residents to assimilate the language of modern jazz. Musicians like David Baker,
Wes, Buddy, and Monk Montgomery, J.J. Johnson, and Slide Hampton were a number of years
older and served as important mentors for Hubbard and his young cohorts. The older musicians
expected their young apprentices to work diligently to learn the correct chord changes to
standard tunes, study the improvisational language of modern jazz and its innovators, and present
We weren’t jiving at all, it was straight ahead. Everyone was very intent on playing the
right things, learning scales and chords, because there were a number of teachers and
players around Indianapolis that were very insistent that we have our act together. 209
Hubbard was a frequent visitor to one club in particular, Speedway City. Here, Wes
Montgomery and his brothers hosted a Saturday jam session that was frequented by many
musicians and Hubbard was permitted to sit it with the group on many occasions. Wes
improvisational vehicles in keys that were unconventional at the time. Hubbard recalls:
The guys Wes played with liked to change keys. For instance, most people play a blues in
F or B-flat. Wes and his crew would play in E concert. If I was going to sit in I had to
208
Morgenstern, “Toward Completeness,” 36.
209
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
71
follow...By their playing in all of those different keys, I was able to develop my sense of
pitch...Playing with Wes was an experience. 210
As was the case with other jazz communities during the 1950s, exceptionally talented
players often developed their skills in local jazz scenes and made the move to New York City to
seek out national level professional opportunities. This was consistent with the practices of other
jazz communities in urban areas around the U.S. Curtis Fuller remembers that “once you were
the top call guy in a place like Detroit or, like Freddie in Indianapolis, it was time to go. That’s a
big reason why all of us, like Freddie, left where we were to go to New York.”
In Indianapolis, J.J. Johnson was among the first to make the move to New York during
the late 1940s, 211 followed a number of years later by Slide Hampton, and eventually the
Montgomery brothers. In addition to receiving support and encouragement from local mentors
within the jazz community, talented young players were also encouraged to relocate by national-
Indianapolis was a major stop for national touring groups during the 1940 and 50s,
particularly bands led by Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Jay McShann, and countless others as “it
212
was a hub for car, train, and air travel.” The constant stream of national-level talent that
performed and interacted with local jazz musicians was a source of great inspiration for not only
Hubbard, but also dozens of jazz musicians who hailed from Indianapolis.
In the case of Freddie Hubbard, it has been reported that he left Indianapolis for New
York after Miles Davis heard him during one of his trips to Indianapolis. However, this is
completely inaccurate. Larry Ridley maintains that an alto saxophonist named Leonard Benjamin
210
Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard,” 17.
211
Miles Davis with Quincy Troupe, Miles: the Autobiography (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990), 61-62.
212
Lissa May, “The Role of Crispus Attucks High School in the musical development of African American jazz
musicians in Indianapolis in the 1930s and 1940s,” Jazz Research Proceedings Yearbook (January 1, 2004), 5.
72
convinced Hubbard to go to New York City with him. Hubbard confirms this in an interview
with Thomas Erdmann, stating that Benjamin “offered me the opportunity to stay with him until
I got on my feet.” 213 The two traveled to New York City and, upon arriving, Hubbard made the
Unlike Donald Byrd, whose move to New York City was prompted by his military
service and stationing near West Point, Hubbard’s relocation was motivated solely by a desire to
find more lucrative performance opportunities. Where Byrd enjoyed the relative security of a
military paycheck and family housing, Hubbard had no source of secure income.
Arriving in New York City in 1958, it took Hubbard a considerable amount of time to
begin establishing a foothold on his career in the musician-saturated, highly competitive city.
After staying with Leonard Benjamin for several weeks, he moved in with trombonist Curtis
Fuller.
Slide sent Freddie up to live with me a little while when he first came to town. I had a
place and a lot of the fellas would stay with me. I was the guy who lived alone, so they
would always be sent to stay with me. 214
After a brief stay with Fuller, Hubbard moved to the Bronx and stayed with fellow
I was lucky at first, because I knew Slide Hampton. He had a brownstone where he lived
that was right behind the Apollo Theatre. I stayed with him for long time...going to jam
213
Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard,” 17.
214
Curtis Fuller, telephone interview, August 9, 2011.
73
sessions, playing any kind of gigs I could. I ate fish and chips every day. $.50 and that
was a meal. It was hard at first, but eventually my name got around. 215
Hubbard’s arrival in New York loosely coincided with the appearance of two other young
trumpeters who were also great admirers of the style of Clifford Brown—Lee Morgan and
Booker Little. Morgan, who had been a student of Brown’s in Philadelphia, came to New York
in 1956. Booker Little left Memphis, TN for the city shortly after Hubbard arrived in New
York. 216 The modern jazz trumpet community in New York was, like the rest of the jazz world,
still reeling from the death of Clifford Brown in 1956. Hubbard recalled that by the time he
arrived in New York, “if you didn’t play like Miles, or like Dizzy, or like Clifford, you weren’t
accepted.” Though young players were encouraged to find their own individual voices as
improvisers, one had to “go through some of (Brown’s) stuff to get there.” 217
While Hubbard was able to attend jam sessions in Harlem, he was amazed at the sheer
amount of musicians that were “on the scene.” Coming from Indianapolis, “working four days a
week and making about eighty-five dollars” and being a member of a small but thriving jazz
community, Hubbard was somewhat deflated by the initial challenges of breaking into the New
York jazz community. 218 He scrambled and was able to find playing work doing studio sessions,
jingles, 219 and other non-jazz performance opportunities. 220 These kinds of professional
opportunities were available to Hubbard because he was a proficient music-reader and was able
to adapt his personal style to fit a variety of playing situations. Hubbard’s association with bands
215
Hubbard, audio recording of master class, October, 2008.
216
Curtis Fuller, telephone interview, August 9, 2011.
217
Hubbard, audio recording of master class, October, 2008.
218
Tomkins, “Freddie Hubbard Speaks his Mind,” 21.
219
A colloquial term used to describe brief, incidental music that was recorded for television and radio
advertisements.
220
Tomkins, “Freddie Hubbard Speaks his Mind,” 22.
74
led by Quincy Jones was the primary factor that led to these opportunities being available to
him. 221
Hubbard was persistent and soon began to spend time with a wide range of musicians
who were already established jazz giants. He practiced with trumpeters Kenny Dorham and
Donald Byrd, saxophonists Eric Dolphy, John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, and trombonist and
Hubbard’s desire to seek out and learn directly from established masters of the music was
a trait that was certainly a result of the close-knit, mentor/mentee structure of the Indianapolis
jazz community from which he came. It is also notable that Hubbard sought the guidance and
influence of other instrumentalists as a means for finding more innovative approaches to modern
Hubbard’s first break in New York City came when he was hired by Sonny Rollins to
join his group in April of 1959. With Rollins, Hubbard was able to tour the nation and, at the
same time, take his first steps towards establishing himself as a new voice in modern jazz
trumpet style. Although employment with Rollins represented his first real stint of steady
employment as a jazz trumpeter, it was not his first taste of national-level exposure. Less then a
year after he arrived in New York City, Hubbard was beginning to be hired as a sideman on
221
Pat Griffith, “Freddie Hubbard: ‘Music is my Purpose,’” Down Beat 39 (December 7, 1972), 15.
75
Hubbard’s recorded output in New York City began with a live date with drummer Philly
Joe Jones in 1958. Although he had recorded with the Montgomery brothers in Indianapolis in
late 1957, his appearance on recording sessions with John Coltrane (December 26, 1958) 222,
bassist Paul Chambers (February 2, 1959), and Slide Hampton (December 1959) were important
first steps in establishing himself within the New York City jazz community. While these early
recording opportunities provided Hubbard with great exposure within the jazz world, he still
found it necessary to seek out studio work and performance opportunities in more commercially
oriented veins of music because he has not yet reached the point at which he could subsist as a
1960 marks the year when Hubbard’s work as a jazz trumpeter eclipsed his work in
commercial and studio circles. This shift from free-lance musician to full-time jazz musician
occurred because of two significant career opportunities. First, he became a member of Quincy
Jones’s big band, replacing Clark Terry 224; this afforded him the opportunity not only to record
and interact with other rising stars in the New York City jazz community, but also to tour
Hubbard’s musical training and work in studio circles were excellent means of
preparation for his employment in Jones’s band. While Hubbard’s energies had been spent
primarily on growing as a jazz trumpet soloist, studio work would have undoubtedly honed his
sight reading skills and sharpened his abilities as an ensemble player—two elements that are vital
222
All discography information in this chapter is taken from “Hub Tones - the complete Freddie Hubbard
Discography,” http://www.chetbaker.net/freddiehubbard.html, accessed on May 27, 2011.
223
Hubbard, audio recording of master class, October, 2008.
224
Fuller, telephone interview, August 9, 2011.
76
Likewise, Hubbard’s connection to the traditions of jazz trumpet style, particularly his
understanding of the style of Clifford Brown, made his inclusion in J.J. Johnson’s sextet a logical
one. It also represented a validation of sorts; proof that Hubbard’s skills as an improviser and
stylist had reached a level where an artist of Johnson’s stature would want to include him in his
band.
Hubbard’s recorded output in 1960 increased dramatically and he was an integral part of
recording sessions led by Eric Dolphy (April 1, 1960), Charlie Persip (April 2, 1960), Tina
Brooks (June 25, 1960), Hank Mobley (November 13, 1960), Curtis Fuller (December, 1960),
Kenny Drew (December 11, 1960), Benny Golson (December 14, 1960), and Ornette Coleman
Also of significance for Hubbard in 1960—Blue Note Records founder Alfred Lion
signed him to a recording contract. His first two recordings as a leader (June 19, 1960 and
November 6, 1960) resulted in his first two releases under his own name: Open Sesame (Blue
Note Records, BLP 4040) and Goin’ Up (Blue Note Records, BLP 4056).
Hubbard continued to be a top call sideman on recording sessions in both the modern jazz
tradition and, thanks to his association with John Coltrane and later Ornette Coleman, the
skills he acquired as a studio and commercial musician, made it possible for him to adapt his
Throughout 1961, Hubbard increasingly became a fixture on the national jazz scene by
way of his rise within the New York jazz community, culminating with his winning the Down
Beat critic’s “New Star” award for trumpet in 1961. 225 If 1960 had been the year that Hubbard’s
225
Gitler, “Focus on Freddie Hubbard,” 22.
77
career as a jazz trumpeter became solidified, the following year marks the point when Hubbard’s
place within the pantheon of jazz trumpet stylists would be assured. After concurrent stints with
J.J. Johnson and Quincy Jones, Hubbard was offered a position in Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers.
Freddie and I came into the Messengers at the same time, in 1961. We were both working
in Quincy’s band and we walked around the corner and joined Blakey. Lee Morgan had
left to go out on his own, but Art had Jimmy Merrit. We joined up with Wayne (Shorter)
and Cedar (Walton). 226
Hubbard remembers his time with Blakey fondly in an interview with Pat Griffith, stating
that his time with the Jazz Messengers “was a fun period in my life...Reggie Workman, Wayne
Shorter and myself were all the same age, so we developed together. I worked with Art for two-
By 1961 Blakey’s group had become one of the most successful ensembles in modern
jazz and Hubbard’s membership in the organization is highly significant for several reasons.
First, it placed Hubbard within the same historical category as trumpeters Clifford Brown, Kenny
Dorham, Donald Byrd, Blue Mitchell, and Lee Morgan. Second, Blakey’s ensemble had become
an important “finishing school” of sorts and members usually left the group after several years to
start successful solo careers. Third, it reaffirmed Hubbard’s primary aesthetic alliance of the
1960s, as his career would become increasingly associated with modern jazz and post-bop, rather
than with the Avant-Garde. Though Hubbard would appear on significant free-jazz recordings
during the 1960s (Out to Lunch with Eric Dolphy and Ascension with John Coltrane) the bulk of
226
Fuller, telephone interview, August 9, 2011.
227
Griffith, “Freddie Hubbard,” 15.
78
recorded output, live performances, and musical associations would be within the modern jazz
subgenre.
influenced Hubbard. After the early influence of Chet Baker, whose soft, subdued tone appealed
to the young Hubbard, Clifford Brown would his primary trumpet influence. Since Hubbard did
not meet or hear Brown live, much less form a personal bond with him in the way the Lee
Morgan did, Brown’s influence upon Hubbard would have come from recordings. During
Hubbard’s time in Indianapolis, particularly his work with the Jazz Contemporaries, Brown’s
When he arrived in New York City, Hubbard was still in a stage of formative
development. He was fortunate to be able to interact on a regular basis with the musicians who
While a member of the Jazz Contemporaries in Indianapolis, Hubbard and his young
band mates transcribed recordings of the Clifford Brown-Max Roach quintet and the Horace
Silver quintet. 228 Silver’s trumpeter at the time, Kenny Dorham, would have a much more direct
impact on Hubbard once he moved to New York City. Hubbard frequently practiced with
Dorham, though it is certain that these mutual practice sessions resembled lessons in the early
stages since Dorham was a veteran modern jazz trumpeter. 229 Hubbard’s friendship with Dorham
228
Ridley, telephone interview, September 21, 2011.
229
Though underrepresented in historical studies of jazz trumpet style, Dorham was among the first generation of
modern jazz trumpeters to follow Dizzy Gillespie. He replaced Miles Davis in Charlie Parker’s quintet in 1948, was
79
seemed to have the most significant impact on his approach to the trumpet within the modern
jazz style.
I also practiced with Kenny Dorham. Kenny Dorham taught me a lot. Like playing
intervals inside the chords. Most trumpet players will try to play inside the chords, but
Kenny showed me a lot about playing intervals inside the chords. 230
Dorham’s approach to jazz trumpet style was informed both by his time as a member of
KD (Kenny Dorham) was a great trumpeter, but he was also a hell of a tenor saxophonist.
He sounded very much like Sonny Rollins. And when he played the trumpet you could
really hear all of those saxophone things in his playing: the way he played chords, his
phrasing, all of that stuff. 231
Dorham helped Hubbard bridge the gap between the trumpet-specific influence of
Clifford Brown and the larger world of saxophone style within the modern jazz idiom.
Another trumpeter with whom Hubbard spent one-on-one time was Donald Byrd. Six
years his senior, Byrd was enjoying a busy career as a bandleader and recording artist when
Hubbard arrived in New York City. 232 Byrd imparted his sense of phrasing upon the younger
a member of both the Billy Eckstine band and Dizzy Gillespie’s big band along with Davis and Fats Navarro, and
was a charter member of Horace Silver’s quintet.
230
Hubbard audio recording of master class, October, 2008.
231
Curtis Fuller, telephone interview, August 9, 2011.
232
Jimmy Owens, telephone interview, February 20, 2010. Owens states that, in the late 1950s and early 1960s,
Byrd was “always on his way to gig, a rehearsal, or a recording session.”
233
Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard,” 17.
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Finally, Hubbard was keenly aware of the style of Miles Davis and worked consciously
234
to incorporate elements of Davis’s playing into his own style. While Davis’s influence upon
Hubbard during these formative years was small, it is notable because it speaks to Hubbard’s
understanding of the hierarchy that existed on the national jazz scene. By the time Hubbard
arrived in New York City Davis was arguably the most visible and financially successful jazz
musician of the day. Davis’s regular engagements at New York’s Café Bohemia and Village
Vanguard with his sextet (which included Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane, Paul Chambers,
Jimmy Cobb, and Bill Evans) were consistently sold out. If Clifford Brown represented the
musical standard by which Hubbard and other jazz trumpeters measured themselves, Davis’s
Hubbard’s practice sessions with saxophonists Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane, and Eric
Dolphy were perhaps more instrumental in shaping Hubbard’s improvisational voice than any
other factor. It was Hubbard’s desire to assimilate the performance practice of modern jazz
saxophonists that is one of the defining elements of Hubbard’s style and approach to the trumpet.
