|
photo by Joyce Magee
Jeffrey Magee,
author of
Fletcher
Henderson and Big Band Jazz:
The Uncrowned King of Swing
_________________________________
If Benny Goodman was the "King of Swing," then Fletcher Henderson was the
power behind the throne. Not only did Henderson arrange the music that powered
Goodman's meteoric rise, he also helped launch the careers of Louis Armstrong
and Coleman Hawkins, among others. In Fletcher Henderson and Big Band
Jazz: The Uncrowned King of Swing, Jeffrey Magee offers a fascinating
account of this pivotal bandleader, throwing new light on the emergence of
modern jazz and the world that created it.
Drawing on an unprecedented combination of sources, including sound recordings,
obscure stock arrangements, and hundreds of scores that have been available
only since Goodman's death, Magee illuminates Henderson's musical output,
from his early work as a New York bandleader, to his pivotal role in building
the Kingdom of Swing. He shows how Henderson, standing at the forefront of
the New York jazz scene during the 1920s and '30s, assembled the era's best
musicians, simultaneously preserving jazz's distinctiveness and performing
popular dance music that reached a wide audience.
Magee reveals how, in Henderson's largely segregated musical world, black
and white musicians worked together to establish jazz, how Henderson's style
rose out of collaborations with many key players, how these players deftly
combined improvised and written music, and how their work negotiated artistic
and commercial impulses. And Magee reveals how, in the depths of the Depression,
record producer John Hammond brought together Henderson and Goodman, a fortuitous
collaboration that changed the face of American music.#
In our January 17, 2005 interview, Magee discusses the career of this monumental
musician who helped shape an entire musical era.
Interview Topics
Analyzing Henderson's
role in American music
Moving from Georgia to New York
Working with Harry Pace
The four tiers of black
musicians
Finding talent for the band
Don Redman's
significance in the development of jazz
Working at the Roseland
Ballroom
Coping with Louis
Armstrong's impact on the band
Armstrong
changing the way Coleman Hawkins played saxophone
Not having Armstrong sing
with the band
Evaluating the post Armstrong
band
The disparity
of live performances and recordings
Henderson as bandleader
Becoming Benny Goodman's
arranger
The Three R's
Building the Kingdom of Swing
Henderson and Goodman's
personal relationship
Henderson's continuing
impact on music
The "frustration" theory
*
About Jeffrey Magee
Book Reviews
Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra, 1925
Front row, left to right: Kaiser Marshall, Coleman Hawkins, Buster
Bailey, Don Redman, Charlie Dixon, Fletcher Henderson. Back row, left to
right; Charley Green, Elmer Chambers, Louis Armstrong, Howard Scott, Ralph
Escudero.
_____
"The sheer quantity of recordings by Hendersons band, and the record
labels for which it recorded, reveal that Hendersons brand of dance
music was a commercially viable product. That a black band could make dozens
of recordings outside the domain of race records marks a major
achievement in the early 1920s. The early recordings of Hendersons
band are usually interpreted on stylistic grounds alone and found lacking
jazz interest. Seen collectively as a rare feat for a black band, however,
they stand as an important legacy of the possibilities of black culture in
the period."
- Jeffrey Magee
*
Christopher Columbus , by the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra
_________________________________
JJM Concerning the goal of your book, you wrote,
"It aims to redefine Henderson's role in American music through an analysis
of the primary source materials embedded in the historical circumstances
of their creation, including the Great Migration of African Americans from
the rural South to the urban North, the Harlem Renaissance, the dissemination
of jazz and dance music through radio, records and touring, the consolidation
of the music industry in the hands of white agents and bookers, and American
popular music and culture of the 1920s and 1930s." Why was Fletcher Henderson
a particularly good figure for this sort of study?
JM I can't claim that this was the reason
I began this work -- I wanted to write about the music, period. But as the
work developed, I came to see him as this wonderful representative of the
era. So many great musicians passed through his band -- Louis Armstrong,
Coleman Hawkins, Don Redman, Benny Carter -- and because he also worked as
Benny Goodman's arranger, the key figures of the era crossed paths with him
in a very significant way. On top of that, his career very neatly intersects
with all the other cultural phenomena of the era. Radio, for example, was
just taking off when he arrived in New York City, and by the end of the twenties,
his band reached its height of prestige just as everyone got a radio in their
home, which helped disseminate his music on an unprecedented scale. At the
same time, more sound recordings were being made and race records were beginning
to find success. So, his career overlaps nicely with the rise of these media
as disseminators of music in general, and black music in particular. He is
a kind of lightning rod for these currents.
The other dimension he intersected, of course, is racial. Although the Harlem
Renaissance is more often viewed as a literary and artistic phenomenon, and
less so as a music phenomenon, he intersected with its ideals. It was an
era when whites wanted black music to sound black, and their vocabulary of
growl effects, bent pitches, the twelve-bar chord progression, and vocal
effects through the horn is what white listeners craved. But it also had
a narrowing effect on what black musicians could do in the public arena.
Duncan Schiedt Collection
Fletcher Henderson
_____
Agrravatin' Papa , sung by Inez Wallace, accompanied by Henderson on
piano, c. 1923
*
"Fletcher Henderson wasnt sure it would be dignified enough
for him
to be the piano player for a girl who sang the blues in a cellar.
Before he would go out [on tour] Fletcher had his whole family come up from
Georgia to look me over."
