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Tommy Flanagan

Thomas Lee Flanagan (March 16, 1930 – November 16, 2001) was an American jazz pianist and composer. He grew up in Detroit, initially influenced by such pianists as Art Tatum, Teddy Wilson, and Nat King Cole, and then by bebop musicians. Within months of moving to New York in 1956, he had recorded with Miles Davis and on Sonny Rollins' album Saxophone Colossus. Recordings under various leaders, including Giant Steps of John Coltrane, continued well into 1962, when he became vocalist Ella Fitzgerald's full-time accompanist. He worked with Fitzgerald for three years until 1965, and then in 1968 returned to be her pianist and musical director, this time for a decade.

Tommy Flanagan
Flanagan at the Village Jazz Lounge in Walt Disney World, 1978
Background information
Birth nameThomas Lee Flanagan
Born(1930-03-16)March 16, 1930
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
DiedNovember 16, 2001(2001-11-16) (aged 71)
New York City, New York, U.S.
GenresBebop, hard bop, mainstream jazz
Occupation(s)Musician, composer
Instrument(s)Piano
Years active1940s–2001

After leaving Fitzgerald in 1978, Flanagan attracted praise for the elegance of his playing, which was principally in trio settings when under his own leadership. In his 45-year recording career, he recorded more than three dozen albums under his own name and more than 200 as a sideman. By the time of his death, he was one of the most widely admired jazz pianists and had influenced both his contemporaries and later generations of players.

Early life edit

Flanagan was born in Conant Gardens, Detroit, Michigan, on March 16, 1930.[1][2] He was the youngest of six children – five boys and a girl.[1] His parents were both originally from Georgia.[3] His father, Johnson Sr,[4] was a postman, and his mother, Ida Mae,[3] worked in the garment industry.[1]

At the age of six, Flanagan's parents gave him a clarinet for Christmas.[2] He learned to read music from playing the clarinet, but within a few years he preferred the piano.[2][3] The family had a piano in the house, and Flanagan received lessons from one of his brothers, Johnson,[5] and Gladys Wade Dillard, who also taught Kirk Lightsey and Barry Harris.[5][6][7] Flanagan graduated from Northern High School, which he attended with other future musicians, including saxophonist Sonny Red.[8][9]

Flanagan's early influences included Art Tatum and Teddy Wilson, both of whom he heard on the radio and playing in the Detroit area, as well as Nat King Cole and local pianists Earl Van Riper and Willie Anderson.[5][10] These, however, played in an earlier style, and the young Flanagan and his friends were more interested in the newer bebop, including that played by pianist Bud Powell, who had a strong effect on Flanagan's musical thinking and improvising.[5]

Later life and career edit

1945–1955 – Around Detroit edit

Flanagan's first concert was around 1945, with trombonist Frank Rosolino.[8] Given Flanagan was only around 15 years old at the time, he could not stay in the bar area of the club between sets, so he went to another room and did some homework.[10] As a teenager, he played in a band led by Lucky Thompson that also contained Pepper Adams and Kenny Burrell.[5][11] Still in his teens, Flanagan also sat in on piano for some appearances by Charlie Parker in Detroit.[12] During 1949, Flanagan had his first residence, at the Blue Bird Inn in Detroit.[5] In 1950, he played with Rudy Rutherford, until the clarinetist returned to the Count Basie band.[13] Flanagan then played jazz and rhythm and blues with saxophonist George Benson in Toledo, Ohio, before being drafted into the army in 1951.[13]

After basic training in Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, Flanagan auditioned as a pianist for an army show.[14] He gained the role, which prevented him from being sent to the Korean War at that time; approximately a year later, however, he was sent to Kunsan, with the war ongoing.[14] There, he worked as a motion-picture projectionist.[14] After two years' service he was discharged and returned to Detroit, where he soon became pianist at the Blue Bird again.[2][13] He again worked with Burrell, as well as Donald Byrd and Yusef Lateef, among others.[2]

1956–early 1978 – After move to New York edit

Flanagan moved to New York in 1956.[15] He was unsure of how long he would stay, having been persuaded to go by Burrell; the two men initially stayed with Burrell's aunt in Harlem.[5][16] Flanagan soon found work in clubs and studios, including recording Detroit – New York Junction with Thad Jones in March.[5] Later that month, he returned to recording, this time with Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins, for tracks released on Collectors' Items.[16] Rollins was leader for another session three months later: Saxophone Colossus,[7] which was labeled an "undisputed masterpiece" by The Penguin Guide to Jazz.[17]

Flanagan also first accompanied Ella Fitzgerald in 1956, for around a month, including at the Newport Jazz Festival.[5] Later that year, he joined trombonist J. J. Johnson, with whom he recorded several albums in 1957 and then toured Europe.[5] While in Sweden, Flanagan, with bassist Wilbur Little and drummer Elvin Jones, recorded his first album as leader, Overseas.[18] Late in 1957, he was part of Miles Davis' band for a short period, before returning to Johnson early the following year, for another stay of 10 months.[19] A period leading his own trio in 1958 was followed by working with trombonist Tyree Glenn.[19]

Throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s, Flanagan made frequent appearances in recording studios, for many leaders and record labels. In May 1959, he was part of a groundbreaking recording: John Coltrane's Giant Steps, described by The Penguin Guide to Jazz as the saxophonist's "first genuinely iconic record".[20] The technical complexity of the music, particularly of the title track, meant that there were numerous false starts and rejected takes,[20] and the initially released take of "Giant Steps" is a rare instance on record of Flanagan sounding uncertain.[20] Another appearance on a landmark recording came in January of the following year: Flanagan was a member of the quartet that made The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery; his playing complemented that of the guitarist, using controlled force on bebop numbers and delicacy on a ballad track.[21][22]

Flanagan was with trumpeter Harry Edison in 1959–60, and tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins in 1961–62, including a UK tour.[19] In this period, Flanagan recorded albums with several leaders from an earlier era, including Lionel Hampton, Jo Jones, and Pee Wee Russell, as well as one with Edison and around 10 with Hawkins. Flanagan then played with guitarist Jim Hall and bassist Percy Heath as a trio in New York.[19]

In 1962, Flanagan was asked by jazz impresario Norman Granz to become Ella Fitzgerald's full-time accompanist.[23] Flanagan was looking for steadier work than was available with Hawkins, so he accepted.[23] He worked with Fitzgerald from 1962 to 1965.[15][24] They toured internationally, including to Japan in 1964.[25] He also played with other bands when not required by the vocalist; these included a brief reunion with Rollins in 1965.[26] Later the same year, Flanagan left Fitzgerald and was part of Art Farmer's short-lived New York Jazz Sextet, which recorded Group Therapy.[27][28] Flanagan then became accompanist to Tony Bennett for part of 1966,[29] and lived on the West Coast.[24]

Flanagan returned to working with Fitzgerald in 1968.[15] In addition to being her pianist, mostly as part of a trio, he was her musical director.[24] Her profile was high enough for the group to tour for 40–45 weeks a year,[30] including at least one tour of Europe a year (29 cities on the continent in 1970, for example).[12][31] During these concerts, Flanagan often played a set as part of his trio, without the singer.[32][33] Beginning in 1974, he again began to perform and record as a leader: his 1975 trio release, The Tommy Flanagan Tokyo Recital, was his first as leader since 1960.[34] Prior to these performances, he had felt that his technique was inadequate for a soloist, but he enjoyed the extra exposure of being a leader, so decided to continue.[10] Flanagan ended his role with Fitzgerald in 1978, after he had a heart attack[15] and had become tired of extensive touring.[35] After the heart attack, he stopped smoking, reduced the amount that he drank, and exercised by walking more than he had previously.[24]

 
Flanagan (left) with Ella Fitzgerald and Gerald Ford

Late 1978–2001 – After Ella Fitzgerald edit

Soon after leaving Fitzgerald, Flanagan played solo piano in New York.[36] In 1979, he was a guest on the first series of Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz radio programs.[37] He continued to work with other players, including as a trio with Tal Farlow and Red Mitchell in 1980.[38] For much of the 1980s, he led a trio that featured bassist George Mraz and various drummers. By around 1990, Flanagan was concentrating on his own appearances and recordings rather than sideman activities.[39] In the early 1990s, Mraz was replaced by Peter Washington, whose heavier bass lines added urgency to the trio's sound.[40]

Flanagan's reputation gradually grew after he moved on from being primarily an accompanist: in a 1992 article, critic Leonard Feather suggested that "Flanagan is the pianist most likely to be named a personal idol by other jazz pianists, whether they be swing veterans or avant-gardists".[29] This made him more in demand; the workload may have contributed to his collapse in 1991 and subsequent quadruple bypass heart surgery.[29] He returned to playing within weeks, but also returned to hospital for treatment for an aneurysm.[41] Flanagan was awarded the Danish Jazzpar Prize in 1993.[15] Three years later, he was selected for a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Fellowship.[42] In 1990, 1993 and 1997, Flanagan toured Japan, where he was very popular, with 100 Golden Fingers, a 10-pianist group.[43][44][45]

Flanagan continued to be praised for the elegance of his playing – critic Ben Ratliff commented in 1998 that the trio with Washington and drummer Lewis Nash was, "in its controlled, elegant way, [...] one of the more extraordinarily coordinated piano trios in jazz's history".[46] Despite the near-unanimous praise from critics and musicians for Flanagan's recordings and concert performances after he left Fitzgerald, he did not secure a recording contract with a major label for more than one album.[47]

In late October 2001, Flanagan played in a John Coltrane tribute at the San Francisco Jazz Festival.[2] The following month, he was admitted to Mount Sinai hospital in Manhattan; less than two weeks later, on November 16, he died there, from complications related to the aneurysm he had suffered a decade earlier.[2][15][48]