In addition to the impact of saxophonists on his approach to the trumpet itself, his time with
Rollins, Dolphy, and Coltrane expanded his harmonic and melodic vocabulary, particularly his
time with Coltrane. Coltrane’s use of Nicholas Slominsky’s scale thesaurus as well as his
utilization of piano and harp technique books as resources for technical study were imparted
upon Hubbard. Likewise, Eric Dolphy and Hubbard practiced extensively from technical books
234
Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard,” 19.
235
Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard,” 17-18.
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Through his exposure to the harmonic language of these innovators, Hubbard began to
experiment with what he describes as techniques for changing his “embouchure to match style
the position of the mouthpiece on the lips in order to perform more efficiently. Some developing
players are advised to undergo such a change because their initial mouthpiece placement was
change. Embouchure changes can be quite difficult to complete since the muscles of the face
have usually become accustomed to performing with the mouthpiece in its original location, to
say nothing of the fact that the player’s sensations of mouthpiece placement and embouchure
In light of this, Hubbard’s own words may be misleading to some readers who are
reveal that his mouthpiece placement remained consistent throughout his documented career,
suggesting that his interaction with saxophonists caused him not to undergo a mouthpiece
placement change in the traditional sense. Rather, Hubbard experimented with different types of
embouchure movements and conscious manipulations of the aperture of the embouchure in order
Also of note during these formative stages in New York City is Hubbard’s relationship
with Max Roach. Hubbard spent time with drummer and former Clifford Brown colleague Max
236
Erdmann, “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard,” 17.
237
In my teaching I liken this change of mouthpiece placement to an attempt to teach a right-handed individual to
write using his or her left hand.
82
238
Roach, who used to welcome Hubbard into his home to listen to, talk about, and play music.
With Roach, Hubbard worked on developing his ability to improvise clearly and coherently at
extremely fast tempi. 239 Roach’s delicate cymbal touch, something that Clifford Brown found so
appealing, made a favorable impression on Hubbard. In fact several years later, during the mid
1960s, Hubbard would become a member of Roach’s group after leaving Art Blakey’s Jazz
Messengers.
2.3.5 Conclusions
Freddie Hubbard’s success as a modern jazz trumpeter was the result of the confluence of
events and experiences that occurred in his early life as well as his educational experiences,
grounding in modern jazz harmony and improvisational practices as well as the early
professional experiences necessary for him to succeed upon his arrival in New York City.
Hubbard’s exposure to the fundamentals of traditional trumpet methods under the tutelege of
Max Woodbury, as well as his early experiments with other brass instruments, helped to shape
His early professional experiences in commercial and studio work, borne out of financial
necessity, helped prepare Hubbard for the lucrative recording career he would enjoy within both
the modern jazz and free jazz idioms. Hubbard’s membership in Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers is
238
Tomkins, “Freddie Hubbard Speaks his Mind,” 22.
239
Griffith, “Freddie Hubbard,” 15.
83
defining, as is his appearance on dozens of modern jazz recordings during the 1960s as well as
His use of Clifford Brown as a model during his formative years prepared him to be
accepted by other jazz trumpeters upon his arrival in New York City. But it was his interactions
and practice sessions with a wide variety of other instrumentalists within the modern jazz idiom,
particularly saxophonists, that would help define his personal approach to modern jazz trumpet
style.
Excursions into jazz-fusion idioms, a reentry into commercial and studio work, and with it a
highly lucrative career followed in the 1970s. After realigning his aesthetic choices and
embracing modern jazz performance again in the 1980s and 90s, Hubbard suffered a debilitating
embouchure injury in 1992 from which he struggled to recover until his death in 2009. Though
his career spanned nearly five decades, his most significant contributions to jazz trumpet style
are found on his modern jazz recordings, both as a sideman and as a leader. Hubbard, who died
in 2009 at the age of 70, remains one of the most historically significant and consistently
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3.0 COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
David Baker’s framework for the examination of jazz style forms the foundation for my
analysis of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard’s improvisational voices. I couple this with an
undertaken in consultation with my advisor, Dr. Nathan Davis. Standard Western music notation
is used for the majority of this analysis because the musical information under examination lends
itself most easily to this type of notation. I have chosen to stay close to this method of illustrating
musical elements because modern jazz is an improvisational style that uses functional, tonal
harmony and rhythmic elements 240 that are most easily shown in this manner. In order to more
fully comprehend the ways in which Clifford Brown’s improvisational style may have influenced
Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard, an intensive examination of the modern jazz trumpet styles
of all three of these musicians has been undertaken. To accomplish this, representative solos by
The original transcriptions that I have created to conduct the comparative analysis are the
result of a process that I have used to assimilate the styles of these three players into my own
240
Though rhythmic elements are, at times, loosely represented by Western notation,
241
Like the majority of jazz musicians throughout history, I have used this method to assimilate elements of the
styles of dozens of players into my own improvisational vocabulary.
85
information that goes beyond the pitches, approximate rhythms, and chord changes. As such, I
Using the recording, I first learned to perform each recorded solo on the B-flat trumpet,
taking care to emulate all performance elements including articulation, accents and vibrato to
make my own performance sound as close to the original as possible. Second, the rhythmic and
melodic information was transferred into Western notation using Sibelius 6.2.8. Next, the
performance elements such as articulation, accents, and vibrato were notated (for a complete
table of diacritical and notation markings used in this study see Appendix C). Finally, the
notation of these performance elements was checked for accuracy using software 242 that slows
the speed of the recording down without altering the pitch, thereby allowing me to examine
isolated moments in critical detail. While it is possible to loosely recreate the recorded solos
using the completed transcriptions, along with the recording as a guide, the purpose of these
Each transcription appears as if written for the B-flat trumpet in order to most accurately
depict performance elements related to valve combinations 243 and register breaks. 244 Above the
notated transcriptions, chord symbols 245 are presented that represent the harmonic context of the
improvisational vehicle. The chord changes are taken from the standard progressions used for
each of these improvisational vehicles. Key signatures appear in the complete transcriptions
(found in Appendix A) that represent the accepted key center of the composition. However, in
the figures extracted from the transcriptions that appear in chapter 3, the key signature has been
242
The software I have used is Transcribe! and may be purchased on the internet at http://www.seventhstring.com/
243
The B-flat trumpet uses three piston valves as the mechanism for achieving chromatic performance. The
combinations of depresses valves are commonly called “fingerings.” For a complete fingering chart for the B-flat
trumpet, see Appendix B.
244
See section 3.1.3.
245
Nomenclature used to notate the chord changes of an improvisational vehicle.
86
omitted and accidentals have been used. Further, in both the full transcriptions and in the figures,
accidentals have been chosen that assist in readability, rather than using double-sharps and
double-flats though at times these would be considered theoretically correct. 246 Formal sections
of the improvisational vehicle have been notated in the complete transcriptions using a double
barline to assist in analyzing phrasing tendencies. Finally, tables that specifically examine
phrasing are presented in section 3.4 and serve as another lens through which to view phrase-
related elements.
The performance elements under analysis are organized into categories with some
containing multiple subcategories. Representative examples will be presented within the body of
the analysis using excerpts from the aforementioned transcriptions. In addition, a glossary of
specialist terminology may be found in Appendix B, a table of diacritical and notational marks in
Appendix C, a table of valve combinations for the B-flat trumpet in Appendix D, a legend of
chord symbols in Appendix E, and samples of representative exercises and excerpts from the
A jazz trumpet player’s personal approach to articulation is one of the most individual
elements of his or her style. The unique way in which a jazz trumpeter uses varying articulation
devices. This includes adherence to the prevailing jazz trumpet articulation model (see Figs. 3.1-
246
The use of enharmonic equivalents in jazz notation is an accepted practice as jazz musicians often speak of chord
extensions using numerical enharmonic equivalents. For example, the sharp-5 and flat-13 may be used
interchangeably in performance related discussions.
87
16), variations of the prevailing model (see Figs. 3.17-23), the use of successively tongued
pitches (see Figs. 3.24-34), the use of slurred versus tongued pitches in material that crosses
register breaks on the B-flat trumpet (see Figs. 3.36-46), and the utilization of ghost notes 247 (see
Figs. 3.47-53). By examining these elements in comparative detail, it is possible to determine the
degree to which Donald Byrd and Freddie Hubbard were influenced by Clifford Brown’s
The essence of jazz trumpet style is defined by articulation as a means for expressing
time-feel, combined with a negotiation of the physical limitations placed on the improviser by
the trumpet itself. Simply put, when and how a trumpet player tongues is a significant factor that
defines his or her personal style. Nowhere is this more important or evident than when a
trumpeter is playing eighth-note-based lines. 249 The prevailing “model” used by jazz trumpet
247
Notes that are deemphasized to the point of being barely audible are called ghost notes.
248 The unique way a jazz trumpeter combines varying articulation devices.
249
Eighth-note-based lines are lines that are constructed using eighth-notes as the primary foundation. These will
be discussed in greater detail in section 3.2. The term “based” is included in my definition of this musical element
because it is possible to improvise lines using sixteenth-notes (sometimes called “double-time” lines), thirty-second-
notes, etc. These instances are rare, though they can occur in modern jazz. .
250
In this case, the prevailing jazz trumpet articulation model represents the standard means by which jazz
trumpeters combine tongued and slurred pitches when performing eighth-notes in succession.
88
Note that the downbeats (with the exception of the starting pitch) are not tongued. The
eighth notes are also performed with a relatively equal time value, or in an even rhythmic
manner at medium to bright tempos. 251 This gives this articulation model a smooth, light swing
feel. 252
At medium tempos and below, jazz trumpeters often tongue more frequently when
performing eighth-note-based lines, but the overall character of the improvised material remains
smooth with off beats accented. An example of this is found in Fig. 3.2.
This performance practice among modern jazz trumpeters is in keeping with the general
principles of bebop/modern jazz stylists from the 1940s through today. 253
While it is common to find instances where modern jazz trumpeters use the above
articulation model found in Figure 3.2, some mixing of the articulation styles from Figures 3.1
and 3.2 in common. It is rare that trumpeters in the modern jazz tradition tongue every pitch
within eighth-note-based lines, primarily because of the exceptionally high degree of technical
proficiency in tongue control that the player must possess to tongue so frequently. 254 Likewise,
251
For the purposes of this study, metronome marking of 200 beats per minute (bpm) or greater.
252
McNeil, The Art of Jazz Trumpet: Complete Edition, 29. McNeil correctly asserts that eighth notes in the modern
jazz tradition are performed in an even manner “with accents on the upbeats.”
253
Eddie Meadows, Bebop to Cool: Context, Ideology, and Identity (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003), 128.
254
In point of fact, developing jazz trumpet players often begin by attempting to tongue every pitch, which results in
a choppy, highly detached style that is not stylistically authentic.
89
exclusive use of slurred pitches is equally rare as slurred pitches lack rhythmic definition and a
connection to musical time. Thus, the articulation model shown in Fig. 3.1 represents the best
option for both physically efficient trumpet playing and constructing lines with rhythmic
definition.
However, cases where a player breaks with this method of articulation exist and are
usually determined by the physical characteristics of the trumpet. Most notable are larger leaps.
Intervals larger than an ascending major third tend to be tongued, even if this means
tonguing a metric accent or downbeat within an eighth-note line. 255 Coordination of tongue
position 256 and air stream 257 over larger intervals is quite challenging. Tonguing a large interval
usually results in faster air speed, allowing the desired interval to be executed much easier by the
trumpeter.
Figure 3.3 Tonguing of large intervals. Clifford Brown, "Flossie Lou," measures 25-26. 258
In a few cases Brown adheres strictly to the prevailing jazz trumpet articulation model as
seen in Figure 3.1, although there are a number of lines where this model—tongued upbeats and
255
McNeil, The Art of Jazz Trumpet, 39.
256
The height of the back, or dorsal, of the tongue within the oral cavity during trumpet performance. The tongue is
raised and lower to assist in register changes.
257
Air stream refers to the air blown through the oral cavity, across the pursed lips that form the embouchure, and
into the trumpet.
90
slurred downbeats within eighth-note-based lines—informs Brown’s performance (see Figs. 3.4-
6). When Brown does use this method of articulation it is most often for short periods of musical
time, perhaps for only one or two measures. In Figs. 3.4-6, Brown’s improvised passages are
presented in the top staff, while the aforementioned jazz trumpet articulation model (as seen in
Fig. 3.1) is presented below for reference. The model is meant to show the standard combination
of slurred and tongued pitches. Readers should compare the articulation markings between the
top staff (Brown, Byrd, or Hubbard’s original improvised material) and the bottom staff. The
bottom staff represents how the line would have been articulated had Brown, Byrd, or Hubbard
Figure 3.4 Adherence to prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Clifford Brown, "Daahoud,"
measures 6-7.
Figure 3.5 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Clifford Brown, “Gertrude’s
91
Figure 3.6 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
measures 19-20.
On early and later recordings Donald Byrd adheres more strictly to the prevailing jazz
trumpet articulation model than Brown. Within eighth-note-based lines Byrd utilizes this
articulation model regularly (see Figs 3.7-8). This is consistent with Byrd’s affinity for the style
of Fats Navarro and Thad Jones, who used this technique more systematically and with less
Figure 3.7 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,”
measure 48-52.
92
Figure 3.8 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be
While it is true that Byrd, like Brown, varies this model often (see Fig. 3.8), an important
difference should be noted. Where Brown’s variations involve tonguing more notes, Byrd’s
involve slurring more notes. This seemingly small difference produces two divergent sounds,
with Brown’s being somewhat more detached and rhythmically emphatic and Byrd’s being much
smoother and less aggressive. While short, one to two bar occurrences of general adherence to
this model would suggest that this is a commonality between Brown and Byrd, findings suggest
otherwise. Byrd was given to using the prevailing jazz trumpet articulation model for much
greater lengths of musical time, sometimes for four or more measures. No examples of this
length were observed in the improvised solos of Brown. Fig. 3.9-10 show extended passages
93
Figure 3.9 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think
Figure 3.10 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old
94
In the earliest recorded solo by Freddie Hubbard in this study he does not make use of the
model shown in Fig. 3.1, suggesting that the influence of Clifford Brown upon his own
articulation palette was of prime importance. Fig. 3.11 illustrates this point quite clearly and it
can be readily seen that Hubbard prefers to tongue the majority of his eighth-note-based lines
Figure 3.11 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s
95
However, merely one year later, in 1958, Freddie Hubbard makes moderate use of the
prevailing jazz articulation model, particularly at faster tempos, though Brown’s influence is still
heard and seen in Figs. 3.12-13 as Hubbard often uses other articulation groupings within the
same solos.
Figure 3.12 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s
Bounce,” measures 20-24.
96
Figure 3.13 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s
Interestingly, an examination of Hubbard’s recordings from late 1959 through the end of
the date range of this study shows many more lines where he adheres more strictly to the
standard jazz trumpet articulation model (see Fig. 3.1) when performing eighth-note-based lines,
even at slower tempi when straying away from this model would be less technically demanding,
as in Figs. 3.14-16.
97
Figure 3.14 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your
98
Figure 3.15 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,”
measures 34-44.
99
Figure 3.16 Adherence to the prevailing model for jazz trumpet articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,”
measures 14-24.
100
Also, as can be seen in Figures 3.14-16, Hubbard like Byrd used the prevailing model for
jazz trumpet articulation for longer periods of musical time, rather than for short bursts as did
Brown. This finding suggests that though Brown’s influence remains in the form of the mixing
of tongued and slurred pitches within eighth-note-based lines, Hubbard’s practice sessions with
trumpeters Kenny Dorham and, to a much greater extent, Donald Byrd caused him to reevaluate
his personal articulation palette and adopt a smoother, more slur-based approach. Further, the
influence of saxophonists John Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, and Sonny Rollins would also have been
In addition to utilizing the prevailing jazz trumpet articulation model to varying degrees,
all of these players varied this model during the course of performance in recurring ways.
Brown’s variation of this model is highly systematic and it is possible to define it as a technique
in its own right. What I have chosen to call variation “A” (see Fig. 3.17) is constructed as
follows, regardless of the intervals present within the improvised eighth-note line:
259
Don Aliquo, telephone conversation. Saxophonists in the modern jazz idiom tend to slur much more often than
they tongue pitches. Overuse of the tongue in articulating eighth-note-based lines on the saxophone produces a
detached, “excessively reedy” sound that is non-idiomatic to performance practice.