- Ethel Waters
|
JJM You suggest that his versatility and
professionalism served to foil the stereotypes of black musicians of that
era.
JM Yes. Henderson's band had a way of keeping
open the musical possibilities. They were known for playing waltzes at Roseland
Ballroom and for playing arrangements of the classics, and in doing that,
they were constantly foiling efforts to put them in some kind of stylistic
and racial box, which was very confining to musicians of that time.
JJM
Henderson was born and raised in Georgia. How did he wind up in New
York?
JM He graduated from college in 1920, and
from everything I have seen his intent was to attend graduate school at Columbia
University.
JJM To study science?
JM Possibly. He may have wanted to become
a chemist working for a pharmaceutical company. I am not sure what he had
in mind, but I have always wondered how seriously he really intended to go
to graduate school to become a scientist. His parents probably saw the move
as acceptable for two reasons; the first being the promise of higher education,
which was extremely important to them, and the second was that they knew
people in New York. A former teacher at his father's school lived in New
York, and he lived with her for a short time, and he had contacts with people
like Harry Pace, who was a famous Atlanta University graduate and who, with
W.C. Handy, became his first employer in New York. So, he had the promise
of higher education at a great institution, and high quality
contacts.
JJM
Once he was connected with Pace, Henderson sort of rode the choices
that Pace made in his own career. How did those choices affect Henderson's
career?
JM Pace was in the publishing business for
a time with W.C. Handy. Being a very savvy businessman, Pace immediately
saw the commercial potential for recorded music, and felt that black music
in particular was going to be very popular, but he wanted to record "cultivated"
music, as Ethel Waters called it. So, Pace split off from Handy and formed
the Pace Phonograph Corporation, which started by issuing Black Swan Records.
Henderson came along at around this time and was employed in a variety of
jobs; for example, he played piano for the singers and helped choose the
repertoire to record. He served, in a way, as the label's musical director.
Since he was well educated and musically trained, I imagine that Pace saw
him as a like-minded figure who could help lead this company to success.
|
| JJM
Concerning the kind of work that was available to black musicians
of the era, you talk about the four tiers of where they came from. Would
you talk a little about these tiers, and which of them did Henderson's musicians
come from?
JM The trumpeter Rex Stewart's writings were
a great source for me, because not only did he play in the Henderson band,
but he was also a very careful observer of this music scene of the twenties
and thirties. He writes about this four tier hierarchy for black musicians
your question refers to. The Clef Club -- the organization that James Reese
Europe organized less than a decade before Henderson came to New York --
was the top tier. If you were part of the Clef Club you could get the elite
jobs, which at that time were playing for well-to-do white audiences in downtown
hotels and ballrooms.
The second tier were the burlesque musicians. It may be surprising to find
these musicians this high, but Stewart was not looking at musical quality
so much as professional breadth, and since burlesque musicians got to tour
all over the place, they made a bigger impact through touring far beyond
New York City. To Stewart, traveling with a singer or a small band was a
plum job because you got to tour around and your music got to be heard by
more people than if you only played in New York.
The next tier is the large bands, of which Henderson's was one, and also
the bands of people like Sam Wooding, and some Chicago people like Dave Peyton
and Doc Cook. This tier of musicians was a new phenomenon that was partly
spawned by James Reese Europe's success as a bandleader. The appeal for the
musicians here was that, in order to be a member of these bands, you had
to be able to read music as well as improvise. At this point, reading carried
a lot of social importance, because it foiled the racial stereotypes -- it
demonstrated education, literacy, and a degree of discipline. The stereotype
of the period held that blacks were natural musicians who just improvised
everything, so, when they sat down in front of a music stand reading sheet
music, it made a statement. It is hard to recapture that feeling now, of
what that sheer visual impact would have meant. Many black musicians write
about the importance of this in their memoirs.
The fourth tier belonged to the musicians playing in small clubs and cabarets,
venues he called "penny a dance" halls, where men paid a penny to a woman
known as a "taxi dancer" to dance with for a short period of time. This kind
of job called for constantly changing repertoire, because the shorter the
arrangement, the more they earned. It was great experience for the musicians,
who were assigned all kinds of material to play on the spur of the moment.
This wasn't exactly a high-class job, however, because in some places the
taxi dancers were basically glorified prostitutes. As a result, these jobs
tended to be looked down upon as lower-class work. |
Boy Meets Horn, by Rex Stewart
_____
Jackass Blues , Rex Stewart playing with the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra
*
Memphis Blues , by James Reese Europe
_____
"Henderson was able to stake and sustain his position by assembling
some of the eras best jazz musicians, a Whos Who of pre-modern
jazz. Some created artistic lineages on their respective instruments. A
substantial history of jazz trumpet, for example, could be written using
only musicians who passed through Hendersons band: Louis Armstrong,
Joe Smith, Tommy Ladnier, Rex Stewart, Bobby Stark, Red Allen, Roy Eldridge,
and, subbing in the band for about two weeks, Dizzy Gillespie. The same could
be said of reed players Coleman Hawkins, Buster Bailey, Benny Carter, Russell
Procope, Hilton Jefferson, Lester Young, Ben Webster, Chu Berry, and Dexter
Gordon. In Hendersons prime, the only other comparable group of stars
performing in public at such a consistently high level was the New York Yankees."
- Jeffrey Magee |
Stanley Dance and Helen Oakley Dance Archives
Fletcher Henderson
Hendersons talent was the ability to "take improvised licks
hed heard from the guys playing, and harmonize and orchestrate them
into an arrangement."