Personal life edit

Flanagan first married in 1960, to Ann.[24] The couple had a son and two daughters, and divorced in the early 1970s; Ann was killed in a car accident in 1980.[24] Flanagan's mother died in 1959, and his father in 1977.[10] Flanagan married Diana, his second wife, in 1976.[49] He was survived by Diana, the three children from his first marriage, and six grandchildren.[15]

Flanagan was usually self-effacing, reserved and amiable.[1][50] His personality was summarized by his second wife: "His gentleness and quietness are deceptive. He is a strong man, and he has a lot of spirit and firmness."[49]

Playing style edit

Whitney Balliett stated that Flanagan was the most consistent of the pianists influenced by Wilson, Tatum and Cole, and invariably created something new in his playing: he "often states the melody with dissonant, levering chords played offbeat or staccato. Never decorative, they [...] reveal both a respect for the melody and an intense desire to alter it"; during his main improvising, he used "interval-filled descending figures [...] charging rhythmic phrases whose accented first notes make the succeeding notes snap, double-time phrases that race ahead to clear the way, and legato phrases that form sauntering rear guards."[35] In a review of a 1989 concert, Feather commented that Flanagan used "subtle dynamic shadings", while "bursts of upsweeping chords sometimes lent an element of surprise, with a nimble left hand offering graceful filigree fills" and occasional musical quotes that added humor.[51] Other techniques he employed were, in Stanley Crouch's description, "crooning effects achieved by manipulating the pedals, holding down keys long enough to sustain notes in decisively different ways, and working out inflections that evoke the voice – sighs, moans, swells, purrs".[52] Critic John S. Wilson described Flanagan's solo piano style on ballads in 1978: "He drifts through ballads with a dreamy langourous flow, but it is not a soft or flabby style. There is, beneath the surface, a vitality that gives it a lean, swinging character".[36]

Although he acknowledged the influence of other pianists, Flanagan stated that, "I like to play like a horn player, like I'm blowing into the piano. The sound of a piece – its over-all tonality – is what concerns me."[14] In concerts, Flanagan typically played a range of composers' works and, once he had become established as a small-group leader, he often played songs by Tadd Dameron, Duke Ellington, Benny Golson, Thad Jones, Tom McIntosh, and Thelonious Monk.[53]

Awards and legacy edit

During his career, Flanagan was nominated for five Grammy Awards. The first occasion was in 1983: The Magnificent Tommy Flanagan for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Soloist; and Giant Steps for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Group.[54] Two years later, Thelonica was nominated for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Soloist.[55] The next nomination was in 1998, for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo for his solo on "Dear Old Stockholm" from Sea Changes.[56][57] The last, in 2003, was in the same category, for Flanagan's solo on "Sunset & the Mockingbird", from A Great Night in Harlem.[58]

Flanagan's influence on pianists extended from his contemporaries to younger performers. Contemporaries included fellow Detroit players Barry Harris and Roland Hanna.[59] Lightsey was influenced by Flanagan's musical creative thinking and pianistic fluidity.[60] Alan Broadbent also acknowledged Flanagan as an influence,[61] as did Helen Sung, who changed from being a classical music pianist to a jazz one after hearing the swing and logic of a Flanagan solo.[62] Kenny Barron described Flanagan as his "hero" and stated that he admired the older man's touch and phrasing from when he first heard it at junior high school: "He became an influence and continued to be an influence till the day he died – and he still is."[63]

