JSngry Posted January 13 Report Posted January 13 1 hour ago, Dan Gould said: A ood example of the missing information is that it has been said by about every musician asked that they 'heard' Percy spent time at Riker's Island, the (especially now) infamous NYC jail. But nobody seems to know what put him there. The usual suspect, probably,? Quote
Dan Gould Posted January 13 Author Report Posted January 13 46 minutes ago, JSngry said: The usual suspect, probably,? That's the presumption, or perhaps drug-related theft? Bill Doggett said on the WKCR memorial broadcast that "Everybody that met Percy loved him. Now some of the things that happened later on in his life people didn't necessarily like, but Percy as an individual was a beautiful person." That suggests to me it wasn't a stretch for possession. He was well liked. Everybody that met Percy loved him. You know, some of the things that happened later on in his life people didn't necessarily like, but Percy as an individual was a beautiful person. A wonderful man, a wonderful friend, a wonderful musician. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted January 20 Report Posted January 20 Neloms sounds great on this clip, wow! Quote
Dan Gould Posted January 26 Author Report Posted January 26 (edited) Same engagement, a week later, last time bebop this time "Idaho". Edited January 26 by Dan Gould Quote
Dan Gould Posted January 31 Author Report Posted January 31 I reached out to the Vandy Librarian about an updated spreadsheet of recordings ... and got a list of interviews, four of which were of Percy France or about him. Something to look forward to! (Not to mention 6 or more performance tapes I didn't recognize as already uploaded). Well ... a day later three of the four were released and I am excited by this one in particular, it's about three hours of Percy spinning records and talking about the music, plus an interview with Schaap that I suspect is the longest known interview especially in the absence of any recorded evidence of an interview Allen Lowe told me he had conducted once. https://aviary.library.vanderbilt.edu/collections/2137/collection_resources/141198 Jazz Alternatives: Percy France musician host (9/26/1979) Quote
Dan Gould Posted February 9 Author Report Posted February 9 Vanderbilt uploaded the Max Roach interview segment from the Percy France Memorial broadcast and with a little bit of editing I've adopted it into this Remembrance which I will be adding to the website: “Percy France for us embodied what this music was all about as far as the musician was concerned. It’s really a performer’s music and the great performers are the ones who make the history of the music and Percy was certainly one of those. You don’t hear playing like that today, you just don’t, you don’t hear that. It came from that school that embodied people like Coleman Hawkins and Duke Ellington and Don Byas – some of the greatest musicians that this country has produced. And Percy was certainly one of those. When I heard Percy on saxophone, it made me smile. Percy could blow anybody off the stand but he had the humility that wasn’t weak, it was strong. He was a nice human being and you got that from him, and heard it in his playing. Remember that old spiritual “He Never Said a Mumblin’ Word” no matter what was done to him he never complained about what was going on with himself personally. He was always encouraging whenever I came up to see him where he was playing – kind of a smiling personality.” Quote
Dan Gould Posted Sunday at 06:49 PM Author Report Posted Sunday at 06:49 PM August 25 1985 there was an impromptu jam session during a West End Day broadcast on WKCR, bringing Percy France together with Bill Wurtzel and Ali Ryerson: Quote
JSngry Posted Sunday at 07:21 PM Report Posted Sunday at 07:21 PM How do Percy and Lockjaw line up chronologically? Quote
Dan Gould Posted Sunday at 07:34 PM Author Report Posted Sunday at 07:34 PM Lock was six years older (1922 vs 1928), started recording about two years earlier (1947 vs 1949). Quote
JSngry Posted Sunday at 09:06 PM Report Posted Sunday at 09:06 PM Ok, they definitely seem to have been breathing some of the same air as far as saxophone mechanics go. Fascinating, as not very many others have! Quote
Dan Gould Posted Sunday at 10:04 PM Author Report Posted Sunday at 10:04 PM 55 minutes ago, JSngry said: Ok, they definitely seem to have been breathing some of the same air as far as saxophone mechanics go. Fascinating, as not very many others have! I haven't cross-referenced influences between the two of them ... but becoming musicians in that time frame - both oriented mostly toward swing. They were both born in NYC. Quote
JSngry Posted Monday at 12:23 AM Report Posted Monday at 12:23 AM My guess would by Byas and or Ben. They both founds ways of doing that "sound as sound thing" to some extent, in the way that Percy and especially Lock did. Breathing the same air! Quote
Dan Gould Posted Monday at 02:35 AM Author Report Posted Monday at 02:35 AM Byas and Webster were two of the people Percy named in the interview segment of the "Musician Host" show that I linked above. I don't know for sure who Lockjaw would have named or if he was ever asked that kind of question. Quote
JSngry Posted Monday at 03:50 AM Report Posted Monday at 03:50 AM Apparently he was a BIG Ben admirer. Quote
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