- Rex Stewart
_____
Alabamy Bound
*
Don Redman
"Redmans early arrangements with Henderson often aim to dazzle
the listener (and challenge the dancer) with a barrage of contrasting colors
and patterns."
- Jeffrey Magee
_____
Sugar Foot Stomp  |
JJM
A "who's who" of pre-modern jazz played with Henderson. How did he
find the quality of talent for his band?
JM That's a good question, and it's tough
to answer. His strongest instincts were as a bandleader, and for putting
together a group of musicians who could bring things to his music. His arranging
talent was probably a by-product of band leading, even though he became most
famous as an arranger for Goodman. Some of the musicians he hired for his
band may have been happened upon as if by accident. When he was touring with
Ethel Waters and the Black Swan group in the early twenties, he heard people
like Joe Smith and Louis Armstrong, and because they were well known locally,
he approached them about playing. When you are leading a band in New York,
you tend to know everybody, and everybody tends to know you, and as the twenties
went on, everybody was raiding each other's bands. But I think Henderson
did have his ear out constantly for new talent, and his musical training
made him particularly good at recognizing talent, and then approaching people
about joining his band.
JJM You wrote that the first four years of Henderson's
band must be construed as the "Redman period." What significance does Don
Redman hold in the development of jazz?
JM When you read up on early jazz, he is
frequently talked about as the first great jazz arranger. I have come to
believe, however, that the qualities that made him unique have been overlooked
in favor of the tried and true features like call and response, the separation
of reeds and brass, and so on. Yes, he did all that, but what really leaps
out to my ear when listening to those Redman period recordings with the Henderson
band is this quick shifting among instruments and the sheer kaleidoscopic
colors that he brought to popular song arrangements. When I look at stock
arrangements of the period, I see how he would take a published sheet and
just completely turn it upside down, rearranging its parts, juxtaposing sections
in novel ways. It's as if he was making a puzzle, or using stock arrangements
as a playground for new ideas.
JJM Yes, you wrote, "For Redman, a piece of
sheet music was not a road map but a playground or a puzzle whose parts could
be altered, extended, truncated, and otherwise rearranged at will."
JM Yes, and again, that gets back to the
dimension of written music, and you can't recognize what he did just by listening
to recordings. His contribution really leaps out at you only when you listen
to the recording while also looking at the stock arrangement, which you know
he was using. It becomes a fascinating exercise to retrace the steps he took
from the stock arrangement to the recording. For example, you may discover
that he is using a middle section melody of the stock as an accompaniment
of a soloist, or that he is writing a new interlude, or that he is modulating
where the stock doesn't modulate. So, he is doing all of these things that
you can certainly pick up from listening to the recording alone -- and it
is fascinating to listen to -- but it is even more fascinating when you look
at the stock arrangement and the recording together, because you get a glimpse
of the creative process involved. |
| JJM
How did their work at the Roseland Ballroom shape their repertoire
and the style they performed it in?
JM That gets back to the point about versatility.
When you are playing for dancers, you have to have a command of a broad
repertoire and a broad array of styles.
JJM And the dancers were generally an all
white crowd, right?
JM Yes. In the downtown clubs during the
twenties and thirties -- which were pretty much hotel ballrooms -- a black
person had to be a celebrity to attend the clubs.
JJM So, Redman was writing arrangements to
not only suit a white audience, but an upper-crust white audience?
JM The Roseland Ballroom was probably more
of a middle-class venue that a wide social range went to. It was more populist
than a place like the Club Alabam, where they started in the earlier twenties,
or Connie's Inn, where they played in the early thirties. The Roseland was
a genteel place, not at all like the Savoy, where dynamic dancing took place.
There was a place for hot music to be played there, but long head arrangements
with extended improvisation did not work as well at the Roseland as they
did at the Savoy.
JJM Whether they were playing for an upper
or middle-class audience, it was a white audience, primarily, who were dancing
to a black orchestra. As you wrote, Henderson's orchestra "had to strike
a balance between the exotic and the familiar," and this setting must have
certainly impacted how Redman wrote his charts and how the musicians performed.
JM Yes, and it started with the choice of
repertoire they performed, which were the latest popular tunes from Tin Pan
Alley publishers, who were right there in the heart of Manhattan. Broadway
musicals, theater, and popular song publishing were all coalescing in the
Times Square area, and the orchestra performed the latest tunes everyone
knew from going to the shows or from seeing it in Tin Pan Alley sheet music.
People recognized those popular tunes in a way that we don't now, and the
"exotic" thing was to cut and paste, as Redman did, so that they heard just
snippets of the tune -- a bit by the trombone here, the saxes come in over
there, the trumpets pick it up for a minute, followed by a big, splashy cymbal
shot by Kaiser Marshall. People recognized the tunes, but they certainly
never heard them played quite this way before. I like to think of that sheet
music as a kind of black and white sketch that Redman throws all this color
on, and it comes to life in a way that people had never heard before in other
renderings of these songs. Added to that are the vocabulary of blues and
jazz effects that had strong associations with black musicians -- growls,
bent pitches, and the novelty instruments Redman liked to play, such as the
kazoo and train whistles. It makes this vast sound world, as if Redman makes
a two-dimensional piece into a three-dimensional piece.
JJM You used a quote by Henry Louis Gates
to describe this, "resemblance by dissemblance
"
JM Right. That seemed like an apt quote.