Discography edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Fordham, John (November 20, 2001) "Tommy Flanagan". The Guardian.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Thurber, John (November 18, 2001) "T. Flanagan, 71; Jazz Pianist, Accompanist". Los Angeles Times.
  3. ^ a b c Balliett 1986, p. 359.
  4. ^ Cohassey, John (1996) "Tommy Flanagan". In Contemporary Musicians. Volume 16. pp. 106–109. Reproduced at encyclopedia.com. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j WKCR broadcast (November 20, 1994) Transcribed at Panken, Ted (March 16, 2013) "For Tommy Flanagan's 83rd Birthday Anniversary, a 1994 Interview on WKCR". Transcript of WKCR radio interview. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
  6. ^ Feather, Leonard and Gitler, Ira (1999) The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz. Oxford University Press. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
  7. ^ a b Bjorn 2001, p. 97.
  8. ^ a b Bjorn 2001, p. 96.
  9. ^ Berger, Edward; Martin, Henry; Morgenstern, Dan (eds.) (2007) Annual Review of Jazz Studies. Volume 13. pp. 62–63. Scarecrow Press.
  10. ^ a b c d Balliett 2000, p. 541.
  11. ^ Bjorn 2001, p. 95.
  12. ^ a b Franckling, Ken (June 24, 1989) "Tommy Flanagan: The Poet of Jazz Piano" New Pittsburgh Courier. p. 2.
  13. ^ a b c Bjorn 2001, p. 131.
  14. ^ a b c d Balliett 1986, p. 360.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Ratliff, Ben (November 19, 2001) "Tommy Flanagan, Elegant Jazz Pianist, Is Dead at 71". The New York Times.
  16. ^ a b Bjorn 2001, p. 153.
  17. ^ Cook & Morton 2008, p. 1233.
  18. ^ "Tommy Flanagan: Poet of Piano". (July 16, 2008) npr radio.
  19. ^ a b c d Dobbins, Bill and Kernfeld, Barry "Flanagan, Tommy". In The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz (2nd ed.). Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved August 7, 2013. (Subscription required.)
  20. ^ a b c Cook & Morton 2008, p. 286.
  21. ^ Cook & Morton 2008, p. 1027.
  22. ^ Nastos, Michael G. "Wes Montgomery: The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery". AllMusic. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
  23. ^ a b Nicholson 1993, p. 188.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Balliett 1986, p. 358.
  25. ^ New York Amsterdam News. p. 12. (January 18, 1964)
  26. ^ Strongin, Theodore (June 18, 1965) "Jazz Series Begins in Museum's Garden" The New York Times. p. 29.
  27. ^ Dryden, Ken "Art Farmer: Art Farmer's New York Jazz Sextet". AllMusic. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
  28. ^ Walker, Jesse H. (February 12, 1966) "Theatricals" New York Amsterdam News. p. 18.
  29. ^ a b c Feather, Leonard (January 26, 1992) "Stop and Bop with Tommy Flanagan". Los Angeles Times.
  30. ^ Nicholson 1993, p. 197.
  31. ^ "Ella Touring in Europe" (May 2, 1970) New Pittsburgh Courier. p. 27.
  32. ^ Duncan, Perdita (November 29, 1969) "Music in Review" New Pittsburgh Courier. p. 14.
  33. ^ Desnselow, Robin (May 11, 1970) "Ella Fitzgerald at the Odeon, Hammersmith" The Guardian. p. 8.
  34. ^ Morgenstern, Dan (2004) Living with Jazz: A Reader. Pantheon Books.
  35. ^ a b Balliett 2000, p. 542.
  36. ^ a b Wilson, John S. (November 24, 1978) "Jazz: Flanagan at Piano" The New York Times. p. C14.
  37. ^ Jackson, Grant (March 25, 2011) "Marian McPartland on Piano Jazz, Part Two". NPR.
  38. ^ Wilson, John S. (July 2, 1981) "Film: Profile of a Guitarist" The New York Times. p. C17.
  39. ^ Himes, Geoffrey (February 2012) "Gary Smulyan: Baritone Believer" Down Beat. p. 46.
  40. ^ Watrous, Peter (September 3, 1992) "Tommy Flanagan, Surprises at His Finger Tips" The New York Times. p. C19.
  41. ^ Sutro, Dirk (October 11, 1991) "Rejuvenated Tommy Flanagan Back at Keyboard". Los Angeles Times.
  42. ^ "NEA Jazz Masters". National Endowment for the Arts. Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  43. ^ Dryden, Ken "Various Artists: 100 Gold Fingers: Piano Playhouse 1990". AllMusic. Retrieved August 29, 2013.
  44. ^ Dryden, Ken "Various Artists: 100 Gold Fingers: Piano Playhouse 1993". AllMusic. Retrieved August 29, 2013.
  45. ^ Brown, Hilary (August 2013) "Pianist Mulgrew Miller Dies of Stroke at Age 57" Down Beat. p. 18.
  46. ^ Ratliff, Ben (September 11, 1998) "Flanagan Trio Takes Care of the Details" The New York Times. p. E28.
  47. ^ Giddins, Gary (1998) Visions of Jazz: The First Century. p. 606. Oxford University Press.
  48. ^ Pleasant, Betty (November 28, 2001) "After Lengthy Illness, 'Elegant' Jazz Pianist, Tommy Flanagan, Dies at 71" Los Angeles Sentinel. p. A4.
  49. ^ a b Balliett 1986, p. 362.
  50. ^ Primack, Bret (January/February 1999) "Tommy Flanagan: Pure Artistry". JazzTimes.
  51. ^ Feather, Leonard (August 14, 1989) "Jazz Review: Flanagan, the Musicians' Musician, Draws a Full House". Los Angeles Times.
  52. ^ Crouch, Stanley (2006) Considering Genius: Writings on Jazz. p. 335. Basic Civitas Books.
  53. ^ Stewart, Zan (February 19, 1988) "Flanagan's Piano Leads Instead of Follows". Los Angeles Times.
  54. ^ "Grammy Awards Final Nominations" (January 22, 1983) Billboard. p. 67.
  55. ^ "Grammy Awards Final Nominations" (January 26, 1985) Billboard. p. 78.
  56. ^ Hunter Jr, Al (February 20, 1998) "Despite the Prime-Time Snub, Jazz Grammys Are Still Gold". philly.com.
  57. ^ "Grammy Awards Final Nominations" (January 17, 1998) Billboard. p. 79.
  58. ^ "Grammy Nominations Announced Today". (January 7, 2003) DownBeat.
  59. ^ Balliett 2000, p. 540.
  60. ^ Bjorn 2001, p. 167.
  61. ^ Heckman, Don (February 17, 2006) "Basics for Broadbent" Los Angeles Times.
  62. ^ Espeland, Pamela (September 17, 2011) "'Round Midnight: A Late-Night Conversation with Helen Sung". npr.
  63. ^ Ouellette, Dan (February 2011) "Blindfold Test: Kenny Barron & Mulgrew Miller" Down Beat. p. 82.