101
Note that the first and last eighth notes of each four-note grouping are tongued, while the
second and third are slurred. Brown uses both legato and staccato attacks when tonguing the first
and fourth note of each group, often mixing the two together to create interesting articulation
Figure 3.18 Articulation variation “A.” Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 22-23.
Figure 3.19 Articulation variation “A.” Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 45-48.
102
Brown makes systematic and highly frequent use of this variation throughout the solos
examined, particularly at tempos greater than 200 beats per minute. Examples of this variation
are rare in solos that are slower than 200 beats per minute as Brown prefers to tongue many
In early recordings of Donald Byrd’s improvised solos variation “A” is observed only
occasionally, though when employed Byrd favors using legato attacks to tongue the first and
fourth pitch of each four-note grouping, rarely using staccato attacks. Like Brown, Byrd uses this
variation in conjunction with other, less systematized variations of the prevailing model for jazz
trumpet articulation model (see Fig. 3.1). However, since Byrd uses the aforementioned model
much more frequently these variations are not as noticeable from a sonic standpoint because their
legato nature does not contrast with Byrd’s overall approach to eighth-note articulation (see Fig.
3.20).
Figure 3.20 Articulation variation “A.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 4.
Byrd uses these variations sparingly, choosing instead to stay close to the standard jazz
Later recordings of Byrd’s improvisations from within the date range of this study reveal
even less occurrences of variation “A,” further suggesting that Byrd was drawn to a more legato,
103
Given his acknowledgement of Brown’s influence upon his stylistic development during
his early years, it is no surprise to find many instances where Freddie Hubbard makes use of
variation “A.” For example, in his solo on “Billie’s Bounce,” Hubbard makes use of this
Figure 3.21 Articulation variation “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 13-17.
Other brief examples may be found as well, as can be seen in Fig. 3.22.
Figure 3.22 Articulation variation “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 18.
104
In keeping with other articulation elements examined in this study, examples of variation
“A” are fewer in number and frequency in recordings made by Hubbard after 1959. When
Hubbard does utilize this method of articulation he favors a legato attack to tongue the first and
fourth eighth notes of each group, giving the passage a smooth sound (see Fig. 3.23). This is
further evidence that Hubbard was influenced by other modern jazz trumpeters upon his arrival
Figure 3.23 Articulation variation “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 16.
260
A trumpet player within the modern jazz idiom will usually avoid lip slurs during
performance, even if this means tonguing a metric accent within an eighth-note line. Usually
these cases involve the avoidance of ascending lip slurs, though descending lip slurs are
sometimes avoided. Not only does the lip slur present an increased physical challenge to the
player, it robs eighth-note-based lines of rhythmic definition and clarity of time-feel. In the
260
Slurs that are performed by connecting two different pitches that use the same valve-combination are called lip
slurs. For a complete table of valve combinations for the B-flat trumpet refer to Appendix D.
105
following excerpt (Fig. 3.24), we might expect Brown to adhere to the standard jazz trumpet
articulation model:
Figure 3.24 Adapted by the author from a Clifford Brown passages from “Flossie Lou” (alternate take 2) measure 2.
In practice, Brown actually avoids using the prevailing model for jazz trumpet
articulation in this case because of successive pitches that occur on the same valve combinations
Figure 3.25 Successively tongued eighth-notes. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measure 2.
As one would expect, Brown frequently tongues successive eighth notes that occur on the
same valve combination. What is more notable, however, is the fact that Brown tongues
successive pitches within eighth-note-based lines on a regular basis, and at a variety of tempi
regardless of the valve combinations used. The overwhelming majority of these attacks are
legato, though Brown uses staccato attacks as a way to create variety and interest (see Fig. 3.26-
27).
106
Figure 3.26 Successively tongued eighth notes. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Emarcy) measures 3-4.
Figure 3.27 Successively tongued eighth notes. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 59-62.
Clifford Brown’s use of successively tongued pitches is notable not only because of the
highly creative manner in which he mixes legato and staccato attacks to create variety, but also
because of the high degree of skill needed to execute such articulations. Trumpet players,
regardless of their stylistic preferences, “tend to play more efficiently” when slurring, and the
extensive use of tongued pitches in succession can create accuracy and endurance issues
throughout the course of a performance. 261 Brown possessed an incredible ability to sustain
successively tongued pitches for long periods of time, due in large part to his diligent practice of
the material contained in Arban’s method and his assimilation of Nineteenth and early Twentieth
century cornet style. It is this utilization of many legato attacks, with occasional staccato attacks
that gives his sound one of its most defining characteristics and has led players and scholars alike
to use adjectives such as “emphatic,” “clean,” “pronounced,” and “direct,” when discussing
Brown.
261
Laurie Frink and John McNeil, Flexus: Trumpet Calisthenics for the Modern Improviser (Brooklyn, NY:
Omnitone Press, 2003), 6-7.
107
Donald Byrd tongued pitches in succession much less frequently than Clifford Brown,
preferring instead to mix slurred and tongued pitches in accordance with the prevailing jazz
trumpet articulation model. However, some instances where Byrd tongues pitches in succession
may be found and they are consistent with the principles laid out in Figure 3.25. Byrd’s
preference for a smoother approach to articulation that avoided frequent tonguing is a reflection
of both his exposure to the long tone studies from Max Schlossberg’s method, the flow studies
found in Herbert L. Clarke’s book, and a diverse set of musical influences. The trend among
Detroit wind players of Byrd’s generation to study the improvisatory styles of modern jazz piano
players is at work here, and Byrd’s own personal attempts to assimilate this style would have
necessitated an approach that was more even and smooth, rather than detached and rhythmically
Figure 3.28 Successively tongued eighth notes. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 9-10.
Figure 3.29 Successively tongued eighth notes. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,” measure 17.
108
The fact that these preceding examples are brief reflects Byrd’s relationship to this facet
of his articulation palette. Specifically, that Byrd chose to tongue eighth-notes repeatedly for
only brief periods of musical time is yet another distinction that may be drawn between the styles
pitches. This is consistent with Hubbard’s affinity for Brown’s style during his formative years.
Like Brown, Hubbard tongued many eighth notes in succession, slurring occasionally, as can be
Figure 3.30 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 1-6.
262
1957-1958
109
Figure 3.31 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 27-31.
Like Hubbard’s approach to other articulation elements under study, fewer cases of
successively tongued pitches are heard on recordings after 1959. Those that occur are similar to
those heard in the playing of Donald Byrd in that Hubbard favors legato attacks over staccato
and tends to slur more often than Clifford Brown. However, one notable exception to this is
found with regard to tempo. In Hubbard’s solo on “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” recorded in
1962, a large amount of successively tongued eighth notes are heard. This tune is performed at a
tempo of approximately 160 beats per minute. The tempo is slow enough to allow for the
tonguing of many eighth notes in succession with little technical or physical difficulty. Hubbard
capitalizes on this by choosing to tongue a high number of eighth notes using a legato attack (see
Fig. 3.32-33). This gives his lines a similar feel to Clifford Brown’s at times, though his playing
110
Figure 3.32 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 10-
11.
Figure 3.33 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 23-
26.
Hubbard makes occasional use of successively tongued pitches at tempos faster than 200
beats per minute as can be seen in Fig. 3.34. This suggests that much of Brown’s influence
remained in Hubbard’s playing but was mediated by the inclusion of elements from trumpeters
Figure 3.34 Successively tongued eighth notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 52.
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3.1.4 Slurred and tongued pitches in lines that cross register breaks
While no real demarcation delineates the lower, middle, and upper registers on a B-flat
trumpet, players can feel certain “breaks” where a distinct change in air speed is necessary to
execute pitches. Air speed is controlled through the coordination of air volume (the amount of air
being blown from the lungs), tongue position (elevating the tongue’s dorsal shrinks the size of
the oral cavity, assisting in producing faster air speeds and higher pitches), and lip tension
(increasing lip tension closes the embouchures opening—or aperture—further increasing air
speed). Although the break between the low and middle registers is difficult to feel because the
required increase in air speed is very slight, the break between the middle and upper registers is
quite perceptible because the increase in air speed needed to generate pitches in the upper
register is much greater. For example, the half step between written G-sharp above the treble
staff and A above the treble staff feels much larger than a half-step 263 and most players, in the
course of an improvisation, will tongue this interval in order to execute it cleanly and with
precision—even if this means breaking with the prevailing jazz trumpet articulation model.
The registers of the trumpet do not exist in isolation and the manner in which a jazz
trumpeter creates musical ideas that encompass multiple registers is an element of personal style,
as well as a reflection of the performer’s training and mastery of the instrument. When a player
chooses to slur over the break between middle and upper registers in ascending lines, it is a direct
reflection of his or her command over the mechanics of the instrument during improvisation.
263
Laurie Frink and John McNeil, Flexus: Trumpet Calisthenics for the Modern Improviser, 72.
112
Figure 3.35 Register breaks on the B-flat trumpet.
Lower Register
264
The trumpet’s lower register begins with written F-sharp below the treble staff and
extends to written B-natural below the treble staff because it represents a distinct feeling of
lessened resistance on the part of the player. 265 Trumpeters often avoid improvising in the lower
register for extended periods of time because the partials 266 are difficult to negotiate and can
Middle Register
The trumpet’s middle register is thought to be between written “C” below the treble staff
to written “G sharp” above the treble staff because the amount of resistance felt is consistently
moderate. This is the most comfortable register of the instrument and is subsequently the one
264
This is actually the lowest note that may be performed on the trumpet as it is designed. While it is possible to
extend the trumpets range below this pitch into what is known as the pedal register, the extreme difficulty inherent
in playing lower than the instrument is designed to play makes this register unfavorable for improvisation. The pedal
register is used by many players and pedagogues as a register in which to perform exercises designed to strengthen
the embouchure’s working parts and improve physical coordination. However, it’s use as a performance register in
jazz is quite rare.
265
Resistance may be understood as the perception of physical difficulty in blowing air through the trumpet. As a
player ascends it becomes physically more demanding to play the trumpet because of the shrinking of the
embouchure’s aperture and the increase in lip tension. Conversely, as a player descends through the middle and
lower registers of the horn, the feeling of resistance lessens and the perception is one of less difficulty in blowing air
through the trumpet.
266
On a B-flat trumpet the intervals between each pitch on a valve combination are called partials.
113
most favored by modern jazz trumpeters. It is also the largest of these perceived registers,
providing ample “space” for the trumpeter to improvise relatively uninhibited by the instrument
itself.
Upper Register
The trumpet’s upper register is thought to begin at written “A” above the treble staff
because it represents a distinct feeling of added resistance and requires a dramatic increase in air
speed on the part of the player. Also, “’A’ above the staff is significantly different in timbre...and
generally feels like the beginning of the upper register.” 267 Improvisation in this register is
common, often for extended periods of musical time, though musical ideas that encompass the
lower limits of this register are most often combined with the upper limits of the middle register.
Further, single note, or dramatic passages that are not made up of lines, are often found in the
Altissimo Register
The trumpet’s altissimo register is thought to begin at written “E flat” above the treble
staff. While there is no finite upper limit to the trumpet’s range, the use of pitches in this register
is quite rare and usually occurs at moments of high musical tension and dramatic content. The
feeling of resistance in this register is exceptionally high because of the air speed needed is
substantial. Also, performance of pitches at this “height” requires a great deal of embouchure
strength to produce the required amount of lip tension. Paradoxically, playing in the trumpet’s
267
Frink and McNeil, Flexus, 72.
114
altissimo register also requires a relaxed throat and abdominal wall in order to facilitate efficient
expulsion of large amounts of air. Excess tension in the body (other than the necessary structural
tension of the embouchure and facial muscles) makes performance in the altissimo register
In keeping with Brown’s highly tongued style and propensity for virtuosic articulation
practices, the solos analyzed reveal very few cases where Brown slurs over the break between
the middle and upper registers of the trumpet when ascending. Brown often favors chordal
material 268 when crossing the break between the middle and upper registers, 269 though occasional
instances where he uses scalar shapes to ascend from middle to upper register can be found. In
most cases, whether negotiating this break via scalar 270 or chordal material, Brown most often
tongues the pitch immediately before and after the register break using a staccato attack (see Fig.
3.36-38).
Figure 3.36 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 1-2.
268
Chordal material refers to improvised material that consists primarily of ascending or descending minor or major
thirds, as in the performance and construction of arppegiated chords. This type of material is difficult to execute on
the trumpet because leaps of a minor third or greater require increased coordination of “air speed, tongue placement,
and lip tension.” Laurie Frink and John McNeil, 90.
269
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011. Yet another manifestation of Brown’s utilization of Arban, Brown
practiced the arpeggio and chordal studies found in Arban’s method religiously and went so far as to advise young
players such as Lee Morgan and Don Cherry to spend considerable time and energy perfecting these drills.
270
Scalar material refers to improvised material that consists primarily of ascending or descending minor and major
seconds, as in the performance and construction of scales. This type of material is easily executed on the trumpet
because it allows for the gradual crossing of register breaks.
115
Figure 3.37 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 24-25.
Figure 3.38 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measure 27.
In a few cases Brown ascends scale wise from the middle to the upper register. These are
notable because the register transitions are tongued, often with staccato articulation, such as the
Figure 3.39 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 39-40.
116
Unlike Brown, much of Donald Byrd’s improvised material avoids ascending across the
break from middle to upper register. Instead Byrd chooses to stay between the lower and upper-
middle registers. When lines do include the upper register they most often begin there and
descend through the register break. On the rare occasions when Byrd’s lines do ascend across the
break from middle to upper register, he tends to slur them. This is consistent with his smooth,
heavily slurred approach. Again, Byrd’s studies with orchestral trumpeters in Detroit and his
work in Schlossberg and Clarke provided him with the fundamental foundation needed to
execute such passages in a legato, slur-based manner. Examples of this may be found in both his
Figure 3.40 Crossing register break using a slur. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measure 19-20.
Lines that include tonguing across the break from middle to upper register are most often
117
Figure 3.41 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,”
measures 12-13.
Freddie Hubbard’s early recorded improvisations reveal that he shared tendencies similar
to Clifford Brown when tonguing across the break between middle and upper registers. This is
consistent with Brown’s influence on Hubbard’s early style and can be seen in Figs. 3.42-43.
Figure 3.42 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,”
measures 27-28.
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Figure 3.43 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,”
measures 17-18.
Recordings of Hubbard’s solos after 1959 show that he employed both tongued and
slurred eighth notes in material that crosses the break between the middle and upper registers
Figure 3.44 Crossing register break using staccato and legato articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,”
measures 14-15.
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Figure 3.45 Crossing register break using staccato articulation. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 40.
Figure 3.46 Crossing register break using slurred and legato articulated pitches. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,”
measures 48-51.
These examples show that Hubbard retained much of the influence of Clifford Brown in
his own approach to negotiating the break between the trumpet’s middle and upper register.
However, the presence of slurred pitches in lines that cross register breaks is a direct reflection of
the influence of trumpeters Byrd and Kenny Dorham as well as saxophonists Coltrane, Dolphy,
and Rollins.
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3.1.5 Utilization of “ghost” notes
Modern jazz trumpet players often deemphasize pitches within eighth-note-based lines so
greatly that some are barely audible. This adds further to the rhythmic interest that varied
articulation and accents create. These deemphasized notes are called ghost notes, or are said to
be ghosted.
Brown used ghost notes frequently, adding greatly to his highly accented style. This
element of his playing may be the result of his affinity for the jazz trumpet style of Clark Terry,
who mastered the technique and used ghost notes ubiquitously. Brown’s admiration for the style
of Charlie Parker may be at work here as well, as Parker was known to use ghost notes quite
often.
Brown deemphasizes, or ghosts, pitches that are on upbeats (although occasionally down
beats are treated to this as well) and are in the trumpet’s middle and lower registers, particularly
121
Figure 3.48 Use of ghost notes. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 25-27.
