- For the New Orleans music historian, see Tad Jones.
Thaddeus Joseph Jones (March
28, 1923 – August 21, 1986) was an American
jazz trumpeter, composer, and
bandleader.
Biography
Thad Jones
was born in Pontiac,
Michigan
to a musical
family of ten (an older brother was pianist Hank Jones and a younger brother was drummer
Elvin Jones). Thad Jones was a
self taught musician, performing professionally by the age of
sixteen. He served in
U.S. Army bands during
World
War II (1943-46).
After Army service including an association with the U.S. Military
School of Music and working with area bands in Des Moines and
Oklahoma City, Thad became a member of the
Count Basie Orchestra in May 1954. He
was featured as a soloist on such well-known tunes as
April in
Paris, Shiny Stockings and
Corner Pocket.
However, his main contribution was his nearly two dozen
arrangements and compositions for the Basie Orchestra, including
The Deacon, H.R.H. (Her Royal Highness, in honor
of the band’s command performance in London),
Counter
Block, and lesser known gems such as
Speaking of
Sounds. His hymn-like ballad
To You was performed by
the Basie band combined with the Duke Ellington Orchestra in their
only recording together, and the recording
Dance Along With
Basie contains nearly an entire album of Jones’ uncredited
arrangements of standard tunes.
Jones left the Basie Orchestra in 1963 to become a freelance
arranger and studio player in New York. In 1965, he and drummer
Mel Lewis formed the
Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Big Band.
The group initially began with informal late night jam sessions
amongst New York's top studio musicians. The group eventually began
performing at the Village Vanguard in February 1966, to wide
acclaim, and continued with Jones in the lead for twelve years.
They won a 1978
Grammy Award
for their album
Live in Munich.
Jones also
taught at William Paterson College
in New Jersey, which is now the site of the Thad
Jones Archive, containing pencil scores and vintage photos as part
of the Living Jazz Archives.
Jones' big band arranging style was unique, especially from the
standpoint of featuring dissonant voicings in a tonal context. This
required the members of his big band to play correctly in tune,
otherwise the dense chords he wrote would not sound correct. Minor
2nds and major 7ths are often featured in his voicings, especially
when the entire band plays a long, powerful chord that some would
describe as having "bite".
One of the more notable albums he made in this regard is
Suite for Pops recorded on
the
A&M Records "Horizon" label
(now out of print) in the early 70's. It also featured the intense
bebop improvisations of saxophonist Billy Harper and the high note
screech playing of lead trumpet player
Jon
Faddis.
In 1978,
Thad suddenly moved to Copenhagen
, Denmark
, (to the
great surprise of his New York band mates), where several other
American jazz musicians had gone to live. Upon Thad’s 1978
departure to live in Europe, the band continued as the Mel Lewis
Orchestra until Lewis’ death in February 1990, and thrives to this
day as the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, still including several Thad
Jones alumni, continuing the extraordinary Monday night tradition
into its fifth decade.
Jones resided in Denmark from 1978-1984, formed a new band
Eclipse, composed for The
Danish Radio Big Band
and taught jazz at the
Royal Danish Conservatory in
Copenhagen. He studied composition formally during this period, as
well as taking up the valve trombone. In February 1985, he returned
to the U.S. to take the leadership of the Basie Orchestra upon his
former leader’s death, fronting the Basie band in numerous tours,
and writing arrangements for recordings and performances with
vocalist Caterina Valente and Manhattan Transfer. He eventually
stopped touring completely, and returned to Denmark several months
before his death on August 21, 1986.
In later years his playing ability was overshadowed by his
composing and arranging skills. His best known composition is the
standard "A Child is Born". A year before his death, Jones came
back to the U.S. to lead the
Count
Basie Orchestra but had to step down due to ill health. He
returned to his home in Copenhagen for the last few months of his
life. He died on
August 21,
1986 after being hospitalized for months but his cause
of death was not published. At the time of his death he had a six
year old child, also named Thad Jones, with his wife Lis Jones, a
daughter Thedia and a son Bruce.
He is buried in Copenhagen's Vestre Kirkegård Cemetery
(Western Churchyard Cemetery).
Discography
As leader
- Detroit-New York Junction 1956
- The Magnificent Thad Jones (Blue Note Records, 1956) with
Billy Mitchell, Barry Harris, Percy
Heath, Max Roach
- The Fabulous Thad Jones (Debut Records/OJC, 1954) with Frank Wess, John
Dennis, Hank Jones, Charles
Mingus, Kenny Clarke, Max Roach
- After Hours (OJC, 1957) with Frank Wess,
Kenny Burrell, Mal Waldron, Paul
Chambers, Art Taylor
- Mad Thad (Fresh Sound, 1957) with Henry Coker, Frank
Foster, Tommy Flanagan, Jimmy Jones, Doug
Watkins, Elvin Jones
- Greetings and
Salutations (Four Leaf Clover, 1977) with Jon Faddis, Lennart
Aberg, Arne Domnérus,
Bengt Hallberg, Georg Riedel, Rune
Gustafsson
- Live at Montmartre (Storyville, 1978) with
Idrees Sulieman, Allan Botschinsky, Jesper Thilo, NHOP.
- Eclipse (Storyville, 1979) with Tim Hagans, Sahib
Shihab, Horace Parlan, Jesper Lundgaard
As leader with Mel Lewis
As sideman
With Herbie Hancock
With Coleman
Hawkins
With Ben Webster
References
- LA Times, "The Envelope" awards database. (link) Accessed 2008 April 30.
- Reuter. Award-winning poet honored by peers,
Globe
& Mail. August
22, 1986.
External links