Bibliography

  • Balliett, Whitney (2000). Collected Works: A Journal of Jazz 1954–2000. Granta Books.
  • Balliett, Whitney (1986). American Musicians: Fifty-Six Portraits in Jazz. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-503758-6.
  • Bjorn, Lars (2001). Before Motown: A History of Jazz in Detroit, 1920–60. University of Michigan Press.
  • Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2008). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings. Penguin.
  • Nicholson, Stuart (1993). Ella Fitzgerald. Victor Gollancz.

External links edit

  • Discography at the Jazz Discography Project
  • Detailed discography as leader, by Michael Fitzgerald
  • 2001 JazzTimes article on Flanagan's lifestyle

tommy, flanagan, other, people, with, same, name, thomas, flanagan, thomas, flanagan, march, 1930, november, 2001, american, jazz, pianist, composer, grew, detroit, initially, influenced, such, pianists, tatum, teddy, wilson, king, cole, then, bebop, musicians. For other people with the same name see Thomas Flanagan Thomas Lee Flanagan March 16 1930 November 16 2001 was an American jazz pianist and composer He grew up in Detroit initially influenced by such pianists as Art Tatum Teddy Wilson and Nat King Cole and then by bebop musicians Within months of moving to New York in 1956 he had recorded with Miles Davis and on Sonny Rollins album Saxophone Colossus Recordings under various leaders including Giant Steps of John Coltrane continued well into 1962 when he became vocalist Ella Fitzgerald s full time accompanist He worked with Fitzgerald for three years until 1965 and then in 1968 returned to be her pianist and musical director this time for a decade Tommy FlanaganFlanagan at the Village Jazz Lounge in Walt Disney World 1978Background informationBirth nameThomas Lee FlanaganBorn 1930 03 16 March 16 1930Detroit Michigan U S DiedNovember 16 2001 2001 11 16 aged 71 New York City New York U S GenresBebop hard bop mainstream jazzOccupation s Musician composerInstrument s PianoYears active1940s 2001 After leaving Fitzgerald in 1978 Flanagan attracted praise for the elegance of his playing which was principally in trio settings when under his own leadership In his 45 year recording career he recorded more than three dozen albums under his own name and more than 200 as a sideman By the time of his death he was one of the most widely admired jazz pianists and had influenced both his contemporaries and later generations of players Contents 1 Early life 2 Later life and career 2 1 1945 1955 Around Detroit 2 2 1956 early 1978 After move to New York 2 3 Late 1978 2001 After Ella Fitzgerald 3 Personal life 4 Playing style 5 Awards and legacy 6 Discography 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editFlanagan was born in Conant Gardens Detroit Michigan on March 16 1930 1 2 He was the youngest of six children five boys and a girl 1 His parents were both originally from Georgia 3 His father Johnson Sr 4 was a postman and his mother Ida Mae 3 worked in the garment industry 1 At the age of six Flanagan s parents gave him a clarinet for Christmas 2 He learned to read music from playing the clarinet but within a few years he preferred the piano 2 3 The family had a piano in the house and Flanagan received lessons from one of his brothers Johnson 5 and Gladys Wade Dillard who also taught Kirk Lightsey and Barry Harris 5 6 7 Flanagan graduated from Northern High School which he attended with other future musicians including saxophonist Sonny Red 8 9 Flanagan s early influences included Art Tatum and Teddy Wilson both of whom he heard on the radio and playing in the Detroit area as well as Nat King Cole and local pianists Earl Van Riper and Willie Anderson 5 10 These however played in an earlier style and the young Flanagan and his friends were more interested in the newer bebop including that played by pianist Bud Powell who had a strong effect on Flanagan s musical thinking and improvising 5 Later life and career edit1945 1955 Around Detroit edit Flanagan s first concert was around 1945 with trombonist Frank Rosolino 8 Given Flanagan was only around 15 years old at the time he could not stay in the bar area of the club between sets so he went to another room and did some homework 10 As a teenager he played in a band led by Lucky Thompson that also contained Pepper Adams and Kenny Burrell 5 11 Still in his teens Flanagan also sat in on piano for some appearances by Charlie Parker in Detroit 12 During 1949 Flanagan had his first residence at the Blue Bird Inn in Detroit 5 In 1950 he played with Rudy Rutherford until the clarinetist returned to the Count Basie band 13 Flanagan then played jazz and rhythm and blues with saxophonist George Benson in Toledo Ohio before being drafted into the army in 1951 13 After basic training in Fort Leonard Wood Missouri Flanagan auditioned as a pianist for an army show 14 He gained the role which prevented him from being sent to the Korean War at that time approximately a year later however he was sent to Kunsan with the war ongoing 14 There he worked as a motion picture projectionist 14 After two years service he was discharged and returned to Detroit where he soon became pianist at the Blue Bird again 2 13 He again worked with Burrell as well as Donald Byrd and Yusef Lateef