Figure 3.49 Use of ghost notes. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 30-31.
Early recordings of Donald Byrd show a similar utilization of ghost notes, though Byrd
does not perform them as frequently as Brown. Like Clifford Brown, Byrd ghosts upbeats within
Figure 3.50 Use of ghost notes. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 47.
The relatively small amount of ghost notes observed in the playing of Donald Byrd may
be attributed to his, and other Detroiters, affinity for the styles of modern jazz pianists, whose
122
Freddie Hubbard uses ghost notes in the same manner as Brown and Byrd, particularly in
Figure 3.51 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 17-18.
Figure 3.52 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 22-23.
Recordings from later in the date range of this study reveal that Hubbard continued to use
this technique (see Figs. 3.53-54), unlike Byrd who tended to play material within eighth-note-
based lines more clearly and evenly rather than utilizing ghosts notes prolifically.
Figure 3.53 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 1-3.
123
Figure 3.54 Use of ghost notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 49-51.
One consistent element that may be found in the styles of modern jazz trumpeters from
the 1940s through today is the use of eighth-note based lines that incorporate ornaments for
added variation and interest. The ubiquitous use of eighth-note-based lines among all modern
jazz soloists reflects the ethos of bebop performance. Musicians sought to improvise longer lines,
utilize varied accents, and negotiate harmonic progressions of ever-increasing richness and
complexity. These harmonic progressions, which utilized ii-V7-I and iii-vi-ii-V7 progressions
(most often at two-beats per chord with the chords changing on metric accents), called for a more
updated rhythmic approach to improvisation than had been heard prior the coalescence of
modern jazz. By creating improvised material based largely in eighth notes, jazz musicians were
able to express more complex musical ideas that were more deeply connected to the rapid
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3.2.1 Prevalence of eighth-note-based lines
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard’s improvised material is firmly set within the modern jazz
tradition. They use eighth notes as the primary basis for all of their lines. Like other modern jazz
musicians, Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard incorporate quarter and eighth note triplets as well as
Figure 3.55 Eighth-note-based lines with triplet and sixteenth-note figures. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
measures 1-10.
125
Figure 3.56 Eighth-note-based lines with triplet and sixteenth-note figures. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be
Figure 3.57 Eighth-note-based lines with triplet and sixteenth-note figures. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,”
measures 28-34.
126
Hubbard’s later recordings, particularly those at tempos below 200 beats per minute,
show the he occasionally favored a slightly more melismatic approach to constructing lines (see
Fig. 3.58). Note the septuplet grouping of eighth notes in the last measure as well as the repeated
eighth-note triplet figures. Also, eighth-note triplet figures are more prevalent, often used to
construct repeating patterns. The inclusion of these elements is consistent with Hubbard’s
Figure 3.58 Use of melismatic tuplet grouping. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 1-
12.
127
3.2.2 Use of quarter notes
When Brown uses quarter notes, they are most often found within the body of a line, as
Figure 3.59 Use of quarter note in eighth-note-based line. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 1-5.
On other occasions, Brown uses quarter notes at the beginning as well as within the body
Figure 3.60 Use of quarter note in eighth-note-based line. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 17-22.
128
Early recordings of Byrd show that while he did include quarter notes within the body of
his eighth-note-based lines, he also used successive quarter notes at the beginnings of lines (see
Fig. 3.61).
Figure 3.61 Extensive use of quarter notes within eighth-note-based lines. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,”
measures 69-73.
Byrd’s recordings from later in the date range of this study reveal similar trends. Further,
Byrd used quarter notes as a means for constructing small quarter-note-based motifs 271 that
Figure 3.62 Use of quarter-note-based motif. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 74-76.
271
William Drabkin, “Motif.” In Grove Music Online, “the shortest subdivision of a theme or phrase that still
maintains its identity as an idea.” Oxford Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/19221 (accessed January 21, 2012). Motifs that
are made up primarily of quarter-notes are called quarter-note motifs.
129
In addition, Byrd often begins a solo by using many quarter notes within the body of his
lines. These, along with sustained pitches, give the opening of his improvisations a relaxed feel
Figure 3.63 Use of quarter notes within the body of eighth-note-based lines. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old
Hubbard’s use of quarter notes during early in his career is similar to Brown’s, which is
consistent with his being influenced by him. Also, like Byrd, Hubbard occasionally played
repeated quarter note based motifs, in this case at the end of a solo, as in Fig. 3.64.
130
Figure 3.64 Use of quarter-note-based motif. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 33-37.
Hubbard retained this preference for using repeated quarter notes within his lines in later
recordings. While not altogether different from Brown’s approach, the frequency with which
Hubbard employed this rhythmic device is notable because it offers further proof that Hubbard
was continually accepting influences from other sources (see Fig. 3.65).
Figure 3.65 Use of repeated quarter notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 1-16.
131
3.2.3 Sustained pitches
Sustained pitches 272 are found infrequently in Brown’s playing. When they do occur they
Figure 3.66 Sustained pitch at the end of a line. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 13-17.
Dotted quarter notes that are performed on a downbeat are usually followed by an eighth
note (see Fig. 3.67). In the following figure the top staff represents the material played by the
soloist while the bottom staff presents the sustained pitch in relief to provide a reference.
Figure 3.67 Use of dotted quarter/eighth-note figure. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific) measures
272
Pitches that are longer than a quarter note are considered sustained pitches.
132
Early recordings of Byrd’s improvised solos show that, in addition to using sustained
pitches at the ends of lines, he occasionally used sustained pitches at the beginning of a line (see
Fig. 3.68).
Figure 3.68 Sustained pitch at the beginning of a line. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,”
On other occasions, particularly later in the date range of this study, Byrd constructs lines
that are ripe with sustained pitches, giving them a floating, suspended-like feel and adding
133
Figure 3.69 Extensive use of sustained pitches. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 37-43. An additional staff
Also, on later recordings by Byrd new elements are present. As seen in Fig. 3.70, Byrd
sometimes employs sustained pitches as effects, using notes of four counts or greater to begin a
passage.
Figure 3.70 Extensive use of sustained pitches. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 19-22. An
134
Early recordings of Hubbard’s improvisations show that he utilized sustained pitches in a
similar manner to Brown preferring to reserve them for the ends of lines and treat them to
terminal vibrato (vibrato use will be discussed in greater detail in section 3.4). This facet of
Figure 3.71 Use of sustained pitch at the end of a line. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 51-56.
recordings, the addition of sustained pitches at the beginnings of lines is a notable change (see
135
Figure 3.72 Extensive use of sustained pitches. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 170-180.
Of further interest is the presence of lines that use dotted quarter/eighth note figures as a
part of the body of the line itself, rather than as a stand-alone motif as in Fig. 3.73. These
examples illustrate Hubbard’s tendency to occasionally create lines that are not based in eighth
notes.
Figure 3.73 Extensive use of dotted quarter/eighth-note figures. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 129-132.
136
The influence of tenor saxophonists John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins as well as alto
saxophonist Eric Dolphy are plausible factors that led Hubbard to incorporate these elements into
his playing.
3.2.4 Syncopations
Syncopation became increasingly important during the formative years of modern jazz
and has become so prevalent that it is a foundational element within the genre. These
Figure 3.74 Syncopation within a line. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 1-3.
Less frequently found in Brown’s playing are occurrences of what may be thought of as
stand-alone syncopations, 273 or syncopations that are not within a line. Although Brown rarely
uses stand-alone syncopations, when he does so it adds great rhythmic interest (see Figs. 3.75-
76).
273
This refers to syncopated rhythmic fragments that are not immediately connected to an improvised line.
137
Figure 3.75 Stand alone syncopation. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 42-44.
Figure 3.76 Stand alone syncopation. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 48-49.
Brown also sustains pitches that begin on an offbeat for a length equal to the value of a
dotted quarter note. These sustained syncopations are used rarely, but add great rhythmic interest
Figure 3.77 Sustained syncopation. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 56-57.
138
Figure 3.78 Sustained syncopations. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud” measures 32-33.
Donald Byrd’s use of syncopation during all points within the date range of this study is
consistent with that of Clifford Brown’s. He uses syncopations within his lines occasionally, as
Figure 3.79 Syncopation within a line. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 27-29.
139
Figure 3.80 Syncopations within a line. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 14-18.
Additionally, Byrd uses stand-alone syncopations rarely (see Fig. 3.81-82), though more
examples of sustained syncopations may be heard than in the playing of Clifford Brown.
Figure 3.81 Sustained syncopations. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,” measures 19-21.
140
Figure 3.82 Sustained syncopations. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 65-69.
Freddie Hubbard’s use of syncopation is consistent with Brown and Byrd’s and he
frequently incorporates these elements within his lines (see. Figs. 3.83-84).
Figure 3.83 Syncopation within a line. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 27-28.
141
Figure 3.84 Syncopations within a line. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 1-2.
Sustained syncopations are also much in evidence. Note the presence of sustained
syncopations in the first, third, and fifth measures of the Fig. 3.85.
Figure 3.85 Sustained syncopations. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 5-9.
Modern jazz musicians utilize a number of ornamental techniques such as turns, grace
notes, appoggiatura and glissandi. Of these, turns are the most favored and their rhythmic
construction is most often based in sixteenth notes or eighth-note-triplets. Apart from the
rhythmic makeup of these turns, their position within the improvised musical line is notable. 274
Clifford Brown’s improvisational style is ripe with ornaments. In much the same way that
the inclusion of ornaments speaks to both his mastery of modern jazz vocabulary and his
exposure to late nineteenth and early twentieth century cornet performance elements found in
Arban’s method, Brown’s structured dedication to practice from the Arban’s book helped him to
develop superior control over this single tonguing. Further, his love and admiration for “popular”
274
Meadows, Bebop to Cool, 127. It is the contention of Meadows that most turns occur “at the beginning or middle
of a phrase but seldom ended a phrase.”
142
trumpet players of the day such as Harry James and Rafael Mendez provides further insight into
Byrd’s improvisational style, particularly during its early years, is also characterized by
the frequent use of ornaments. In addition to the possible influence of Clifford Brown, Byrd’s
exposure to similar technical studies from the Western European tradition is a contributing factor
to this similarity in style. Also, his affinity for the playing of Fats Navarro and Bud Powell are at
work here. Later recordings of Byrd show that he continued to use ornaments quite often.
Hubbard’s use of these ornamental devices may be attributed primarily to the influence of
Clifford Brown on his own playing as well as studies from Arban and other technical methods
under the tutelage of Max Woodbury. These elements remained essential parts of Hubbard’s
improvisational vocabulary during all points in the date range under scrutiny.
275
Hood, telephone interview, August 3, 2011. Brown actually met the virtuosic Mendez. Mendez was so taken with
Brown’s ability that he gave him one of his methods books and signed it. Mendez and James both performed highly
technical pieces that featured articulation such at fast single tonguing, multiple tonguing, and large interval leaps
prominently. Another account of this meeting may be found in Catalano, Clifford Brown, 64.
143
The most frequently occurring ornament used by Brown and Byrd is eighth-note triplet
turns. In keeping with the common practices of modern jazz performance as outlined by Baker
and Meadows, these are most often found at the beginning and middle of lines (see. Figs. 3.87-
88).
Figure 3.87 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 29-34.
Figure 3.88 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 40-45.
Byrd’s use of eighth-note triplet turns is of similar frequency in both early and later
144
Figure 3.89 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 18-20.
Figure 3.90 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 16-17.
Hubbard’s use of these ornaments is consistent with Brown and Byrd both in terms of
frequency, though later recordings reveal less prolific use of eighth-note triplet turns. Note the
presence of three eighth-note-triplet turns in the following example (Fig. 3.91), taken from an
early recording.
145
Figure 3.91 Use of multiple eighth-note-triplet turns. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 8-16.
Later recordings reveal that Hubbard used eighth-note triplet turns less frequently than in
his early recordings, though examples may be found (see Fig. 3.92).
Figure 3.92 Use of eighth-note-triplet turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 22-24.
146
3.2.6 Eighth-sixteenth-note turns
Brown makes occasional use of a rhythmic variation of the eighth-note triplet turn that
involves the use of an eighth-note followed by two sixteenth notes. This figure functions in
exactly the same manner as the eighth-note triplet turn, and the rules established by Baker and
Meadows govern its use in Brown’s playing. This variation is most often found at medium
tempos, while Brown favors eighth-note-triplet turns at faster tempos (see Fig. 3.94-95).
Figure 3.94 Use of eighth-sixteenth-note turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 32-39.
147
Figure 3.95 Use of eighth-sixteenth-note turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific) measures 1-4.
No examples of Byrd’s use of this type of turn were found in the solos included in this
study. While examples surely can be heard during this date range they are rare and Byrd made
Hubbard uses these devices in a similar manner and frequency to Brown during early
recordings (see Figs. 3.96-97. Note the two instances of this ornament in the Fig. 3.96.)
Figure 3.96 Use of multiple eighth-sixteenth-note turns. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 24-32.
148
Figure 3.97 Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 19-20. Note the sixteenth-note turn in measure 19.
Later recordings reveal similar tendencies on the part of Hubbard for the utilization of
Figure 3.98 Use of eighth-sixteenth-note turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 29-32.
149
Sixteenth-note turns are also found frequently in Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard’s playing
and they observes the same rules of use governing the employment of eighth-note-triplet turns
Figure 3.100 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 23-25.
Figure 3.101 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,” measures 45-46.
Figure 3.102 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 11-13.
Figure 3.103 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 19-20.
150
Figure 3.104 Use of sixteenth-note turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 26-28.
A rhythmic variation of sixteenth-note turns that Brown favors involves the use of a
single sixteenth-note-triplet followed by an eighth-note (see Fig. 3.106-107). Again, the same
Figure 3.106 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 24-26.
151
Figure 3.107 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 9-15.
While Byrd and Hubbard make use of this ornament in the same manner as Brown, both
Figure 3.108 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,” measure 29.
Figure 3.109 Use of sixteenth-note-triplet turn. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 15-17.
152
3.2.9 Grace notes
Modern jazz musicians use grace notes often. Generally, three distinct types of grace
notes are used. First are grace notes in the traditional sense, performed by playing a note one half
step below the pitch being embellished. The grace note is tongued and the player then slurs to the
primary pitch. Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard all make prolific use of this technique at all points
during the date range of this study. Not only can this be attributed to the study of late Nineteenth
and early Twentieth century cornet style, but it is also a common technique used by modern jazz
musicians of every instrument. Examples of each player’s use of this technique may be found in
Figs. 3.111-116.
Figure 3.111 Use of grace note. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 22-23.
153
Figure 3.112 Use of grace note. Clifford Brown, “Gertrude’s Bounce,” measures 14-15.
Figure 3.113 Use of multiple grace notes. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 54-64.
Figure 3.114 Use of multiple grace notes. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measures 32-35.
Figure 3.115 Use of multiple grace notes. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 34-37.
154
Figure 3.116 Use of grace note. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 34-36.
A second type of grace note is produced when the trumpeter depresses the valve or valves
half way, creating a muted pitch and a smoother transition from ornament to primary pitch. This
ornament, which I call a half-valve grace note, is most often performed using the second valve,
though it is found on other pitches that use other valve combinations. While used infrequently,
Brown, Byrd and Hubbard use this device in the manner described above (see Figs. 3.118-120).
155
Figure 3.118 Use of half-valve grace note. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 32-32.
Figure 3.119 Use of half-valve grace note. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 122-124.
Figure 3.120 Use of half-valve grace note. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 8-9.
Finally, jazz trumpeters will sometimes perform these half-step embellishments with the
embouchure alone, beginning the pitch approximately one half step below the goal pitch and
using the appropriate valve combination. These effects are commonly called scoops. This is
accomplished by deploying the embouchure with slightly less than the necessary amount of
tension required to execute a pitch on a given valve combination and then compressing the
156
Figure 3.121 Use of scoop. Kenny Dorham, “An Oscar for Oscar,” measures 2-4.