Gates is of course describing literature and oral traditions, but I think
it is apt for written music, in this case. |
Duncan Schiedt Collection
"Striving to become a leading dance orchestra, Hendersons
band made blues recordings with an eye toward broad commercial appeal. Performing
without singers, the band tailored such numbers for Americas most popular
dance since 1914; the fox trot."
- Jeffrey Magee
_____
I'm Coming Virginia
*
Frank Driggs Collection
Connie's Inn
"Whether making the sounds of trains, car horns, wind, animals,
or human sobbing; alluding to other songs through quotation; or just using
unusual instruments for their eccentric timbres; the band fed the popular
demand for music that was surprising, funny, and above all, entertaining."
- Jeffrey Magee
_____
St. Louis Shuffle
|
Louis Armstrong, 1931
"Armstrong may have helped change how the band played, but
he did not necessarily change what it played."
- Jeffrey Magee
_____
Copenhagen  |
JJM Henderson is known by most of us for a handful
of things, one of the most prominent being that Louis Armstrong played with
him. You wrote, "
upon his arrival in New York, Armstrong neither looked
the part -- nor quite played the part -- of a downtown dance musician. The
disparity between Armstrong and the rest of the band, at first an apparent
liability, became a rich source of creative tension, ultimately pitting Redman's
arranging concept against the solo improvisational approach that Armstrong
presented." How did Redman cope with the impact of Armstrong joining Henderson's
orchestra?
JM In my hearing of it, since Redman is already
aiming for maximum variety within an arrangement, Armstrong fit perfectly
into this aesthetic of juxtaposition and contrast. Armstrong, therefore,
becomes yet another weapon in the arsenal of variety. Most jazz historians
make the claim that Armstrong's is the only palatable voice in the band,
and that he makes the rest of the band sound old-fashioned. Imagining this
from the Henderson/Redman perspective, I believe that in Armstrong's playing,
they heard a unique sound they could add into their work, but it first had
to be separated out. They deliberately set Armstrong off from the rest of
the band, and you can hear that because the accompaniment changes underneath
it. He starts to get what Rex Stewart called Western-style accompaniment,
which was a simple backbeat. What is heard as that Armstrong era progresses
-- he was only with the band for thirteen months -- is Redman integrating
him inside the strains, so that instead of setting Armstrong off for an entire
chorus, or strain, of the music, there is give and take between the band
and Armstrong. So, right before he leaves, they do pieces like
"T.N.T. ,"
and "Carolina Stomp," where you hear Redman juxtaposing Armstrong against
the rest of the band, more in dialogue than they had been in the recordings
made right after Armstrong joined.
The whole band responds to Armstrong in different ways. You start to get
a move from a kind of a vertical conception of an arrangement -- blocks of
sound for variety -- to a more horizontal, linear conception, where you feel
the whole arrangement surging forward. This is why so many writers and
commentators talk about how Armstrong changed Henderson's band forever from
a dance band to a jazz band, but this happens very slowly, and in a way,
I believe it takes off even more after Armstrong leaves. |
| JJM You say that Armstrong may have
changed the way Coleman Hawkins played. Is there a song that best demonstrates
this?
JM I think you can point to his famous solo
on the 1926 recording of "Stampede." Hawkins's style changed so radically
in the space of just three years, and he, above all, is the member of the
Henderson band who is trying to absorb the model of Armstrong and make it
his own. In 1923, he was playing solos that sound very old-fashioned now,
where he is kind of running the chord changes up and down. It is a powerful
sound, but it is more of a herky-jerky style. Three years later, in a piece
like "Stampede," he has a much more fluid, linear sense of how to construct
a solo. You can hear little motifs stated and restated and developed over
the course of a solo, and actual figures that Armstrong uses are being woven
into Hawkins's vocabulary, so it becomes very much an Armstrong inflected
saxophone style.
JJM "Stampede" is the piece that the trumpeter
Roy Eldridge copied
JM That's right. Eldridge played the Hawkins
solo on trumpet, so it is an interesting give and take between brass and
reeds. You have an Armstrong model being absorbed by a saxophonist and then
copied by another trumpet player.
|
Coleman Hawkins
_____
Stampede  |
Frank Driggs Collection
Fletcher Henderson and Orchestra, with Louis Armstrong, 1924
_____
My Pretty Girl
*
The Hot Five
Louis Armstrong, Johnny St. Cyr, Johnny Dodds, Kid Ory and Lil
Hardin, c 1925
_____
Heebie Jeebies  |
JJM Of Fletcher Henderson, Armstrong
once said, "Fletcher didn't dig me like Joe Oliver. He had a million dollar
talent in his band and he never thought to let me sing." Why didn't he let
Armstrong sing?
JM I don't know the answer to that. He did
sing a little bit, but it is pretty negligible. It may be that perhaps they
were worried about Armstrong becoming the single star of the band. It also
could be that jazz singing had yet to emerge as we now know it. While Armstrong
was a key figure in developing jazz singing, it is possible that at the time
his style may have tipped the balance toward novelty a bit too much. There
was a kind of dignity about instrumental music that more singing might have
compromised. While Henderson did make dozens of records with singers, it
could be that he preferred to be known as an instrumental band that played
hot dance music. Bringing more singing into that instrumental music conception
would bring the sound too close to the race record sound that he was doing
with singers like Bessie Smith and Alberta Hunter. As I say, I don't have
the answer, I am just thinking of this as you bring up this question.
