This article is about the jazz musician. For the CEO
of Meredith, see Steve
Lacy .
Steve Lacy (July 23, 1934 –
June 4, 2004), born Steven Norman Lackritz in
New
York
, was a jazz saxophonist and composer recognized as one of the
important players of soprano
saxophone.
Coming to prominence in the 1950s as a progressive
Dixieland musician, Lacy went on to a long
and prolific career. He worked extensively in experimental jazz and
dabbled in
free improvisation,
but Lacy's music was typically melodic and
tightly-structured.
Biography
Lacy began
his career at sixteen playing Dixieland
music with much older musicians such as Henry "Red" Allen, Pee
Wee Russell, George "Pops" Foster
and Zutty Singleton and then with
Kansas
City
jazz players like Buck
Clayton, Dicky Wells, and Jimmy Rushing. He then became involved
with the
avant-garde, performing on
Jazz Advance (1956), the debut
album of
Cecil Taylor, and appearing
with Taylor's groundbreaking quartet at the 1957
Newport Jazz Festival; he also made a
notable appearance on an early
Gil Evans
album. His most enduring relationship, however, was with the music
of
Thelonious Monk: he recorded the
first album to feature only Monk compositions (
Reflections, Prestige,
1958) and briefly played in Monk's band in 1960 and later on Monk's
Big Band/Quartet album (Columbia, 1963).
Monk tunes became a permanent part of his repertoire, making an
appearance in virtually every concert appearance and on albums, and
Lacy often collaborated with trombonist
Roswell Rudd in presenting interpretations of
Monk's compositions.
Beyond Monk, he performed the work of jazz composers such as
Charles Mingus,
Duke Ellington and
Herbie Nichols; unlike many jazz musicians he
rarely played standard popular or show tunes. Lacy also became a
highly distinctive composer with a signature simplicity of style: a
Lacy composition is often built out of little more than a single
questioning phrase, repeated several times. In the 1960s he
continued to work with other players involved in the American
free-jazz avant-garde and, in the 1970s, the European free
improvisation scene, and free improvisation remained an important
element in his work thereafter.
Lacy's first visit to Europe came in 1965, with a visit to
Copenhagen in the company of
Kenny Drew;
he went to Italy and formed a quartet with Italian trumpeter
Enrico Rava and the South African
musicians
Johnny Dyani and
Louis Moholo (their visit to Buenos Aires is
documented on
The Forest and
the Zoo, ESP, 1967). After a brief return in New York, he
returned to Italy, then in 1970 moved to Paris, where he lived
until the last two years of his life. He became a widely respected
figure on the European jazz scene, though he remained less
well-known in the U.S.
The core of Lacy's activities from the 1970s to the 1990s was his
sextet: his wife, singer/cellist
Irene
Aebi, soprano/alto saxophonist
Steve Potts, pianist
Bobby Few, bassist
Jean-Jacques Avenel, and drummer Oliver
Johnson (later
John Betsch). Sometimes
this group was scaled up to a large ensemble (e.g.
Vespers, Soul Note, 1993), sometimes pared down to a
quartet, trio, or even a two-saxophone duo. He played duos with
pianist
Eric Watson. Lacy
also, beginning in the 1970s, became a specialist in solo
saxophone; he ranks with
Anthony
Braxton and
Evan Parker in the
development of this demanding form of improvisation.
Lacy was interested in all the arts: the visual arts and poetry in
particular became important sources for him. Collaborating with
painters and dancers in multimedia projects, he made musical
settings of his favourite writers:
Robert
Creeley,
Samuel Beckett,
Tom Raworth,
Taslima
Nasrin,
Herman Melville,
Brion Gysin and other Beat writers,
including settings for the Tao Te Ching and
haiku poetry. As Creeley noted in The Poetry Project
Newsletter, "There’s no way simply to make clear how particular
Steve Lacy was to poets or how much he can now teach them by fact
of his own practice and example. No one was ever more generous or
perceptive."
In 1992, he was the recipient of a
MacArthur Fellowship (nicknamed the
"genius grant").
He also collaborated with a truly extraordinary range of musicians,
from traditional jazz to the avant-garde to contemporary classical
music. Outside of his regular sextet, his most regular collaborator
was pianist
Mal Waldron, with whom he
recorded a number of duet albums (notably
Sempre Amore, a collection of
Ellington/Strayhorn material, Soul Note, 1987).
Lacy
returned to the United
States
in 2002, where he began teaching at the New England
Conservatory of Music
in Boston, Massachusetts
. One of his last public performances was in
front of 25,000 people at the close of a peace
rally on Boston
Common
in March 2003, shortly before the US-led invasion of Iraq.
Lacy was diagnosed with cancer in August 2003, he continued playing
and teaching until weeks before his death at the age of 69.
Discography
References
External links