Interestingly no examples of scoops are found in the solos examined for this study by
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard. This suggests that the formal training which each of these men
received informed their approaches to the trumpet to such a degree that this technique was
avoided. 276
3.2.11 Plops
Another ornament used by modern jazz trumpeters, called a plop, involves beginning
above a goal tone and performing a quick descending slur to this specific pitch. Brown and Byrd
use plops infrequently but to great effect (see Fig. 3.123-124). They are most often found in
passages that begin in the upper register, as a “pickup” type figure to a descending passage.
276
Traditional approaches to trumpet performance based in Western European practices avoid such embouchure
movements, hence this element is not present in the playing of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard.
157
Figure 3.123 Use of plop. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific) measures 16-17.
Figure 3.124 Use of plop. Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measure 34.
No examples of plops were found in the solos of Freddie Hubbard that were included in
this study. This suggests that he chose not to incorporate this element from Brown’s style during
277
Jazz trumpeters also use alternate fingerings during improvised solos to great effect.
These usually take the form of turns and produce interesting, subtle changes in tone color.
Alternate fingerings are used in two basic ways: ornamental and functional.
277
For many pitches on the trumpet there are multiple valve combinations that produce the same pitch. Conventional
fingerings have evolved over time and are a part of early instruction on the trumpet. Valve combinations that are
unconventional are called alternate fingerings. See Appendix E.
158
Ornamental alternate fingerings are most often performed as turns. Functional alternate
fingerings are more complex, usually occurring when the trumpeter repeats the same pitch
multiple times within an eighth-note-based line and chooses not to tongue them. By two sets of
fingerings the pitches may be given rhythmic definition without being tongued. Brown utilizes
alternate fingerings very infrequently and when they appear, they are most often ornamental,
Figure 3.125 Use of ornamental alternate fingering. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 23.
Only one case of Brown using functional alternate fingerings was found, though the
nature of this instance should be examined more closely. In his solo on “Daahoud,” Brown
executes an idea with similar harmonic function and construction to two patterns that he played
earlier in the same solo, but instead of using “F sharp” to “G sharp” as he did in the previous
passages, he performs two successive “F sharp's” using an alternate fingering for the second (see.
Fig. 3.126).
159
Figure 3.126 Use of functional alternate fingering. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 45.
Here, evidence of the logic for Brown’s performance of the passages in Fig. 3.126 reveals
itself. In Fig. 3.126, it is highly probable that Brown attempted to play the same idea that is
found earlier in the solo but failed to successfully execute the “G sharp.” The standard valve
combination for “G-sharp” is valves 2-3, as is the alternate fingering for “F-sharp” at the top of
the treble staff. Had Brown tongued the transition from “F-sharp” to “G-sharp” as he did in
earlier examples, the intended pitch would most certainly have spoken since tonguing generates
more air speed and makes accuracy much greater as the trumpeter approaches the upper register.
In the case of Fig. 3.126. Brown attempts to slur the transition and does not create enough air
speed for the intended pitch to speak, causing the occurrence of an unintended “F-sharp.”
No examples of ornamental alternate fingerings are found in the solos of Donald Byrd
included in this study. Instead, Byrd’s ornaments are clear and utilize conventional fingerings,
which do not produce “false” pitches. This is consistent with Byrd and other Detroit musicians’
affinity for the stylist practices of modern jazz pianists, whose turns must, by the very nature of
Byrd used functional alternate fingerings when performing grace notes, particularly
examples where a written “E” at the top of the treble staff is a performed as a grace note leading
to an “F” a half step higher (see Figs. 3.127-128). While the interval between these two pitches is
160
not a register break, it does represent an interval that is somewhat more difficult to negotiate
when slurring than other half step relationships in the middle register. Many trumpeters use the
alternate fingering of 1-2 for written “E” at the top of the treble staff because it is more in tune
and has a brighter tone than the conventional fingering of 0 valves. It is highly probable that
Figure 3.127 Use of functional alternate fingering. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,” measure
25-26.
Figure 3.128 Use of functional alternate fingering. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,” measures
33-34.
Hubbard uses ornamental alternate fingerings in the same manner as Brown, particularly
161
Figure 3.129 Use of ornamental alternate fingering. Freddie Hubbard “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 1.
much more virtuosic manner. Also, many instances occur where Hubbard likely uses these
fingers to avoid lips slurs between pitches that use the same valve combination, particularly in
double-time, or sixteenth-note-based lines. Fig. 3.130 and 3.131 show the probable points where
Figure 3.130 Use of functional alternate fingering. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures
16-22.
162
Figure 3.131 Use of functional alternate fingering. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 58-63.
While it is possible to execute lip slurs in this register with relative ease under normal
conditions, the presence of these pitches in sixteenth-note-based lines makes their performance
highly difficulty. Moreover, these passages are particularly non-idiomatic to the trumpet. This is
further evidence of the influence of saxophonists upon Hubbard’s style and developing an
alternate fingering system for the execution of fast, chordal passages that use pitches on the same
David Baker’s model for the analysis of a jazz musician’s personal style provides us with
163
player. 278 Through his extensive survey of recorded solos from the modern jazz era, Baker
identifies common practice harmonic and melodic devices that are used by improvisers within
the modern jazz tradition. From a harmonic standpoint, this involves the derivation of a number
In his analysis of Clifford Brown’s style, Baker identifies Brown’s scale preferences as
279
primarily of the major family, including the modal derivatives commonly used in jazz. Baker
also states that Brown uses chromaticism as well as bebop scales and occasional gestures using
the blues scale. Other scales, such as diminished scales over dominant functioning V7 chords,
3.3.1 Chromaticism
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard use chromaticism regularly. A common device used by these
Enclosure figures are melodic devices used by jazz musicians to add harmonic interest
281
and color. Their construction makes them particularly well suited to being executed on the
278 Harmonic language refers to the unique way in which a jazz musician uses various types of scales, patterns, and
other material to negotiate the chord changes of an improvisatory vehicle.
279
Dorian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, Locrian
280
Like so many other terms used to describe common performance elements within jazz, it is difficult to attribute
this term’s genesis to any one scholar or pedagogue.
281
Baker’s texts are among the first to present musical examples of these devices, but the term “enclosure figure”
has been a part of the jazz musician’s vocabulary for quite some time.
164
trumpet. In their most basic form, enclosure figures involve the “surrounding” of a goal tone 282
by its upper and lower neighbor tones. 283 Whether the improviser chooses upper and lower
neighbor tones based on the underlying harmony (diatonic) or by the chromatic relationship to
the goal tone (chromatic) determines how the enclosure figure is categorized. Regardless of
which type is used, the utilization of enclosure figures in great numbers is a defining
Christiansen and Bock present a number of possible variations of enclosure figures that I
have chosen to re-categorize and re-identify to align more favorably with Baker’s definition of
This enclosure figure is the type identified by Baker and sometimes called a chromatic
enclosure. It consists of a half step above followed by a half step below the goal tone and is
282
Goal tones usually fall on strong beats such as 1 and 3 within a measure of 4/4 time. Goal tones are most often
the guide tones of the chord (the chord’s 3rd or 7th degree) or a basic tone (root, 5th, 6th, or 9th)
283
Baker identifies only chromatic enclosure figures in his studies, while Christiansen and Bock identify a number
of different constructions of enclosure figures that are delineated primarily by the relationship of the notes before the
goal tone to the goal tone itself.
165
Enclosure Figure “B”
(enclosure figure “A”). It makes use of a half step below followed by a half step above the goal
This enclosure figure, similar to a figure presented for study by Christiansen and Bock,
makes use of a whole-step above followed by a half step below the goal tone as can be seen in
Fig. 3.134.
166
Figure 3.134 Example of enclosure figure "C."
Enclosure figure “D” is an inversion of enclosure figure “C” and makes use of a half step
below followed by a whole-step above the goal tone (see Fig. 3.135).
Ornaments such as turns can function in the same way as enclosure figures. The most
common enclosure-functioning turn, shown in Fig. 3.136, is a variation of enclosure figure “C.”
167
Figure 3.136 Example of enclosure turn "C."
While Christiansen and Bock present other permutations of enclosure figures, the
examples presented here represent those most commonly used by Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard.
Other versions, such as those constructed entirely of whole-steps, do not create as strong a “pull”
towards the goal tone and when used are most often part of scalar material. Enclosure figures as
used by these trumpeters and other modern jazz musicians are tension-creating devices, used to
Brown uses enclosure figure “A” more frequently than any of the other enclosure figures
identified in this study. For example, in his solo on “Daahoud” sixteen examples of enclosure
figure “A” can be found. The use of this enclosure figure is so frequent that it can be considered
Brown’s studies with his teacher, Robert “Boysie” Lowery who used these devices in his
284
The term “set-up” or “setting-up” is used by many jazz musicians to discuss the manner in which certain
harmonic devices, including enclosure figures, function.
168
Figure 3.137 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” master take measures 1-2.
Figure 3.138 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue Note/Pacific) measure 16.
Figure 3.139 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measure 24.
In some cases, Brown combines two consecutive enclosure figures (as in Fig. 3.140),
285
This is a term used by many jazz musicians and jazz educators. Its origin is unknown.
169
Figure 3.140 Use of consecutive enclosure figures “A,” or a double enclosure. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,”
measures 22-23.
Like Brown, Byrd uses enclosure figure “A” very frequently (see Figs. 3.141-142). This
suggests that Byrd may have adopted this technique from Brown, though the absence of prolific
use of double enclosure figures suggests that Byrd may have adopted this technique from other
Figure 3.141 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,” measure 9.
170
Figure 3.142 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 30-31.
Though less often heard, examples of enclosure figure “A” can be found in later
recordings by Byrd, suggesting that this melodic device was one that he continued to favor. An
Figure 3.143 Use of double enclosure figure. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 25-27.
Figure 3.144 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measures 18.
171
Freddie Hubbard used enclosure figure “A” quite often in early recordings (see Figs.
3.145-146), which is consistent with his affinity for the playing of Clifford Brown.
Figure 3.145 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 17-18.
Figure 3.146 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 21.
In his solo on “Billie’s Bounce” Hubbard makes use of enclosure figure “A” in a repeated
Figure 3.147 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measures 25-28.
172
Later recordings by Hubbard show that this device was still a favorite, though he did not
Figure 3.148 Use of enclosure figure “A.” Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 3.
The fact that enclosure figures remained a part of Hubbard’s harmonic language during
all points within the date range of this study suggests that Brown’s influence in this area was
highly significant.
No examples of Brown, Byrd, or Hubbard employing enclosure figure “B” in any of the
solos surveyed.
The next most frequently used enclosure figure by Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard is
enclosure figure “C” (see Figs. 3.149-156). While it might be tempting to attribute the presence
of this harmonic device in the playing of Byrd and Hubbard solely to the influence of Brown, a
number of factors must be considered. First, this enclosure figure is of a construction that is
directly connected to the major scale and its derivatives, hence it presence can more accurately
be attributed to the employment of the major scale as an improvisatory device. Further, the use of
173
major scale derivations in the playing of one player (which will be examined in the following
subsection) cannot possibly be attributed to the influence of a single player since so many jazz
musicians have based their harmonic language on this element. However, the presence of this
enclosure figure in the playing of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard is notable and worthy of mention.
Figure 3.149 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measure 21.
Figure 3.150 Multiple use of enclosure figure “C.” Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measure 14-15.
Figure 3.151 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 38-39.
174
Figure 3.152 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 17.
Figure 3.153 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “Each Time I Think of You,” measure 30.
Figure 3.154 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measure 41.
Figure 3.155 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measure 5.
175
Figure 3.156 Use of enclosure figure “C.” Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measure 14.
Turns sometimes function as a variation of enclosure figure “C” and Brown makes
occasional use of this ornamental device (see Figs. 3.157). I call these melodic devices are called
“enclosure-turns.”
Figure 3.157 Use of enclosure-turn “C.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring” (Emarcy), measures 14-15.
Byrd makes occasional use of this enclosure figure on early recordings (see Fig. 3.158)
but largely avoids its use in later recordings. This suggests that if Byrd did adopt this
176
Figure 3.158 Use of enclosure-turn “C.” Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measure 61.
Hubbard makes infrequent use of this device at all points within the date range of this
study.
Major scale based material forms the basis for much of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard’s
improvised material. It is rare that these musicians present major scale derived material in pure
form. Rather, they choose to mix major scale derived material with a variety of enclosure figures,
chromatic passing tones, and non-harmonic tones to create their improvised material (see Figs.
3.159-160).
Figure 3.159 Use of G-sharp mixolydian scale with enclosure figure “A.” Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue
177
Figure 3.160 Use of material derived from the major scale with passing tone. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,”
measures 18-22.
Byrd tends to use more non-harmonic and passing tones than does Brown, but his overall
approach to harmony is rooted heavily in major scale derived material, as is shown in Figs.
3.161-163.
Figure 3.161 Use of material derived from the major scale with passing tones. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,”
measures 69-72.
178
Figure 3.162 Use of material derived from the major scale with enclosure figure “A” and passing tones.
Figure 3.163 Use of material derived from the major scale with enclosure figure “A” and passing tones.
Like Byrd, Hubbard makes use of major scale derived material that incorporates
chromatic passing tones and enclosure figures rather than employing these scales in their pure
form but for relatively short periods of musical time (see Figs. 3.164-165).
179
Figure 3.164 Use of material derived from the major scale with passing tone. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,”
measures 2-7.
Figure 3.165 Use of material derived from the major scale. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 27-28.
It is more common to find instances where Byrd and Hubbard use scales that incorporate
chromatic passing tones more systematically. These scales, called bebop scales, form the
backbone of the improvised material of modern jazz and while Brown made use of these devices
180
3.3.3 Bebop Dominant Scales
In addition to major scales and derivatives, 286 Baker identifies the existence and
utilization of eight-note scales (what Baker refers to as “bebop scales”) in modern jazz
performance practice. 287 The most common of these is the bebop dominant scale.
When improvising over V7 chord types that function as dominant chords modern jazz
According to Baker jazz musicians favor the sound of this scale because “all of the chord
tones are on down beats,” and “the tonic of the scale falls on beat one of each successive
Baker maintains that, in addition to using this scale on dominant functioning V7 chords,
modern jazz musicians also use this scale to improvise “on the related minor seventh chord (II)
and, under special conditions...on the related half-diminished seventh chord (VII).” 289
286
For the purposes of this study, major scale derivatives may be thought of as the four most commonly used modes
of the major scale in common use by modern jazz musicians: Dorian, Mixolydian, Lydian, and Aeolian (natural
minor).
287
Baker, How to Play Bebop vol. 1 (Van Nuys, CA: Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., 1985), 1.
288
Baker, How to Play Bebop vol. 1, 1.
289
Baker, How to Play Bebop vol. 1, 1.
181
Brown uses bebop dominant scales much less frequently than major scale derived
material. This is noteworthy because, as Meadows and Baker have identified, modern jazz
musicians used these types of scales prolifically. However, while Brown makes infrequent use of
these scales, instances where he employs them do exists, particularly on earlier recordings. Like
his tendencies when using major scale derivations, Brown intersperses enclosure figures and
Note that examples of bebop dominant scales in the figures below are brief, usually
consisting of only four eighth notes. In fact, early recordings show that Brown preferred to use a
particular pattern when using the bebop-dominant scale. I call this a bebop dominant fragment.
Brown uses this device quite frequently, often using fragments from multiple bebop
182
Figure 3.168 Use of material derived two bebop dominant scales. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 12-13.
Figure 3.169 Use of material derived from multiple bebop dominant scales. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,”
measures 47-52.
On later recordings Brown uses the bebop dominant scale less frequently, and examples
of bebop dominant fragments are rare. Brief examples of material derived from the bebop scale
may be found, though they are much less systematic, as can be seen in 3.170-171.
183
Figure 3.170 Use of material derived from bebop dominant scale with passing tone. Clifford Brown,
Figure 3.171 Use of material derived from bebop dominant scale with enclosure-turn “C.” Clifford Brown,
Byrd uses bebop dominant scales more frequently than does Brown. These instances may
be found at all points during the date range of this study. Also, Byrd tends to use the scale in a
more linear fashion that using bebop dominant fragments (see. Fig. 3.172).