JJM It is also possible that by the time Armstrong
said this, it was easy to look back and say that Henderson missed out on
his talent.
JM That's right, because Armstrong's reminiscing
about this comes much later, and he tends to be very generous in his
reminiscences.
JJM Armstrong's wife 'Lil Hardin wanted him
to step away from Henderson because she felt he wasn't being used properly.
JM Right. She had an idea that he could be
a real solo star, and the leader of the band. She had a much more hardheaded
business sense than Louis did.
JJM I love the story about Armstrong's farewell
party, when he left the band to return to Chicago. He got really drunk,
apparently, and as he was saying goodbye to Henderson, he puked all over
him.
JM I guess you could see that as an accident,
or I guess you could imagine that it was a deliberate comment. [Laughs].
Armstrong, I am sure, would never admit it, but maybe that was part of the
critique later, verbalized in that comment about singing.
|
| JJM
Henderson's band, according to certain critics, took some severe setbacks
in the early thirties. How did the critics differ in their evaluation of
the post-Armstrong Henderson orchestra?
JM The way I read it is that the late
twenties/early thirties Henderson band suffers from the same "retrospective
perspective" that the early band did, and the reason is that they are playing
a versatile repertoire for a largely white audience in an elite venue --
Connie's Inn, in particular -- that does not translate as well into sound
recordings for latter day listeners who have a notion in their minds about
how jazz may have developed. So, the music is heard as being compromised,
when in fact it is yet another manifestation of an asserted versatility that,
in its time, was a mark of status and prestige.
JJM At this time, they were not only recording,
but they were also on the radio a lot. Did his playing on the radio force
him to paint a broad commercial stroke on everything he did?
JM I guess I don't see it that way. Sure,
his music was commercial, but everything was commercial. The hottest music
they played was conceived and performed in a commercial environment. I don't
see that as his selling out or compromising as some writers have, as much
as his knowing his audience. Once it is understood as an audience-centered
value, he used his versatility and applied it to the situation he was given.
I believe that is what Henderson was about. Later on, someone like Hawkins
would feel confined by these audience-centered values because he wanted to
develop the persona of a concert artist, but at the time, knowing and reaching
your audience was a prized value. I don't believe that at the time it was
seen so much as a sell-out or commercial compromise as we might later.
As I got further into this, I was really struck by the breadth of the audiences
that Henderson's band was able to reach. He was one of the first black bands
to play the prom circuit -- from Yale to Princeton to the University of Kansas
-- while also firing up largely black audiences and dancers at the Savoy.
Virtually every night, he played a different venue for a different audience.
Too little is made of what incredible talent it takes to connect to your
audience when it is changing that much.
JJM Regarding the disparity of the quality of live
performances and recordings, Coleman Hawkins said, "We'd play this piece
like mad. Come to work next night. We'd play it: wonderful. Maybe about two
or three days later we'd go down to the studio to record it: horrible. Never
would it come out right
" What do you make of that?
JM It speaks to this last issue we were just
talking about, that playing for live audiences was a vital part of their
music making. They responded to the crowd reactions to their music, and to
the vibrations their dancing feet made on the floor. Dickie Wells talks about
this. He said that when they could feel the dancers collectively pounding
their feet on the floor, it served as a great inspiration to the musicians,
resulting in a kind of symbiotic relationship. It was a feedback loop of
sorts; the listeners and dancers got their energy from the music, and they
reflected it back to the band. That feedback loop is missing in the recording
studio, and I believe that what Hawkins is saying is that missing essential
element affected the recordings.
JJM There are those who say that the sound
quality of Henderson's recordings aren't as good as those of Ellington's
of the same period.
JM That is true to some extent. Henderson
recorded for a lot of different record labels, and you can really hear the
differences sometimes. In the late twenties, they recorded a series for a
label called Harmony, and you can hear a kind of constricted, depthless sound
coming out of them. But he also recorded for some of the best labels of the
era -- Victor and Columbia among them -- so that didn't strike me as big
of an issue as the lack of having an audience while recording. |
Post-Armstrong recordings
_____
Clarinet Marmalade
*
D Natural Blues
*
Frank Driggs Collection
The "Grand Terrace" band of 1936
"As Walter Johnson put it, the band was so good I wouldve
played with them for nothing at that time. Trombonist Dicky Wells agreed:
That was the kind of spirit the cats had. They werent always
worrying about money. In Fletchers band, once you started playing,
once you hit the first note of those good arrangements, all that was forgotten.
It was something the music would do for you."
- Jeffrey Magee
____
Ain't She Sweet  |
"Henderson's character seemed ill-suited for an influential position
in a competitive field. 'Easygoing' is by far the most frequently used word
to describe his personality. By the early 1930s, musicians who showed up
late for a job received no penalty; one of them recalled Henderson's tendency
to start off a piece 'while half the band was looking for the music.' A band
member called Henderson 'aloof' and not much of a mixer. Another observer
found him 'removed' and 'inaccessible' on the bandstand. Henderson's 'Mona
Lisa smile' rarely revealed the thoughts and feelings behind it. By the
mid-1930s, when he was struggling as a bandleader but his arrangements had
made a national impact through Benny Goodman, a musician recalled that
Henderson's manner suggested 'depression.' "
- Jeffrey Magee
_____
Stealin' Apples  |
JJM
There were quite a few changes that took place in the early-to-mid
thirties period. Redman departed and was replaced by a series of arrangers
-- Benny Carter, and Henderson himself among them. Did Henderson begin to
exert more control over the band at this point?