among others 2 1956 early 1978 After move to New York edit Flanagan moved to New York in 1956 15 He was unsure of how long he would stay having been persuaded to go by Burrell the two men initially stayed with Burrell s aunt in Harlem 5 16 Flanagan soon found work in clubs and studios including recording Detroit New York Junction with Thad Jones in March 5 Later that month he returned to recording this time with Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins for tracks released on Collectors Items 16 Rollins was leader for another session three months later Saxophone Colossus 7 which was labeled an undisputed masterpiece by The Penguin Guide to Jazz 17 Flanagan also first accompanied Ella Fitzgerald in 1956 for around a month including at the Newport Jazz Festival 5 Later that year he joined trombonist J J Johnson with whom he recorded several albums in 1957 and then toured Europe 5 While in Sweden Flanagan with bassist Wilbur Little and drummer Elvin Jones recorded his first album as leader Overseas 18 Late in 1957 he was part of Miles Davis band for a short period before returning to Johnson early the following year for another stay of 10 months 19 A period leading his own trio in 1958 was followed by working with trombonist Tyree Glenn 19 Throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s Flanagan made frequent appearances in recording studios for many leaders and record labels In May 1959 he was part of a groundbreaking recording John Coltrane s Giant Steps described by The Penguin Guide to Jazz as the saxophonist s first genuinely iconic record 20 The technical complexity of the music particularly of the title track meant that there were numerous false starts and rejected takes 20 and the initially released take of Giant Steps is a rare instance on record of Flanagan sounding uncertain 20 Another appearance on a landmark recording came in January of the following year Flanagan was a member of the quartet that made The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery his playing complemented that of the guitarist using controlled force on bebop numbers and delicacy on a ballad track 21 22 Flanagan was with trumpeter Harry Edison in 1959 60 and tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins in 1961 62 including a UK tour 19 In this period Flanagan recorded albums with several leaders from an earlier era including Lionel Hampton Jo Jones and Pee Wee Russell as well as one with Edison and around 10 with Hawkins Flanagan then played with guitarist Jim Hall and bassist Percy Heath as a trio in New York 19 In 1962 Flanagan was asked by jazz impresario Norman Granz to become Ella Fitzgerald s full time accompanist 23 Flanagan was looking for steadier work than was available with Hawkins so he accepted 23 He worked with Fitzgerald from 1962 to 1965 15 24 They toured internationally including to Japan in 1964 25 He also played with other bands when not required by the vocalist these included a brief reunion with Rollins in 1965 26 Later the same year Flanagan left Fitzgerald and was part of Art Farmer s short lived New York Jazz Sextet which recorded Group Therapy 27 28 Flanagan then became accompanist to Tony Bennett for part of 1966 29 and lived on the West Coast 24 Flanagan returned to working with Fitzgerald in 1968 15 In addition to being her pianist mostly as part of a trio he was her musical director 24 Her profile was high enough for the group to tour for 40 45 weeks a year 30 including at least one tour of Europe a year 29 cities on the continent in 1970 for example 12 31 During these concerts Flanagan often played a set as part of his trio without the singer 32 33 Beginning in 1974 he again began to perform and record as a leader his 1975 trio release The Tommy Flanagan Tokyo Recital was his first as leader since 1960 34 Prior to these performances he had felt that his technique was inadequate for a soloist but he enjoyed the extra exposure of being a leader so decided to continue 10 Flanagan ended his role with Fitzgerald in 1978 after he had a heart attack 15 and had become tired of extensive touring 35 After the heart attack he stopped smoking reduced the amount that he drank and exercised by walking more than he had previously 24 nbsp Flanagan left with Ella Fitzgerald and Gerald Ford Late 1978 2001 After Ella Fitzgerald edit Soon after leaving Fitzgerald Flanagan played solo piano in New York 36 In 1979 he was a guest on the first series of Marian McPartland s Piano Jazz radio programs 37 He continued to work with other players including as a trio with Tal Farlow and Red Mitchell in 1980 38 For much of the 1980s he led a trio that featured bassist George Mraz and various drummers By around 1990 Flanagan was concentrating on his own appearances and recordings rather than sideman activities 39 In the early 1990s Mraz was replaced by Peter Washington whose heavier bass lines added urgency to the trio s sound 40 Flanagan s reputation gradually grew after he moved on from being primarily an accompanist in a 1992 article critic Leonard Feather suggested that Flanagan is the pianist most likely to be named a personal idol by other jazz pianists whether they be swing veterans or avant gardists 29 This made him more in demand the workload may have contributed to his collapse