184
Figure 3.172 Use of material derived from G bebop dominant scale. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another
Like Brown, Byrd sometimes uses material from two or more bebop dominant scales
Figure 3.173 Use of material derived from multiple bebop dominant scales. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old
Cowhand,” measures 12-15.
Figure 3.174 Use of material derived from multiple bebop dominant scales. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old
185
Figure 3.175 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures
25-26.
Freddie Hubbard uses bebop dominant scales in a similar fashion to Brown, especially
during years early in the date range of this study. Further, Hubbard makes use of bebop dominant
fragments, as well as frequently incorporating enclosure figure “A” into his bebop dominant
Figure 3.176 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale and enclosure figures “A.” Freddie
186
Figure 3.177 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale and enclosure figure “A.” Freddie
Figure 3.178 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale and non-harmonic tone. Freddie
Figure 3.179 Use of material derived from the bebop dominant scale. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 84-
85.
187
3.3.3.1 Chromatic scale
Segments of the chromatic scale are found in modern jazz improvisations and are most
often used as a means for approaching a goal or chord tone. Frequently, the chromatic scale
appears when the use of passing tones is combined with bebop dominant scale usage. (see Fig.
3.180)
Figure 3.180 Standard combination of chromatic targeting and bebop dominant derived material.
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard avoid using the chromatic scale in its pure form. All three
make use of chromatic devices that add harmonic interest and color to major and bebop scale
derived material. These chromatic scale fragments are important connecting devices that function
in much the same way as bebop dominant scales. (see Fig. 3.181-183)
Figure 3.181 Use of chromatic scale fragment and G bebop dominant scale. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,”
measures 57-59.
188
Figure 3.182 Use of chromatic scale fragment and enclosure figure “C.” Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be
Figure 3.183 Use of chromatic scale fragment. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measures 31-32.
290
The incorporation of non-harmonic tones within improvised material is an important
part of the harmonic language of nearly every modern jazz musician. In addition to the use of
these tones in enclosure figure “A,” nonharmonic tones are often presented as part of scales.
Modern jazz musicians make use of scales derived from diminished seventh chords, especially
290
Non-harmonic tones are pitches that are a part of the upper-structure of chords that have been altered. The most
common non-harmonic tones are the flat-9, sharp-9, flat-5 (sharp-11) and sharp-5 (flat-13).
189
when treating a dominant functioning V7 chord to some sort of harmonic alteration. 291 These
diminished scales are constructed by adding a half-step leading tone to each tone in a fully
Because this diminished scale is constructed using a series of alternating whole-steps and
While this scale is used to improvise over diminished chords rather than dominant
functioning V7 chords, a variation of this scale is favored when improvising over an altered V7
chord. By beginning the scale on one of the leading tones and employing the same series of
291
The practice of “altering” a dominant chord involves the raising or lowering (by one half-step) of the chord’s 5th
or 9th degrees.
190
Because this diminished scale is constructed using a series of alternating half steps and
is particularly well suited for use over altered dominant V7 chords because it contains both the
guide tones of the V7 chord (the 3rd and 7th) a number of possible alterations of the 5th and 9th
The sharp-5/flat-13 is also a common non-harmonic tone and is often used as a chromatic
upper neighbor tone to the 5th of a V7 chord. Although not a part of the diminished scale, this
Brown uses diminished scale fragments sparingly and in very small segments, rather than
in extended passages. When these fragments are employed, they are over dominant functioning
V7 chord-types or their corresponding ii chords. Occasionally Brown uses figures that contain
non-harmonic tones over tonic major and minor chords. He draws non-harmonic tones in these
cases from the corresponding V7 chord. The figures below represent some of the most common
ways in which Brown uses fragments of the diminished scale and other non-harmonic tones.
Figure 3.186 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue
191
Figure 3.187 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” (Blue
Donald Byrd uses of non-harmonic tones that are derived from the diminished scale in a
similar manner to Clifford Brown. These occurrences are brief and most often occur on dominant
functioning V7 chords.
Figure 3.188 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Donald Byrd, “Hank’s Tune,” measures 62-63.
Figure 3.189 Use of pitches derived from the diminished scale. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another
192
Figure 3.190 Use of pitches derived from diminished scale. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,”
measure 29.
Other occurrences of non-harmonic tones in Byrd’s playing from recordings at all points
in the date range of this study are frequent. In addition to enclosure figure “A,” isolated non-
harmonic tones often function as leading tones that pull towards to chord tones, creating
harmonic tension.
Figure 3.191 Use of nonharmonic tones. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 34-35.
Like Brown and Byrd, Hubbard uses non-harmonic tones, with diminished fragments
appearing on early recordings in particular. In the following example, Hubbard uses non-
harmonic tones derived from the diminished scale that corresponds to G7.
193
Figure 3.192 Use of pitches derived from diminished scale. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 30-31.
Like Byrd and Brown, Hubbard uses single non-harmonic tones to create harmonic
tension.
Figure 3.193 Use of single non-harmonic tone. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measure 14.
In keeping with the harmonic material that Hubbard was exposed to by Coltrane and
194
Figure 3.194 Use of diminished scale fragment. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 148-150.
The blues scale has been constructed by jazz musicians in order to make use of the “blue
note” as well as the root, 5th, and 4th (or 11th). 292 These “blue notes” are pitches that
293
“create...tension that must be resolved into chord tones,” and are reminiscent of vocal effects.
294
In its pure form, the scale is constructed as follows:
In common practice, modern jazz musicians often make use of small segments of the
scale in order to create musical tension, rather than presenting the scale in its pure form.
292
“Blue notes” are the flat-3, flat-5 (sharp-11) and flat-7 of a given key center.
293
Berg, Alfred’s Essentials of Jazz Theory, 36.
294
Baker, Bebop Vol. 1, 2. The pure form of a scale is the presentation (either ascending or descending) of all
pitches within the scale in sequential order.
195
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard make infrequent use of the blues. While brief examples may
3.3.4.2 3 to flat-9
Another melodic device that Christiansen and Bock attribute to modern jazz performance
practice is called “3 to flat-9.” 295 This piece of harmonic vocabulary has been used by scores of
modern jazz musicians and has been discussed in various degrees of depth by many jazz
pedagogues. Christiansen and Bock present this element in a very concise and succinct form so I
have chosen to rely on their work as a means for explaining this technique. This melodic device
appears in two primary forms. A resolution to the 5th of the I chord using the 3rd and flat-9 of a
and a resolution to the 3rd of the I chord using the 3rd, flat-9, 5th, and flat-7 of the dominant
295
Christiansen and Bock, Essential Jazz Lines, 10.
296
Consult Christiansen and Bock, Essential Jazz Lines, 10, for a more detailed discussion.
196
Figure 3.197 3 to flat-9 descending.
Christiansen and Bock correctly point out that modern jazz performance practice dictates
that “the direction” of the arpeggiated chord outline “does not have to start and continue in only
one direction.” In fact, a myriad of variations of this basic pattern occur in common usage. 297
Further, I have chosen to leave the first two beats of each of the above Figs. 3.196-197 blank
because endless possibilities exists for improvising over the first two beats of such a progression
when using the 3 to flat-9 technique (including playing nothing at all and employing rests to
create music space). Fragments of this device are often found that function, both harmonically
Brown uses 3 to flat-9 patterns very infrequently, choosing instead to create dissonances
on dominant functioning V7 chords by using enclosure figures. However, cases where Brown
employs the 3 to flat-9 pattern may be found, particularly on earlier recordings. In the following
example Brown actually uses two consecutive 3 to flat-9 gestures, the first of which is a
297
Christiansen and Bock, Essential Jazz Lines, 10.
197
Figure 3.198 Multiple 3 to flat-9 patterns. Clifford Brown, “Joy Spring,” measures 26-27.
Like Brown, Donald Byrd uses 3 to flat-9 patterns very infrequently. When he chooses to
employ such patterns they are often over dominant functioning V7 chords that resolve to minor i
chords.
Figure 3.199 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never be Another You,” measures 21-22.
198
Figure 3.200 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 59-60.
Like Brown, Byrd uses partial 3 to flat-9 patterns that often omit the 3rd of the dominant
Figure 3.201 Use of partial 3 to flat-9 pattern. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 64-65.
Freddie Hubbard uses 3 to flat-9 patterns much more frequently than Brown or Byrd,
often employing these patterns as a means for implying harmonic substitutions. This is consistent
with harmonic trends that were occurring during the late 1950s and early 1960s, a date range that
coincides with Hubbard’s formative years and his early professional career. Also, like Brown
and Byrd, he uses partial 3 to flat-9 patterns, in addition to utilizing the pattern in its pure form.
199
Figure 3.202 Use of partial 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Billie’s Bounce,” measure 11.
Figure 3.203 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 6-7.
Figure 3.204 Use 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 83-84.
200
In addition, where Brown and Byrd almost entirely avoid using the ascending version of
the 3 to flat-9 pattern (3- 5- 7- flat-9 resolving to the 5th of the I or i chord), 298 Hubbard makes
Figure 3.205 Use of 3 to flat-9 pattern. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 11-12.
Finally, Hubbard makes occasional use of fragments of the ascending variation of the 3 to
flat-9 pattern, choosing to use the flat-9 as a means for resolving to the 5th of the I or i chord
298
See figure 3.187.
299
Robert Lark, “Selected Contemporary Jazz Trumpet Improvisations by Frederick Dewayne “Freddie” Hubbard:
Structure and Form in Improvisations, with Three Recitals of Selected works by Albinoni, Copland, Haydn,
Hummel, and others,” (DMA Diss., University of North Texas: 1994). Robert Lark also examines this facet of
Hubbard’s playing in the context of representative blues improvisations from 1962 onward.
201
Figure 3.206 Use of 3 to flat-9 fragment. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 135-136.
the mentorship of David Baker, as well as other members of the Indianapolis jazz community,
during his formative years. Baker’s approach to jazz improvisational pedagogy, though certainly
in its early stages during the mid to late 1950s, is centered on the understanding of modern jazz
improvisational patterns. Hubbard’s interactions with Baker provided a foundation for the
understanding of such devices, including the utilization of bebop dominant scales and 3 to flat-9
patterns.
Apart from musical material derived from major, bebop, and chromatic scales, as well as
3 to flat-9 patterns, Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard make use of improvisational patterns that occur
multiple times over the course of different improvisations. Many jazz musicians refer to these
patterns as “licks,” and their presence is often the hallmark of a particular player’s style. Patterns
that recur many times in multiple solos by the same player are sometimes referred to as “pet-
licks.” This is particularly evident in the playing of Donald Byrd at all points within the date
202
range of this study and Freddie Hubbard’s improvisations from later points during the date range
of this study.
Of the three players examined in this study, Brown’s style is the least reliant on repeated
patterns, though instances may be found within individual solos. In Figs. 3.207-208 Brown plays
almost identical passages over the same series of chord changes in the tune “Daahoud.”
203
Figure 3.208 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 26-30.
Shorter, more isolated examples of Brown’s use of recurring patterns may also be found
in the same solo. In the following figure, note the construction of each excerpt. Though they
Figure 3.209 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown “Daahoud,” measures 13 and 51.
204
In both examples, Brown constructs a line using the flat-9, sharp-9, 3, sharp-11, and
sharp-5 of the V7 chord. 300 If we transpose both examples to a starting pitch of “D,” retain their
intervallic construction, and remove chord nomenclature above each example, a more clear view
Figure 3.210 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 13 and 51 transposed.
Other solos by Brown during the date range of this study bear out similar patterns. In the
next examples, taken from Brown’s solo on “Get Happy,” two recurring patterns may be
observed within the span of a single improvised chorus. These two patterns, both of which are
300
In the case of measure 13, the presence of the Gm7 chord should not be cause for skepticism over this analysis.
Modern jazz musicians routinely choose to improvise over a V7 chord and ignore the ii chord in measure that
encompasses a ii-V7 type progression.
205
Figure 3.211 Multiple recurring patterns. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 5, 21-22, and 24-25.
example, Brown chooses to play over the AbMa7 chord at the beginning of the bridge to
“Gertrude’s Bounce,” in a similar way each time. Though not identical, the harmonic similarities
are notable.
Figure 3.212 Recurring patterns. Clifford Brown “Gertrude’s Bounce,” measures 17-18 and 48-49.
206
Brown’s intense knowledge of harmony and his proficiency as a pianist are at work here,
and one can easily make the supposition that Brown’s solos were more compositional in nature
than many of his peers. Since his recurring material occurs over similar chord progressions,
involves similar chord tones, and functions in similar ways these recurring patterns are less
obtrusive than if he were to forcing these ideas to fit over chord progressions for which no
harmonic connection was present. Further, the fact that these recurring patterns are so deeply
Brown’s practice habits and penchant for engaging in rigorous self-evaluation through recorded
practice sessions.
Like Brown, Donald Byrd uses recurring patterns that are connected to the underlying
harmony. Examples of this practice may be found in solos throughout the date range of this
study.
Figure 3.213 Recurring patterns. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,” measure 2-4 and 50-52.
207
Figure 3.214 Recurring patterns. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 8-9 and 90-91.
occasional use of repeated melodic motif over chord changes that repeated over the span of four
all three of these players use antecedent/consequent phrase structure in their improvisations these
208
Figure 3.215 Recurring patterns. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 65-68.
Like Byrd and Brown, Hubbard makes use of recurring patterns that are connected to the
underlying harmony. Examples of this practice may be found in solos throughout the date range
of this study. Hubbard’s recurring patterns tended to have similar shapes, constructions, and
209
Figure 3.216 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 1-2 and 28-29.
While Hubbard used recurring patterns in similar ways to Brown and Byrd, a unique
element is present in his playing, particularly on recordings after 1959. Hubbard occasionally
uses repeated rhythmic motifs for several measures. These motifs help to create tension and
excitement over extended periods of musical time. Examples of these types of passages are not
Figure 3.217 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measures 25-32.
210
Figure 3.218 Recurring patterns. Freddie Hubbard, “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” measure 57-61.
Like Byrd, Hubbard makes occasional use of clear antecedent/consequent type passages.
211
3.4 PHRASING TENDENCIES
Improvisational phrasing in modern jazz is tied directly to the phrase structure of the
improvisational vehicle. As such, how a modern jazz musician phrases his or her improvised
lines in relation to the phrase structure of the tune is an important stylistic trait. Also, the
rhythmic construction of phrase endings is an element often adopted by a student from a model,
hence, phrase-endings found commonly in the playing of Clifford Brown would likely appear in
the playing of Byrd and Hubbard had Brown’s style been highly influential in their respective
developments.
phrasing tendencies in this study. I have applied some of Love’s definitions of phrase-related
elements to the improvised solos of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard. However, I have chosen to
modify and simplify the symbols that he uses to notate these elements in his analysis. The
following definitions provide the tools that I use to examine the phrasing tendencies of Brown,
span.” 301
o 2-phrase: “a phrase that occupies” two measures (what Love calls “a two-bar
hypermeasure”)
301
Stefan Love, “On Phrase Rhythm in Jazz,” (PhD Diss., Eastman School of Music: 2011). Except where noted, all
definitions are taken from Stefan Love, “On Phrase Rhythm in Jazz,” Appendix A.
