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Charles, Jr.; Bird;
Chan; Charlie; Yardbird (1920-1955) Alto saxophonist
Charlie Parker was one of the most influential
improvising soloists in jazz, and a central figure in the development
of bop in the 1940s. A legendary figure in his own lifetime, he
was idolized by those who worked with him, and he inspired a generation
of jazz performers and composers.
Parker was the only child of Charles and Addle
Parker. In 1927, the family moved to Kansas City, Missouri, an important
center of African-American music in the 1920s and 1930s. Parker
had his first music lessons in the local public schools; he began
playing alto saxophone in 1933 and worked occasionally in semi-professional
groups before leaving school in 1935 to become a full-time musician.
From 1935 to 1939, he worked mainly in Kansas City with a wide variety
of local blues and jazz groups. Like most jazz musicians of his
time, he developed his craft largely through practical experience:
listening to older local jazz masters, acquiring a traditional repertory,
and learning through the process of trial and error in the competitive
Kansas City bands and jam sessions.
In 1939 Parker first visited New York (then the
principal center of jazz musical and business activity), staying
for nearly a year. Although he worked only sporadically as a professional
musician, he often participated in jam sessions. By his own later
account, he was bored with the stereotyped changes that were being
used then. He said, "I kept thinking there's bound to be something
elseÖ. I could hear it sometimes, but I couldn't play it."
While working over at the Cherokee in a jam session with the guitarist
Biddy Fleet, Parker suddenly found that by using the higher intervals
of a chord as a melody line and backing them with appropriately
related changes he could play what he had been "hearing."
Yet, it was not until 1944-5 that his conceptions of rhythm and
phrasing had evolved sufficiently to form his mature style.
Parker's name first appeared in the music press
in 1940, and from this date his career is more fully documented.
From 1940 to 1942 he played in Jay McShann's band, with which he
toured the Southwest, Chicago, and New York, and took part in his
first recording sessions in Dallas (1941). These recordings, and
several made for broadcasting from the same period, document his
early, swing-based style, and at the same time reveal his extraordinary
gift for improvisation. In December 1942, he joined Earl Hines'
big band, which then included several other young modernists such
as Dizzy Gillespie. By May 1944 they, with Parker, formed the nucleus
of Billy Eckstine's band.
During these years, Parker regularly participated
in after-hours jam sessions at Minton's Playhouse and Monroe's Uptown
House in New York, where the informal atmosphere and small groups
favored the development of his personal style and of the new bop
music generally. Unfortunately, a strike by the American Federation
of Musicians silenced most of the recording industry from August
1942, causing this crucial stage in Parker's musical evolution to
remain virtually undocumented. Though there are some obscure acetate
recordings of him playing tenor saxophone dating from early 1943.
When the recording ban ended, Parker recorded as a sideman (from
September 15, 1944) and as a leader (from November 26, 1945), which
introduced his music to a wider public and to other musicians.
The year 1945 marked a turning point in Parker's
career: in New York he led his own group for the first time and
worked extensively with Gillespie in small ensembles. In December
1945, he and Gillespie took the new jazz style to Hollywood, where
they fulfilled a six-week nightclub engagement. Parker continued
to work in Los Angeles, recording and performing in concerts and
nightclubs, until June 29, 1946, when a nervous breakdown and addiction
to heroin and alcohol caused his confinement at the Camarillo State
Hospital. He was released in January 1947 and resumed work in Los
Angeles.
Parker returned to New York in April 1947. He
formed a quintet (with Miles Davis, Duke Jordan, Tommy Potter, and
Max Roach) that recorded many of his most famous pieces. The years
from 1941 to 1951 were Parker's most fertile period. He worked in
a wide variety of settings (nightclubs, concerts, radio, and recording
studios) with his own small ensembles, a string group, and Afro-Cuban
bands, and as a guest soloist with local musicians when traveling
without his own group. He visited Europe (1949 and 1950) and recorded
slightly over half his surviving work. Though still beset by problems
associated with drugs and alcohol, he attracted a very large following
in the jazz world and enjoyed a measure of financial success.
In July 1951, Parker's New York cabaret license
was revoked at the request of the narcotics squad. This banned him
from nightclub employment in the city and forced him to adopt a
more peripatetic life until the license was reinstated (probably
in autumn 1953). Sporadically employed, badly in debt, and in failing
physical and mental health, he twice attempted suicide in 1954 and
voluntarily committed himself to Bellevue Hospital in New York.
His last public engagement was on March 5, 1955 at Birdland, a New
York nightclub named in his honor. He died seven days later in the
Manhattan apartment of his friend the Baroness Pannonica de Koenigswarter,
sister of Lord Rothschild.
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text from The New Grove Dictionary
of Jazz, Macmillan Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
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