JM He got more involved in arranging, but
I would have to say he exerted even less control over the band.
JJM Well, he didn't seem to have any control
over the band, and in fact, depending on who you asked, was a pretty awful
bandleader.
JM In a conventional sense, yes, he was not
a good bandleader. He was not a disciplinarian. For example, band members
would show up at different times, and he would nod approvingly at a guy who
showed up late but who would play a good solo. This irked people in the band
-- his brother Horace in particular had a problem with that, because he was
more serious about the business of bandleading. On the other hand, the guitarist
Lawrence Lucie said he liked Henderson's leadership style, and how Henderson
loved hearing the band play. He must have had some kind of aura that his
musical training, experience, prestige, and talent gave off, because when
he approved of a musician, it lit the musician up. Lucie said that they fed
off of each other's excitement for playing in the band.
Coleman Hawkins is "Exhibit A" of a guy who would show up late for work,
yet Henderson let it happen night after night because he played great. Even
John Hammond, who was always frustrated by Henderson's lack of discipline
and authority over his band, had to admit that somehow the band would play
with more fire when Henderson just let them do what they wanted. It is hard
to say that he should have done anything differently. If he did, it would
have been a different band, and we might not have had the fiery performances
and the great solos his attitude may have fostered. |
| JJM
How did he end up being Benny Goodman's arranger?
JM This is one of the most fascinating moments
in this whole story of Henderson, and is right up there in the top ten of
great moments in jazz and popular music history. In 1934, Henderson's band
is struggling a bit. They were on the road, in Detroit, and by contemporary
accounts were doing quite well with the crowds at the Grand Ballroom. But,
for some reason, Henderson is either not getting paid, or if he is, he is
not paying his musicians. They are left without money, and the band has to
scrounge up enough money for bus fare back to New York. The band dissolves,
and Henderson is now a bandleader without a band. He also returns to New
York and attempts to keep a band together. During this time, he and his wife
work together on arrangements, and a competition heats up between he and
his brother Horace, who is leading a different band practically across the
street from Fletcher.
At this same time, in late November/early December of 1934, Benny Goodman
is hired to play on a radio program called "Let's Dance." He is in need of
musical arrangements, and Hammond, among others, points him to Henderson
as a good potential source for them. He hires Henderson -- as well as several
other arrangers -- and pays him $37.50 per arrangement. It was not clear
at this point that Henderson would emerge as a leading figure in this group
of arrangers, or as the "maker" of the Goodman sound, but by early January,
Goodman had a number of Henderson arrangements in his book. He started playing
them on the radio and really liked what he heard. He then noticed that when
they got out of the studio and played public performances during the week,
the dancers were responding very well to Henderson's arrangements, so he
wanted more of them. "Let's Dance" continued until May of 1935, and by then,
Goodman was using quite a few Henderson arrangements, and saw that they were
doing quite well. He hadn't recorded a lot of them yet -- the recording came
later -- but they had already passed the test of making the dancers move. |
"Without Fletcher I probably would have had a pretty good band,
but it would have been something quite different from what it eventually
turned out to be."
- Benny Goodman
____
Honeysuckle Rose  |
Duncan Schiedt Collection
"It was one of the biggest kicks Ive ever had in music to
go through these scores and dig the music out of them, even in rehearsal."
- Benny Goodman
_____
St. Louis Blues
|
JJM You
talk about the importance of the three "R's," and how Henderson wrote
arrangements to pass this test.
JM Yes, what I call the three "R's" are:
"Road", "Radio," and "Recording." This came from testimony pieced together
from a variety of people -- Rex Stewart, John Hammond, and the singer Helen
Ward among them. Ward talked about how Goodman developed a systematic approach
to testing an arrangement's value. He would first take it on the road and
play it in public for dancers. Seeing how they responded was a key element
to the arrangement's worth. If it succeeded on the road in front of a live
audience, he would then take it on the "Let's Dance" show and play it on
the radio. Then, as Ward recalls, if the people in the studio audience responded
to it, and if it worked well on radio, Goodman would record it. In addition
to these three "R's," I talk about a fourth "R" that preceded all of these,
and that was rehearsal. Goodman was a very hard a taskmaster, and he wanted
every ensemble phrase to be perfected and uniform to a level that Henderson's
band -- under Henderson's leadership -- never attained.
JJM
Of the indirect influence Henderson's group of the twenties
had on Goodman's sound, you wrote, "Along with the 'In the Mood' riff that
passed through Henderson's band in Horace's tune 'Hot and Anxious,' these
passages collectively reinforce the notion that Goodman and Henderson built
the Kingdom of Swing partly from recycled shards of earlier black jazz and
dance music."
JM That's right. First of all there are the
tunes that transferred over from Henderson's band to Goodman, among them
"Wrapping it Up,"
"Down South Camp Meeting ," "King Porter Stomp,"
"Sugar Foot Stomp ," and "Honeysuckle Rose." Then you hear passages from earlier
Henderson recordings that are recycled and transformed in Henderson's
arrangements for Goodman. For example, there are phrases and riffs in the
Henderson band's late twenties recording of
"St.