in 1991 and subsequent quadruple bypass heart surgery 29 He returned to playing within weeks but also returned to hospital for treatment for an aneurysm 41 Flanagan was awarded the Danish Jazzpar Prize in 1993 15 Three years later he was selected for a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Fellowship 42 In 1990 1993 and 1997 Flanagan toured Japan where he was very popular with 100 Golden Fingers a 10 pianist group 43 44 45 Flanagan continued to be praised for the elegance of his playing critic Ben Ratliff commented in 1998 that the trio with Washington and drummer Lewis Nash was in its controlled elegant way one of the more extraordinarily coordinated piano trios in jazz s history 46 Despite the near unanimous praise from critics and musicians for Flanagan s recordings and concert performances after he left Fitzgerald he did not secure a recording contract with a major label for more than one album 47 In late October 2001 Flanagan played in a John Coltrane tribute at the San Francisco Jazz Festival 2 The following month he was admitted to Mount Sinai hospital in Manhattan less than two weeks later on November 16 he died there from complications related to the aneurysm he had suffered a decade earlier 2 15 48 Personal life editFlanagan first married in 1960 to Ann 24 The couple had a son and two daughters and divorced in the early 1970s Ann was killed in a car accident in 1980 24 Flanagan s mother died in 1959 and his father in 1977 10 Flanagan married Diana his second wife in 1976 49 He was survived by Diana the three children from his first marriage and six grandchildren 15 Flanagan was usually self effacing reserved and amiable 1 50 His personality was summarized by his second wife His gentleness and quietness are deceptive He is a strong man and he has a lot of spirit and firmness 49 Playing style editWhitney Balliett stated that Flanagan was the most consistent of the pianists influenced by Wilson Tatum and Cole and invariably created something new in his playing he often states the melody with dissonant levering chords played offbeat or staccato Never decorative they reveal both a respect for the melody and an intense desire to alter it during his main improvising he used interval filled descending figures charging rhythmic phrases whose accented first notes make the succeeding notes snap double time phrases that race ahead to clear the way and legato phrases that form sauntering rear guards 35 In a review of a 1989 concert Feather commented that Flanagan used subtle dynamic shadings while bursts of upsweeping chords sometimes lent an element of surprise with a nimble left hand offering graceful filigree fills and occasional musical quotes that added humor 51 Other techniques he employed were in Stanley Crouch s description crooning effects achieved by manipulating the pedals holding down keys long enough to sustain notes in decisively different ways and working out inflections that evoke the voice sighs moans swells purrs 52 Critic John S Wilson described Flanagan s solo piano style on ballads in 1978 He drifts through ballads with a dreamy langourous flow but it is not a soft or flabby style There is beneath the surface a vitality that gives it a lean swinging character 36 Although he acknowledged the influence of other pianists Flanagan stated that I like to play like a horn player like I m blowing into the piano The sound of a piece its over all tonality is what concerns me 14 In concerts Flanagan typically played a range of composers works and once he had become established as a small group leader he often played songs by Tadd Dameron Duke Ellington Benny Golson Thad Jones Tom McIntosh and Thelonious Monk 53 Awards and legacy editDuring his career Flanagan was nominated for five Grammy Awards The first occasion was in 1983 The Magnificent Tommy Flanagan for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance Soloist and Giant Steps for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance Group 54 Two years later Thelonica was nominated for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance Soloist 55 The next nomination was in 1998 for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo for his solo on Dear Old Stockholm from Sea Changes 56 57 The last in 2003 was in the same category for Flanagan s solo on Sunset amp the Mockingbird from A Great Night in Harlem 58 Flanagan s influence on pianists extended from his contemporaries to younger performers Contemporaries included fellow Detroit players Barry Harris and Roland Hanna 59 Lightsey was influenced by Flanagan s musical creative thinking and pianistic fluidity 60 Alan Broadbent also acknowledged Flanagan as an influence 61 as did Helen Sung who changed from being a classical music pianist to a jazz one after hearing the swing and logic of a Flanagan solo 62 Kenny Barron described Flanagan as his hero and stated that he admired the older man s touch and phrasing from when he first heard it at junior high school He became an influence and continued to be an influence till the day he died and he still is 63 Discography editMain article Tommy Flanagan discographyReferences edit a b c d Fordham John November 20 2001 Tommy Flanagan The Guardian a b c d e f g Thurber John November 18 2001 T Flanagan 71 Jazz Pianist Accompanist