212
o 4-phrase: “a phrase that occupies” four measures (what Love calls “a four-bar
hypermeasure”)
o 6-phrase: a phrase that occupies six measures (not part of Love’s study)
o 8-phrase: “a phrase that occupies” eight measures (what Love calls “an eight-
bar hypermeasure”)
o Extension. All of the above phrases may be treated to phrase extensions (most often
occurring across bar-lines). These are noted with a + sign following the
o Combined phrase. Unlike Love, I define a combined phrase in terms of the total
types.
o Chorus. “One cycle of” the improvisational vehicle. “Most performances include
multiple choruses.”
o Hypermeasure. “refers to refer to levels above the measure-level, e.g. the two-
I do not adhere strictly to Love’s model for the analysis of phrasing tendencies in this
study. Rather, Love’s work provides a basic set of terms that facilitate the discussion of phrasing
tendencies within the context of this comparative analysis. My chief motivation for this
213
modification is that I am most concerned with identifying any trends in phrase-length as well as
vehicle 302 and improvised phrases offer an interesting lens through which to examine a jazz
consist of some combination of four to eight bar phrases that are grouped together to form a
chorus. The underlying harmony of these segments constitutes both the harmonic underpinning
of the composed melody and the harmonic material upon which jazz musicians base their
improvisations. How a jazz trumpeter chooses to present improvised material within this loose
“scheme” is a matter of great individuality and young players often subconsciously adopt the
Rests are considered a part of the segments that make up the improvised material
connected to the improvisational vehicle’s phrase structure. Since the members of the rhythm
section are realizing the phrase structure of the improvisational vehicle, the soloist is free to
combine improvised material with musical space. Also, since the soloist is free to construct
improvised material that may be in opposition to the phrase structure of the scheme, phrases may
“cross” the superficial boundaries that separate the subsections of the scheme’s phrase
structure. 303 Jazz musicians refer to these types of phrases as “playing across the bar-line.” Love
refers to these types of segments as having a dissonant relationship to the underlying phrase
302
“On Phrase Rhythm in Jazz,” Appendix A. Called the “tune,” “chorus,” or “form” by jazz musicians and referred
to as the “scheme” by Love.
303
Stefan Love’s dissertation is an intriguing and thorough examination of improvisational phrasing. Much of my
work in this section of the dissertation is inspired by Love’s work.
214
The styles of Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard are filled with examples of 2-phrase, 4-phrase,
6-phrase, and 8-phrase passages. Most of these include prefixes that occasionally cross formal
section boundaries. The formal sections of the improvisational vehicle are treated to improvised
that cross these boundaries very often. The following phrase are most representative of the
215
Table 3.1 Phrase table. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud.”
216
Table 3.2 Phrase table. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You.”
217
Table 3.3 Phrase table. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight.”
218
While Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard have similar phrasing tendencies, Byrd’s penchant for
improvising phrases that cross sectional boundaries is notable, and he uses these techniques
If we focus our gaze on a deeper level of phrase examination, we can look more closely
at the ways in which Brown, Byrd and Hubbard end their phrases rhythmically. The two primary
types of phrase endings used by these three players are “bebop” phrase endings and sustained
Brown, Byrd and Hubbard use “Bebop” phrase endings extensively. These are so termed
Bebop phrase endings can occur on any downbeat in the measure and are usually
followed by a rest, often for more than two beats. These rhythmic figures occur not only at the
conclusion of phrases, but can also occur within improvised lines as well. But their use as
distinctive phrase endings is a trait that is highly common among many modern jazz
musicians. 305
304
Meadows, Bebop to Cool, 138.
305
Meadows, Bebop to Cool, 138.
219
Brown makes frequent use of this type of phrase ending, as can be seen in Figs. 3.222-
223.
Figure 3.222 Bebop phrase ending. Clifford Brown, “Get Happy,” measures 13-17.
Figure 3.223 Bebop phrase ending. Clifford Brown, “Daahoud,” measures 6-10.
220
Byrd and Hubbard also make frequent use of this technique as well, as can been seen in
Figs. 3.224-227.
Figure 3.224 Bebop phrase ending. Donald Byrd, “There Will Never Be Another You,” measures 43-45.
Figure 3.225 Bebop phrase ending. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 1-3.
221
Figure 3.226 Bebop phrase ending. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight,” measures 3-6.
Figure 3.227 Bebop phrase ending. Freddie Hubbard, “Birdlike,” measures 26-32.
Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard also use sustained pitches as phrase endings. Sustained
pitches are of a value of dotted-quarter note or greater. These notes are occasionally treated to
terminal vibrato. Brown makes occasional use of this type of phrase ending, especially on
222
Terminal vibrato is notated as follows:
Figure 3.229 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Clifford Brown, “Flossie Lou,” measures 13-18.
223
Figure 3.230 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Clifford Brown, “Gertrude’s Bounce,” measures 24-28.
Figure 3.231 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Donald Byrd, “I’m an Old Cowhand,” measures 14-18.
224
Figure 3.232 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Donald Byrd, “Just in Time,” measures 57-63.
Figure 3.233 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Freddie Hubbard, “Tadd’s Delight, “ measures 59-65.
225
Figure 3.234 Sustained pitch with terminal vibrato. Freddie Hubbard, “Pat ‘n Chat,” measure 1-4.
The phrasing similarities between these three players suggest both similar influence as
well as a common fluency in modern jazz improvisational practices. The matter of Byrd’s
tendency to construct more phrases that cross sectional boundaries may be attributed to both his
efficient use of his breath capacity—acquired through practice using the flow studies of Clarke’s
method—and the regional trend among Detroit wind players to emulate the performance style of
modern jazz piano players. This distinction not withstanding, the overwhelming similarities in
phrasing tendencies represent a significant commonality between Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard.
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4.0 CONCLUSIONS
As has been shown, these three modern jazz trumpeters share many stylistic traits that
would tend to substantiate many of the claims that Clifford Brown influenced Donald Byrd and
Freddie Hubbard.
Byrd himself has stated in many forums that he holds great respect and admiration for the
life and music of Clifford Brown. 306 Both came from very stable, loving homes where education
and discipline were placed at a premium. Formal musical study was encouraged and fostered.
Their experiences within their respective regional jazz communities helped to shape their
approaches to modern jazz trumpet improvisation, which accounts for similarities in harmonic
language and rhythmic practices. As the two trumpeters were very much contemporaries (with
Brown being a mere two years older than Byrd) and had affinities for the playing of Fats
Navarro, it is not surprising that stylistic commonalities exist. 307 Also, the fact that both Brown
and Byrd were exposed to Western European-based trumpet instruction and musical practices
accounts for many of the same similarities, particularly the use of ornaments such as turns and
grace notes, their avoidance of scoops, and their sparse yet consistent use of terminal vibrato.
306
Particularly in his open letter commemorating the anniversary off Brown’s death.
307
Byrd himself noted Clare Rocquemore, Fats Navarro, and Thad Jones as three of his earliest trumpet-specific
models. He did not mention Brown within this context.
227
However, distinctions may be drawn in that Byrd’s exposure to flow and tone studies
from Max Schlossberg’s method as well as studies with Detroit’s symphonic trumpeters
informed a style that was much more legato than Brown’s. In fact, articulation tendencies
represent the single most significant difference between Brown and Byrd’s individual
approaches. This is notable because articulation tendencies are perhaps the most important
While Byrd and Brown both used similar methods when constructing their phrases, Byrd
tended to improvise longer phrases that crossed formal boundaries. While Brown was an
accomplished piano player, he chose not incorporate these longer, more flowing phrases that are
associated with modern jazz pianists. Conversely, Byrd and other young Detroit wind players
within the jazz idiom sought to incorporate pianistic elements into their improvisational styles,
which accounts for Byrd’s penchant for executing longer, unbroken phrases. Attempts to perform
Byrd’s solos along with the original recording provide proof of Byrd’s incredible breath capacity
as some of his longer phrases are quite difficult to execute on a single air-stream, yet no chance
for a substantial inhalation is to be had. Byrd’s vital capacity was efficiently used and it is likely
that he also incorporated brief breaths into his performances. Brown’s phrases, on the other hand,
are not difficult to execute from a breathing standpoint. This is an important distinction. Byrd’s
sparing use of ghost notes is in direct contrast to Brown’s tendency to employ them frequently,
something else that speaks to different influences between these two players.
In general, claims that Byrd was influenced by Brown are, on the surface, quite accurate
in that similarities in key areas of style (rhythmic tendencies, the use of ornaments, and harmonic
language) are substantial. However, notions that Brown’s style was of a fundamental or
formative influence upon Byrd are not accurate, as the differences in articulation tendencies and
228
phrasing suggest that Byrd sought a wide variety of influences during his developmental years.
Finally, one must not discount the elements of Byrd’s musical skill-set that would allow him to
understand and assimilate the stylistic “calling-cards” of those musicians around him at all points
during his career. As relayed by Nathan Davis, Byrd had an amazing ability to boil down the
style of a particular player to a few key musical elements and improvisational tendencies. If the
presence of stylistic similarities between Brown and Byrd would lead us to suppose that Brown
was highly influential to Byrd as a stylistic model, we must also consider the fact that Byrd
assumed a position of prominence within the New York jazz community following the death of
Brown. Brown’s shadow loomed large in 1956 and Byrd would have certainly felt the pressure to
exhibit some stylistic traits that were reminiscent of Brown’s playing, particularly since he
succeeded Brown in a number of professional situations. It is much more accurate to state that
Brown’s overarching influence upon all newly established and up-and-coming jazz trumpeters
during the 1950s touched Byrd. But Byrd’s style was formed using so many varied sources of
influence that Brown’s style was only a small piece in his overall development. It is not accurate
to place Byrd within a “school” of playing at which Brown is the pinnacle, nor is it appropriate
to place him within a lineage of players at which Brown is of a parental relationship. Unlike
many trumpeters who arrived on the national jazz scene several years after Brown’s passing,
Byrd was already working towards becoming an established members of the New York jazz
community during the early 1950s while serving in the U.S. Air Force. Hence, Byrd must be
given a place alongside trumpeters such as Clifford Brown, Art Farmer, Thad Jones, Idrees
Suleiman, Miles Davis and Kenny Dorham as being among a generation of trumpeters who
followed Fats Navarro and Dizzy Gillespie and refined the collective improvisational style of
229
Freddie Hubbard’s early style 308 is incredibly similar to Clifford Brown’s in nearly every
respect: articulation tendencies, rhythmic practices, the use of ornaments of all types, the absence
of embouchure scoops, harmonic language (particularly his use of enclosure figure “A”), and
phrasing tendencies. Hubbard’s own admission that Brown’s playing was a formative influence
proves that the similarities between his early style and that of Brown is not a coincidence caused
by similar influences and educational experiences. Rather, these experiential and educational
similarities provided Hubbard with the foundation to assimilate the style of Clifford Brown at a
While Hubbard’s home life differed from Brown’s (Hubbard was raised by a single
mother), the importance of music in the lives of his older siblings’ church and social interactions
created an environment where young Hubbard was surrounded by music. Also, his mother’s
status as a single parent did not, by all accounts, diminish the stability of the home she provided
for her children and Freddie’s musical curiosities were encouraged. Like Brown, Hubbard was
exposed to the elements of Western European art music and was able to synthesize these into his
own development as a modern jazz musician. And like Brown, Hubbard was immersed in a
regional jazz community in Indianapolis and enjoyed all the benefits of those interactions.
Unlike Byrd and Brown, who were contemporaries, the age difference between Brown
and Hubbard is significant. Hubbard was a young teenager when he began to attempt to emulate
Brown, therefore Brown’s playing style had a much more formative impact on Hubbard’s own
style formation. Whereas Byrd was already an established player in Detroit at the time of
Brown’s rise to prominence in about 1954, Hubbard had barely begun playing the trumpet. When
308
From 1957-1958.
230
Brown died in 1956 Byrd was a fixture on the New York jazz community while Hubbard was in
high school.
What is particularly noteworthy in the case of Freddie Hubbard is that his arrival in New
York City in 1958 gave him the chance to interact with a whole host of musicians and that would
cause him to shed many of the Brown-derived elements from his playing. Hubbard’s rhythmic
practices and phrasing tendencies would become more closely connected to the styles of modern
jazz saxophonists. His articulation tendencies would fall more in line with those of not only
saxophonists, but with Donald Byrd’s more legato-based approach, so much so that it can be said
that Hubbard’s practice sessions with the elder Byrd had an enormous impact on his own
To that end, it is accurate to state that Hubbard used the playing of Clifford Brown as a
template for his own during his formative style, adopting nearly all of the same performance
playing at which Brown is at the pinnacle since he quickly absorbed many more influences upon
arriving in New York City in 1958 and reevaluated his approaches to both articulation and
phrasing as a result of these varied sources of musical inspiration. Hubbard’s mature style, which
was in place by about 1960, bears only partial connection to Brown’s and while he could be
considered part of Brown’s musical lineage, it is inaccurate to label him as a disciple. Rather,
Hubbard carved out an individual space as a modern jazz trumpet stylist whose unique
incorporation of elements from a variety of sources, including free-jazz and the Avant-Garde,
would position him to be a direct influence on jazz trumpeters from the post-bop period and
beyond. Therefore it can be said that Hubbard was to trumpeters of the post-bop period what
Brown was to young trumpeters of the late-modern jazz period: a figure of great importance
231
whose stylistic contributions to jazz trumpet performance were formational for many young
trumpeters.
It is the hope of the author that those who continue to contribute to the collective
knowledge of the history of jazz will make use of comparative analysis to achieve more depth in
the understanding of one player’s influence upon another. Similar studies may be undertaken in
all areas of jazz studies that examine performance elements unique to specific instruments and
style-periods. Insider perspectives are crucial to a more nuanced understanding of jazz history
since many of the inaccuracies and mischaracterizations that have been perpetuated have found
their way into popular lore among jazz musicians themselves. Most crucially, various methods of
comparative analysis offer the best hope for putting historical assertions of stylistic influence and
similarity under a focused lens through which a greater understanding of style may be achieved.
232
5.0 REFERENCE
All print material and interviews used in the completion of this study are included under the
heading “Bibliography” and are listed alphabetically. All recordings used to conduct the
analytical transcriptions are included under the heading “Discography.” They are listed
5.1 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Arban, Jean-Baptiste. Complete Celebrated Method for Cornet: World’s Edition. New York:
Carl Fischer, 1984. Reprinted as the Complete Conservatory Method for Trumpet
(Cornet) or E-flat Alto, B-flat Tenor, Baritone, Euphonium, and B-flat Bass in Treble
Clef. Edited by Edwin Franko Goldman and Walter M. Smith. New York: Carl Fischer,
1982.
Baker, Davis. How to Play Bebop, Vol. 1. Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., 1985.
Baker, David. The Jazz Style of Clifford Brown: A Musical and Historical Perspective. Van
Nuys, CA: Alfred Publishing Co. Inc., 1982.
Berg, Shelton. Alfred’s Essentials of Jazz Theory: A Complete Self-Study Course for All
Musicians. Van Nuys, CA: Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., 2006.
Berliner, Paul. Thinking in Jazz: The Infinite Art of Improvisation. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1994.
Bjorn, Lars and Jim Gallert. Before Motown: A History of Jazz in Detroit 1920-60. Ann Arbor:
University of Michigan Press, 2001.
233
Broschke-Davis, Ursula. Paris without Regret. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1986.
Byrd, Donald. “Donald Byrd Talks to Young Trumpeters.” Down Beat 28:18. 1961. 38-39.
Christiansen, Corey and Kim Bock. Essential Jazz Lines: In the Style of Clifford Brown. Pacific,
MO: Mel Bay, 2004.
Catalano, Nick. Clifford Brown: The Life and Art of the Legendary Jazz Trumpeter. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2000.
Clarke, Herbert L. Technical Studies for the Cornet. New York: Carl Fischer, 1934.
Crawford, Marc. “Benny Remembers Clifford.” Down Beat. October 12, 1961. 22-23.
Davis, Miles and Quincy Troupe. Miles: The Autobiography. New York: Simon & Schuster,
1990.
Davis, Nathan. Writings in Jazz. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing, Co., 2002.
Erdmann, Tom. “An Interview with Freddie Hubbard.” ITG Journal 26/2 (January, 2002). 15-25.
Erdmann, Tom. “M+M=A: An Interview with Donald Byrd.” ITG Journal 28/3 (March, 2004).
30-39.
Farkas, Phillip. The Art of Horn Playing. Miami, FL: Summy-Birchard, Inc., 1956.
Feather, Leonard. “Remembering Clifford Brown.” Los Angeles Times, June 30, 1985. AC44.
Feather, Leornard. New Edition of the Encyclopedia of Jazz. New York: Horizon Press, 1955.