Louis Blues " that end up in the version he arranged for Goodman. Even
though it is not the same arrangement, you hear him using the passages in
it. Another example is the tag ending of "Between the Devil and the Deep
Blue Sea," which comes from an earlier Henderson recording, "Can You Take
It." There is a major characteristic of Henderson's arranging -- a chain
of syncopation -- that was heard throughout his early thirties recordings
that became a real trademark of Henderson's written arrangements for Goodman.
There are also some things from Benny Carter's arrangements for Henderson's
band that Henderson took up and revised for Goodman's band.
He is absorbing all of this stuff that his own band had done, and it makes
sense, because he was having to produce work at such a fast pace. Goodman
was really turning the screws on him, calling him up at four o'clock in the
morning and saying he needed an arrangement in a few hours. Under this kind
of pressure, Henderson was bound to use stuff that he had already played.
What is remarkable is the transformation that occurred, taking an arrangement
he had played with his own band, and revising it for Goodman, emphasizing
the written parts over the solo parts that were emphasized before. |
| JJM Any idea what their personal relationship was
like?
JM I would say it was one of mutual respect.
Goodman certainly recognized the value of Henderson's work. He was very
demanding, but I wouldn't say he took him for granted. Henderson became a
kind of alter ego for Goodman, who needed him to complete his musical identity.
This was why in 1939 he fired Jess Stacy, who was a great pianist who just
the year before played this sparkling solo on "Sing Sing Sing" during the
Carnegie Hall concert. He replaced Stacy with Henderson -- who was not highly
respected as a pianist and not a particularly imaginative soloist -- as an
accompanist. It is likely he made this change so that Henderson wouldn't
leave. From this decision one can make the assumption that he needed Henderson
probably more than Henderson needed him, and certainly more than Henderson
wanted to need Goodman. For Henderson, ultimately his identity was rooted
in bandleading, and in an ideal world, his own band would be playing his
arrangements better than anybody, but that wasn't the case.
I don't know how friendly they were off the bandstand. My sense is that it
was what might be called a professional friendship rooted in their work rather
than in any kind of social interaction. I also think that Goodman may have
seen Henderson as a kind of father figure. It is hard to understand that
because Goodman is so much better known than Henderson is now, but Henderson
was twelve years older, and throughout the twenties he led the most prestigious
band when Goodman was basically a teenager, trying to come up through the
business. The other thing to support this is that Henderson was much better
educated than Goodman, musically and otherwise. So, Henderson had a lot of
qualities that Goodman recognized and needed to complete his professional
and musical identity.
JJM
You write that Henderson's musical legacy continues to inflect the
soundtrack of American life. How so?
JM You hear it regularly popping up in surprising
places. I have heard it, for example, in café's, in movie soundtracks,
and in music that NPR uses to transition from one program to another.
His way of treating a band captured the ear of an entire generation, and
these very tight, block-voiced chords interacting with each other and improvising
soloists is such a basic sound that we think of it as the normal sound of
big bands. That sound comes from Henderson, who channeled his work through
his own band, and through Goodman's, so whenever you hear a big band play,
which unfortunately is less and less often, I think you hear that legacy. |
Duncan Schiedt Collection
Helen Ward, Benny Goodman, Fletcher Henderson, John Hammond
"All of Hendersons changes to King Porter Stomp
reflect a shift in emphasis toward ensemble precision, from a band that excelled
in loose, solo-based, playing-in-the-mud head arrangements to a band that
had fewer exciting improvisers but played together like a well-oiled machine.
John Hammond recognized Goodmans version as 'something of a landmark
in white jazz circles. It is the first time, to my knowledge, that a large
white orchestra has succeeded in capturing the attack and freedom of the
best colored bands.'"
- Jeffrey Magee
_____
King Porter Stomp  |
A Study in Frustraion: The Fletcher Henderson Story
"In the '20s, the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra was musically the
most advanced in the land, but it was revered by a very limited public. He
developed musicians who went on to much greater fame on their own, and devised
the arranging formula that made Benny Goodman the 'King of Swing' in the
'30s and '40s. He made great recordings of his own compositions, which
sold a minimal number, only to have the same tunes and arrangements cut by
Benny Goodman with astronomical sales. No question about it; he was
frustrated."
- John Hammond
_____
New King Porter Stomp  |
JJM
One of his albums -- produced by John Hammond -- is called A Study
in Frustration. The word "frustration" is used a lot when the
conversation turns to Fletcher Henderson. Why?
JM Hammond is the main person responsible
for associating the idea of frustration with Henderson's career. He felt
that Henderson's music succeeded with Goodman in a way that it could not
with his own band, so he did not achieve the fame or fortune that Goodman
did playing that music. Henderson did experience some frustration in the
sense that he wanted to succeed as a bandleader, and ideally would have been
playing his own arrangements better than anyone else. But I think he accepted
the situation in which Goodman's band picked up his arrangements and perfected
them, especially the written parts. That was a source of great pride and
satisfaction for him. The frustration part is only part of the story, and
I think it is Hammond projecting his own feelings onto Henderson.
JJM He was known to do that at times.
JM Yes. Hammond determined in the early thirties
that Henderson's band was the best, and he was going to make it known as
the best band. When that didn't happen, the next best thing was for Goodman
to make Henderson's music better known. I do believe much of this frustration
theory is a lot of Hammond projecting his own feelings on to Henderson. On
the other hand, think what would have happened if Goodman hadn't played
Henderson's arrangements. He certainly wouldn't have been any better known
or financially rewarded.