Los Angeles Times a b c Balliett 1986 p 359 Cohassey John 1996 Tommy Flanagan In Contemporary Musicians Volume 16 pp 106 109 Reproduced at encyclopedia com Retrieved August 20 2013 a b c d e f g h i j WKCR broadcast November 20 1994 Transcribed at Panken Ted March 16 2013 For Tommy Flanagan s 83rd Birthday Anniversary a 1994 Interview on WKCR Transcript of WKCR radio interview Retrieved August 6 2013 Feather Leonard and Gitler Ira 1999 The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz Oxford University Press Retrieved August 6 2013 a b Bjorn 2001 p 97 a b Bjorn 2001 p 96 Berger Edward Martin Henry Morgenstern Dan eds 2007 Annual Review of Jazz Studies Volume 13 pp 62 63 Scarecrow Press a b c d Balliett 2000 p 541 Bjorn 2001 p 95 a b Franckling Ken June 24 1989 Tommy Flanagan The Poet of Jazz Piano New Pittsburgh Courier p 2 a b c Bjorn 2001 p 131 a b c d Balliett 1986 p 360 a b c d e f g Ratliff Ben November 19 2001 Tommy Flanagan Elegant Jazz Pianist Is Dead at 71 The New York Times a b Bjorn 2001 p 153 Cook amp Morton 2008 p 1233 Tommy Flanagan Poet of Piano July 16 2008 npr radio a b c d Dobbins Bill and Kernfeld Barry Flanagan Tommy In The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz 2nd ed Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press Retrieved August 7 2013 Subscription required a b c Cook amp Morton 2008 p 286 Cook amp Morton 2008 p 1027 Nastos Michael G Wes Montgomery The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery AllMusic Retrieved August 8 2013 a b Nicholson 1993 p 188 a b c d e f Balliett 1986 p 358 New York Amsterdam News p 12 January 18 1964 Strongin Theodore June 18 1965 Jazz Series Begins in Museum s Garden The New York Times p 29 Dryden Ken Art Farmer Art Farmer s New York Jazz Sextet AllMusic Retrieved August 8 2013 Walker Jesse H February 12 1966 Theatricals New York Amsterdam News p 18 a b c Feather Leonard January 26 1992 Stop and Bop with Tommy Flanagan Los Angeles Times Nicholson 1993 p 197 Ella Touring in Europe May 2 1970 New Pittsburgh Courier p 27 Duncan Perdita November 29 1969 Music in Review New Pittsburgh Courier p 14 Desnselow Robin May 11 1970 Ella Fitzgerald at the Odeon Hammersmith The Guardian p 8 Morgenstern Dan 2004 Living with Jazz A Reader Pantheon Books a b Balliett 2000 p 542 a b Wilson John S November 24 1978 Jazz Flanagan at Piano The New York Times p C14 Jackson Grant March 25 2011 Marian McPartland on Piano Jazz Part Two NPR Wilson John S July 2 1981 Film Profile of a Guitarist The New York Times p C17 Himes Geoffrey February 2012 Gary Smulyan Baritone Believer Down Beat p 46 Watrous Peter September 3 1992 Tommy Flanagan Surprises at His Finger Tips The New York Times p C19 Sutro Dirk October 11 1991 Rejuvenated Tommy Flanagan Back at Keyboard Los Angeles Times NEA Jazz Masters National Endowment for the Arts Retrieved January 2 2014 Dryden Ken Various Artists 100 Gold Fingers Piano Playhouse 1990 AllMusic Retrieved August 29 2013 Dryden Ken Various Artists 100 Gold Fingers Piano Playhouse 1993 AllMusic Retrieved August 29 2013 Brown Hilary August 2013 Pianist Mulgrew Miller Dies of Stroke at Age 57 Down Beat p 18 Ratliff Ben September 11 1998 Flanagan Trio Takes Care of the Details The New York Times p E28 Giddins Gary 1998 Visions of Jazz The First Century p 606 Oxford University Press Pleasant Betty November 28 2001 After Lengthy Illness Elegant Jazz Pianist Tommy Flanagan Dies at 71 Los Angeles Sentinel p A4 a b Balliett 1986 p 362 Primack Bret January February 1999 Tommy Flanagan Pure Artistry JazzTimes Feather Leonard August 14 1989 Jazz Review Flanagan the Musicians Musician Draws a Full House Los Angeles Times Crouch Stanley 2006 Considering Genius Writings on Jazz p 335 Basic Civitas Books Stewart Zan February 19 1988 Flanagan s Piano Leads Instead of Follows Los Angeles Times Grammy Awards Final Nominations January 22 1983 Billboard p 67 Grammy Awards Final Nominations January 26 1985 Billboard p 78 Hunter Jr Al February 20 1998 Despite the Prime Time Snub Jazz Grammys Are Still Gold philly com Grammy Awards Final Nominations January 17 1998 Billboard p 79 Grammy Nominations Announced Today January 7 2003 DownBeat Balliett 2000 p 540 Bjorn 2001 p 167 Heckman Don February 17 2006 Basics for Broadbent Los Angeles Times Espeland Pamela September 17 2011 Round Midnight A Late Night Conversation with Helen Sung npr Ouellette Dan February 2011 Blindfold Test Kenny Barron amp Mulgrew Miller Down Beat p 82 Bibliography Balliett Whitney 2000 Collected Works A Journal of Jazz 1954 2000 Granta Books Balliett Whitney 1986 American Musicians Fifty Six Portraits in Jazz Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 503758 6 Bjorn Lars 2001 Before Motown A History of Jazz in Detroit 1920 60 University of Michigan Press Cook Richard Morton Brian 2008 The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings Penguin Nicholson Stuart 1993 Ella Fitzgerald Victor Gollancz External links editDiscography at the Jazz Discography Project Detailed discography as leader by Michael Fitzgerald 2001 JazzTimes article on Flanagan s lifestyle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tommy Flanagan amp oldid 1216710594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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