Photo by Andrea Canter
Frank Morgan's energetic alto belies his 70+ years and three decades of
heroin addiction. His comeback in the 1980s to the highest level of
burning bop was nothing short of remarkable. The son of Ink Spots'
guitarist Stanley Morgan was born in Minneapolis, moved to Milwaukee at
age six, and studied guitar as a young child. He was inspired to switch
instruments at age seven after hearing Charlie Parker with the Jay
McShann Band. Through his father, he was able to meet Parker who
suggested that young Morgan start out on the clarinet. Said Morgan, "I
was a little mad with Bird, because I wanted to play saxophone. I
didn't understand that he thought he was getting me off to a proper
start...It proved to be a blessing, insofar as I was able to develop a
clarinet technique that has carried over into my saxophone playing."
Within a couple years, Morgan had moved on to soprano and then alto
sax.
At age fourteen, his family moved to Los Angeles where his father
opened a club, Casablanca. Charlie Parker was a frequent performer, and
the alto star took a great interest in the teenage Morganâ€"and Morgan
found Parker of great interest, both as a musician and heroin addict.
"I thought the heroin and the bebop and the whole lifestyle thing went
together. I thought that one used heroin to play like Charlie Parker
played." Morgan played in bop bands on Central Avenue in the early
1950s, recording with Teddy Charles and Kenny Clarke, as well as with
his own band for GNP. The critics raved about his debut release,
declaring him the successor to long-time acquaintance and muse, Charlie
Parker. Parker died shortly thereafter, and with some of his band
members, Morgan "proceeded...to celebrate Bird's death by doing the
very thing that killed him. That's the way we celebrated Bird's
passing, to go out and do some junk. It would have been better if we'd
realized it was time to stop."
Thirty years went by before Frank Morgan made another recording
as leader; in the interim he unfortunately followed too closely in the
footsteps of his idol, experiencing heroin addiction and intermittent
jail terms for possession. But he never stopped playing for long, and
even in prison he was able to hone his craft. "The greatest big band I
ever played with was in San Quentin. Art Pepper and I were proud of
that band...We played every Saturday night for what they called a
Warden's Tour, which showed paying visitors only the cleanest cell
blocks and exercise yards. But people would take that tour just to hear
the band." With his 1985 comeback recording (Easy Living,
Contemporary), Frank Morgan proved to be a descendent, not clone of
Charlie Parker, with a more personal bop style than he had demonstrated
earlier. Noted Gary Giddens in the Village Voice (1986), "Morgan's alto
sound is supple and lyrical in a way that recalls Benny Carter almost
as much as Parker. His tone is fuller in the lower notes than on top,
and it can be prim and dry, which makes his frequent use of pinched
high notes to pace himself and increase tension all the more
effective."
After his resurgence, Frank Morgan recorded and toured with
seemingly boundless energy, releasing 14 recordings over the next
decade. Following a serious stroke in 1996, Morgan was out of action
only two months. City Nights (HighNote, 2004), recorded live at New
York's Jazz Standard with pianist George Cables, bassist Curtis Lundy,
and drummer Billy Hart, shows Morgan is on top of his horn and still
evolving, taking on Miles, Monk, and Coltrane, and creating more space
in his arrangements. Noted Florence Wetzel (All About Jazz), "It's 64
minutes of pure delight, jazz at its classic best played by a living
master."
"There is no one around who is better on the alto saxophone.
What comes out of his horn is soulful, full of fire and
timeless"-Wynton Marsalis.
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