JJM And we probably wouldn't be sitting here,
talking about him.
JM Maybe not. So, I end the book realizing
that I needed to hold two opposing views in my head at the same time, and
I termed them "frustration" and "fulfillment." It probably says more about
the reader than about Henderson whether they put the weight on one or the
other. To really understand and live this tension that infused Henderson's
life and work, you have to be able to hold both of these in your soul at
the same time. Yes, there was an element of frustration in the way things
turned out, but on the other hand, his work was fulfilling in a way few of
us will ever have the satisfaction of experiencing. |
_________________________________
"...as twenty-first century observers trying to make sense of Henderson's
legacy, the frustration and fulfillment are no longer Henderson's, but
ours."
- Jeffrey Magee
*
Shanghai Shuffle
Fletcher
Henderson and Big Band Jazz:
The Uncrowned King of Swing
by
Jeffrey Magee
About Jeffrey Magee
Jeffrey Magee is an Associate Professor of Musicology at Indiana University.
His writings on jazz, ragtime, and American popular song have appeared in
American Music, Lenox Avenue, International Dictionary of Black Composers,
Musical Quarterly, the Cambridge History of American Music, and the
Journal of the American Musicological Society.
*
JJM Who was your childhood hero?
JM I grew up near Pittsburgh in the seventies,
which was a great decade for Pittsburgh sports. The Pirates won two World
Series and the Steelers won four Super Bowls during this time. I was in the
heart of my childhood, and in my prime of being a sports fan as well, so
it was a magical time for me. Every time I hear the names of the great players
of those teams -- Willie Stargell, Roberto Clemente, Terry Bradshaw, Lynn
Swann, "Mean" Joe Greene, Jack Ham, Jack Lambert, not to mention guys who
aren't remembered as well any more like, say, Richie Hebner and Rocky Bleier
-- it conjures up a whole range of feelings and memories.
I'd have to add at least two other people to my list, although I didn't think
of them as "heroes" at the time. One is my uncle Alan Magee, an artist. I
look back and realize that I studied his illustrations and paintings -- and
his independent way of life -- for clues about how I could live. The other
is my father, Richard Magee, who read my early attempts at writing and, by
making marginal comments, showed me that choosing the right word is a serious
business, that writing is a painstaking process, a challenging craft. Also,
my father -- my whole family, really, including my mother Joyce and brother
Rich -- is liberal in a sense that seems to have been lost: open-minded,
tolerant, generous, compassionate. I would say that my late-blooming interest
in jazz -- after growing up listening to seventies pop and learning classical
piano -- owes something to that background.
__________
Book Reviews
"Magee has written an important book, illuminating an era too often reduced
to its most familiar names. Goodman might have been the King of Swing, but
Henderson here emerges as that kingdom's chief architect, an innovative musician
who played a crucial role in building music that, Magee maintains, achieved
'a delicate consensus joining teenagers and adults, black and white, oral
and written music, Tin Pan Alley and jazz.'" -- Boston Globe
"Excellent.... Jazz fans have waited 30 years for a trained musicologist
such as Mr. Magee...to create a book that evaluates Henderson's strengths
and weaknesses and attempts to place him in the history of American music."
-- Will Friedwald, New York Sun
"Nobody -- not Ellington, nor Basie, nor Goodman -- was more thoroughly
involved with the beginnings of the Swing Era than Fletcher Henderson. Jeff
Magee's book gives this jazz giant what he deserves: a sensitive and balanced
examination of the pianist and arranger's personal history as well as a judicious
evaluation of his music." -- Scott K. Deveaux, author of The Birth of
Bebop: A Social and Musical History
"Magee does an excellent job of placing his subject in the context of uncertain
social changes in the African American community. Well researched and highly
readable." -- Library Journal
"Magee paints a vivid portrait of the central figures of early jazz and swing
(Louis Armstrong is a 'strong streak of color in a crazy quilt') as well
as the business of recording and touring in the 1920s and '30s. While Benny
Goodman is lauded as the major force behind the Big Band sound, Magee argues
convincingly that Henderson was equally important in 'building the kingdom
of swing.'" -- Publishers Weekly
"Magee's treatment of Henderson and jazz music here is a loving, erudite
and welcome one on a giant of the form." -- Charleston Post & Courier
"Fletcher Henderson occupies such a vital role in the evolution of American
music that it comes as a shock that we had to wait this long for a superlative
biography such as this. Jeff Magee has not only discovered hitherto unknown
connections between Henderson's life and music, but has also linked them
to the cultural scene in which they existed. The jazz world owes Jeff Magee
a big thank-you for undertaking such a massive project and for doing it so
well." -- Loren Schoenberg, Executive Director, The Jazz Museum in Harlem
"A good musical study of Henderson has been long needed, and this is well
researched, thorough, and well written. Of particular value is Magee's sensible
and realistic view of the music business, which affords the reader a view
into the lives of African-American musicians of the day. This is an important
study of the jazz of the 1920s and 1930s." -- Lewis Porter, Professor of
Music, Rutgers-Newark University, and author of John Coltrane: His Life
and Music
Fletcher Henderson products at Amazon.com
Jeffrey Magee products at Amazon.com
_______________________________
This interview took place on January 17, 2005
*
If you enjoyed this interview, you may want to read our interview with Jazz Modernism author Alfred Appel.
_______________________________
Other
Jerry Jazz Musician interviews
# Text from publisher.
|