Friedman, Joshua. “The Jazz Fusion of Freddie Hubbard and CTI Records: An Analysis of the
Collaborations between Freddie Hubbard and Creed Taylor.” MM Thesis, California
State University, Long Beach: 2009.
Frink, Laurie and John McNeil. Flexus: Trumpet Calisthenics for the Modern Improviser.
Brooklyn: Omnitone Press, 2003.
234
Fuller, Curtis. Telephone Interview. Pittsburgh, PA, February 18, 2010.
Gitler, Ira. “Focus on Freddie Hubbard.” Down Beat 29. January 18, 1962. 22.
Goldsher, Alan. Hard Bop Academy. Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corp., 2002.
Gridley, Mark. Jazz Styles: History and Analysis. New York: Prentice Hall, 1976.
Gridley, Mark. Jazz Styles: History and Analysis. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2000.
Griffith, Pat. “Freddie Hubbard: Music is my Purpose.” Down Beat 39. December 7, 1972. 15.
Hood, Alan J. “We Should All Remember Clifford Brown.” Jazz Educators’ Journal; the
Magazine of the National Association of Jazz Educators 26:2 (1994). 18-24.
Hubbard, Freddie. Unpublished Master Class Audio Recording. Navy School of Music, Norfolk,
VA, October 2008.
Kernfield, Barry. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd Edition. Grove Music Online, Oxford
Music Online. Accessed July 29, 2011.
Korall, B. “Donald Byrd - Campus Catalyst.” Down Beat 38:13. 1966. 19.
Love, Stefan. “On Phrase Rhythm in Jazz.” PhD Diss., Eastman School of Music: 2011.
Martin, Henry and Keith Waters. Jazz: the First 100 Years. Belmont, CA: Thomson/Schirmer,
2006.
Mathieson, Kenny. Cookin: Hard Bop and Soul Jazz 1954-65. Edinburgh: Canongate, 2002.
235
May, Lissa. “The Role of Crispus Attucks High School in the Musical Development of African
American Jazz Musicians in Indianapolis in the 1930s and 1940s.” Jazz Research
Proceedings Yearbook (January 1, 2004). 1-8.
McNeil, John. The Art of Jazz Trumpet: Complete Edition. New York: Gerard & Sarzin, 1999.
Meadows, Eddie. Bebop to Cool: Context, Ideology, and Identity. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Morgenstern, Dan. “Toward Completeness.” Down Beat 76. December, 2009. 35-37.
Nevard, Mike. “An Appreciation of the Late Clifford Brown.” Melody Maker 31. July 7, 1956. 5.
Ramsey, Doug. Jazz Matters: reflections on the music & some of its makers. Fayetteville, AR:
University of Arkansas Press, 1989.
Richardson, Edward Rex. “Structural Elegance and Harmonic Disparity in Selected Solos by
Trumpeters Freddie Hubbard and Woody Shaw.” DMA Diss., Louisiana State University
and Agricultural and Mechanical College: 2006.
Rosenthal, David. Hard Bop: Jazz & Black Music 1955-1965. New York, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1992.
Schlossberg, Max. Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet. New York: M. Baron
Company, 1965. Original copyright holder J.F. Hill & Company, 1937.
Taylor, Arthur. Notes and Tones: Musician to Musician Interviews. New York: DaCapo Press,
1982.
Tirro, Frank. Jazz: A History. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. Inc., 1977.
Tomkins, Les. “Freddie Hubbard Speaks his Mind.” Crescendo International 11. 1973. 20-22.
West, Hollie. “Trumpeter’s Training.” Down Beat 47. July, 1980. 30-31.
236
5.2 DISCOGRAPHY
“Get Happy.” The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Vol. 1. Blue Note, BLP 1505. Recorded on June 22,
1953.
“Joy Spring.” Clifford Brown: The Complete Blue Note and Pacific Recordings. Mosaic, MR5-
104. Recorded on July 12, 1954.
“Daahoud.” Clifford Brown & Max Roach. Emarcy, 814645, 1954. Recorded on August 2, 1954.
“Joy Spring.” Clifford Brown & Max Roach. Emarcy, 814645. Recorded on August 2, 1954.
“Gertrude’s Bounce.” Clifford Brown and Max Roach at Basin Street. Emarcy, MG-36070.
Recorded on January 4, 1956.
“Flossie Lou.” The Complete EmArcy Recordings of Clifford Brown. Emarcy, 838306. Recorded
on February 17, 1956.
“Hank’s Tune.” Donald Byrd – Byrd’s Eye View. Transition, TRLP 4 LNJ 70104. Recorded on
December 2, 1955.
“There Will Never Be Another You.” The Jazz Message of Hank Mobley. Savoy, MG 12064.
Recorded on February 8, 1956.
“I’m an Old Cowhand.” Donald Byrd – Chant. Blue Note, LT 991. Recorded on April 17, 1961.
“Each Time I Think of You.” Donald Byrd – The Cat Walk. Blue Note, BLP 4075. Recorded on
May 2, 1961.
“Just In Time.” Jimmy Heath and Brass – Swamp Seed. Riverside, RLP 465 RS 9465. Recorded
on March 11, 1963.
237
5.2.3 Freddie Hubbard
“Tadd’s Delight.” Unreleased Live Recording. From the personal collection of David Baker.
Recorded in early 1957.
“Billie’s Bounce.” The Montgomery Brothers and Five Others. Pacific Jazz, PJ 1240 ST 20137.
Recorded on December 30, 1957.
“Birdlike.” Freddie Hubbard – Ready for Freddie. Blue Note, BLP 4085. Recorded on August
21, 1961.
“Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams.” Interplay: Bill Evans Quintet. Riverside, RLP 445. Recorded
on July 16, 1962.
“Pat ‘n Chat.” Hank Mobley – The Turnaround. Blue Note, BLP 4186. Recorded on February 5,
1965.
238
APPENDIX A
The following transcriptions include notations for articulations, terminal vibrato, and all
ornaments as well as the chord changes for the underlying harmony. They are presented in
chronological order and may be referenced with any of the figures contained in the body of text
using the measures numbers at the beginning of each stave. Textual descriptions and phrase
markings that are included in the figures in chapter 3 are not presented in these transcriptions.
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A.1 CLIFFORD BROWN - TRANSCRIPTIONS
240
241
242
A.1.2 Clifford Brown’s solo on “Joy Spring.” (Blue Note/Pacific)
243
244
245
A.1.3 Clifford Brown’s Solo on “Daahoud.”
246
247
248
A.1.4 Clifford Brown’s Solo on “Flossie Lou.”
249
250
251
A.1.5 Clifford Brown’s solo on “Gertrude’s Bounce,”
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253
A.2 DONALD BYRD – TRANSCRIPTIONS
254
255
256
257
A.2.2 Donald Byrd’s solo on “There Will Never be Another You.”
258
259
260
A.2.3 Donald Byrd’s solo on “Each Time I Think of You.”
261
262
263
A.2.4 Donald Byrd’s solo on “I’m an old Cowhand,”
264
265
266
267
A.2.5 Donald Byrd’s solo on “Just in Time.”
268
269
270
A.3 FREDDIE HUBBARD – TRANSCRIPTIONS
271
272
273
274
A.3.2 Freddie Hubbard’s solo on “Billie’s Bounce,”
275
276
A.3.3 Freddie Hubbard’s solo on “Birdlike.”
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
A.3.4 Freddie Hubbard’s solo on “Wrap your Troubles in Dreams,”
284
285
286
A.3.5 Freddie Hubbard’s solo on “Pat ‘n Chat.”
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288
289
290
APPENDIX B
Air Stream
The air blown through the oral cavity, across the pursed lips that form the embouchure,
Articulation
309
The “degree to which each of a succession of notes is separated in performance.”
Additionally, for the purposes of this study, slurred pitches, accents, and ghost notes are
Articulation Palette
309Bryan White, "articulation." In The Oxford Companion to Music, edited by Alison Latham. Oxford Music
Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t114/e420 (accessed January 21, 2012).
291
Chord Changes
Chord Symbols
Chordal
Improvised or composed material that is constructed primarily of minor and major thirds
Eighth-note-based Lines
Embouchure
Ghost Notes
Notes that are deemphasized to the point of being barely audible are said to be ghosted,
or called ghost notes. This is done by altering the intensity of the air stream momentarily
so that the deemphasized pitch is much softer in relation to the pitch immediately before
and after.
292
Harmonic Language
Harmonic language refers to the unique way in which a jazz musician uses various types
improvisational vehicle.
Improvisational Vocabulary
Improvisational vocabulary refers to the unique way a jazz musician combines harmonic,
Legato Attack
Tonguing a note on the trumpet using a “D” consonant produces a round, smooth sound,
called a legato attack. Multiple legato attacks in succession are heard as being very
smooth.
Line(s)
“A melody of one measure or longer and moving in eighth-notes or faster values.” 310
Lip Slur
Slurring two or more pitches that use the same valve combination on the trumpet is
known as a lip slur. Since the notes in question use the same valve combination, changes
in airspeed, tongue position, and lip tension alone are adjusted to change to the next pitch.
310Shelton G. Berg, Alfred’s Essentials of Jazz Theory: A Complete Self-Study Course for All Musicians (Van
Nuys, CA: Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., 2006), 7.
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Melismatic
referred to as melismatic.
Modern Jazz
For purposes of this study, Modern jazz refers to three subgenres of jazz: bebop; hard
bop; and cool jazz. Harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic performance practice among these
three genres is nearly identical and, as such, the blanket term “modern jazz” is used.
Motif
A brief musical idea, often thought of as the “shortest subdivision of a theme or phrase
Ornaments
of eighth-note-based material that include turns, and various types of grace notes are
called ornaments. For the purposes of this study they are sometimes called ornamental
devices.
311 William Drabkin, "Motif." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/19221 (accessed January 21, 2012).
312
"Ornaments," In The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. rev., edited by Michael Kennedy. Oxford Music
Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t237/e7533 (accessed January 21, 2012).
294
Partials
not be harmonic. The fundamental and all overtones may be described as partials; in this
case, the fundamental is the first partial, the first overtone the second partial, and so
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on.” On a B-flat trumpet, each valve combination produces separate overtone series.
The seven valve combinations allow the trumpeter to switch between these overtone
Register
prescribe the size of a register, though the construction or playing of an instrument and
the manner of singing can help to determine whether two notes are in the same or a
314
different register.” The B-flat trumpet has five registers, four of which are commonly
used in jazz performance. From lowest to highest these five registers are as follows:
pedal; lower; middle; upper; and altissimo. The pedal register is seldom used in jazz
trumpet performance.
Scalar
Improvised or composed material that is constructed primarily of minor and major second
intervals is referred to as scalar because of its similarity to most scales in their pure
forms.
313 Murray Campbell, "Partial." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/20975 (accessed January 21, 2012).
314 William Drabkin, "Register." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/23072 (accessed January 21, 2012).
295
Slur
Pitches in succession that are played on a single breath and not separated by tongued
attack. 315 On the trumpet, the pitches are changed only by changing to the appropriate
Staccato Attack
Tonguing a note on the trumpet using a “T” consonant produces a distinct, pointed sound,
called a staccato attack. Multiple staccato attacks in succession are heard as being
detached.
Stand-alone Syncopation
Sustained Syncopation
Sustained pitches that begin on an offbeat for a length equal to the value of a dotted
quarter note.
Time-feel
A term that refers to a jazz musician’s interpretation of rhythmic pulse and musical time.
315 "Slur," In The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. rev., edited by Michael Kennedy. Oxford Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t237/e9519 (accessed January 21, 2012).
296
Tongue Position
The height of the back, or “dorsal,” of the tongue within the oral cavity. As the dorsal of
the tongue is raised and approaches the roof of the mouth the speed of the air blown
through the mouth increases. Low tongue positions produce slow airspeeds, while higher
Tonguing
“In playing mouth-blown wind instruments, the technique used for beginning (and
sometimes ending) notes, except those which are slurred...In playing cup-mouthpiece
instruments and members of the flute family the tip of the tongue is generally placed
against the palate behind the upper teeth, then drawn back as if forming the consonant ‘T’
or ‘D’ with some suitable vowel. Such a movement is often termed a ‘tongue stroke’ (Fr.
coup de langue; Ger. Zungenstoss).” 316 Legato notes are created using the consonant “D”
316 Bruce Dickey and David Lasocki,"Tonguing." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/28119 (accessed January 21, 2012).
297
APPENDIX C
Accents
Embouchure Scoop
298
Fall
Ghost Note
Grace Note
299
Half-Valve Grace Note
Legato Attack
Plop
300
Slurs
Staccato Attack
Terminal Vibrato
301
APPENDIX D
The pitches that are given in the following table are written pitches for the B-flat trumpet.
302
303
APPENDIX E
I have chosen to use the standard, reduced chord/scale notation favored by jazz educator Jamey
Aebersold. To that end, all chords have been notated using as little extensions as possible. The
following chart shows the chord symbols used and provides a definition of the harmonic
information that each one represents. Further, each chord is given with the chord root as “C.”
Cmaj7 Major. Can be used to denote major triad, 7, 9, 13, and 6/9 chords.
Cmaj7#11 Lydian. Denotes major 7chord with a raised 11th (4th) scale degree.
C7(#11) or C7(b5) Dominant 7 or 13 with a raised 11th (4th) or lowered 5th degree
Cm7 Minor. Can be used to denote minor triad, 7, 9, 11, and 13 chords.
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APPENDIX F
This Appendix includes representative exercises from the three major traditional trumpet
methods discussed in this study as well as a brief synopsis of each method. Each series of
representative studies and exercises are presented exactly as they appear in the original method
books. I have included descriptive text to aid the reader in understanding the construction of the
Arban
Arban’s method book is vast and covers a tremendous amount of fundamental exercises and
studies. However, little text was included in the original edition Brown, Byrd, and Hubbard were
exposed to. While there are exercises and drills that address legato and melodic playing, a
significant portion of material in the book was centered on laying the foundation for the
performance of pieces that showcased virtuosic feats of single and multiple tonguing. Basic
exercises and short etudes were to primarily tongued. Students who worked diligently from
Arban’s manual were (and are) able to achieve excellent control of their tonguing clarity and
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speed. The following exercises and excerpts are representative of the prevalence of tonguing
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Figure 5.1 Representative Exercises from J.B. Arban’s method book.
307
Figure 5.2 Representative Exercises from J.B. Arban’s method book.
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Figure 5.3 Excerpt from J.B. Arban’s variations on the theme from The Carnival of Venice.
Schlossberg
Max Schlossberg’s Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet is yet another famous method
book that many trumpeters have incorporated into their developmental and daily routines. Like
Arban’s method, Schlossberg’s contains occasional instructions and texts but is primarily a
compendium of musical exercises. In the introductory material, Schlossberg states that the book
has been divided into eight parts: I. Long Note Drills; II. Intervals; III. Octave Drills; IV. Lip
Drills; V. Chord Drills; VI. Scale Drills; VII. Chromatic Scale Drills; VIII. Etudes. Note the lack
of a dedicated subheading for articulation and tonguing exercises. Schlossberg chooses instead to
incorporate articulation practice into scale studies. The vast majority of the drills are slurred and
309
cross multiple register breaks. Dymanic markings given are primarily quite soft (piano to mezzo-
forte) which would tend to encourage efficient use of air volume and air stream.
310
Figure 5.4 Representative examples from Max Schlossberg’s method book
311
Figure 5.5 Representative examples from Max Schlossberg’s method book
Clarke
Herbert L. Clarke’s Technical Studies for the Cornet has been a staple of the daily routines of
trumpeters since its publication. Clarke, like Arban, was an accomplished cornet soloist whose
virtuosity was touted throughout his career. Clarke’s book is short and concise, focusing
primarily on diatonic and chromatic technical studies. Clarke instructs the reader to perform the
exercises in one breath in order to “acquire endurance without strain or injury.” Further, the
prevailing dynamic marking is pianissimo (pp), though some instances where studies are marked
312
piano do occur. Like Schlossberg’s method, the performance of these studies at extremely soft
313
314
APPENDIX G
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
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