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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT2305>
<title>
Jan. 18, 1993: Dizzy Gillespie:1917-1993
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CULTURE, Page 57
Two Who Transformed Their Worlds
Dizzy Gillespie 1917-1993
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By JAY COCKS
</p>
<p> That is the question: To be or not...to bop. The
problem, first stated by an English playwright of some note, was
rephrased and repunctuated by John Birks Gillespie in 1979 and
used as the title of a free-swinging memoir. To Be or Not...to Bop: hip, funny, silly, fractured, rhythmic--each word
is like a snap of the fingers--pointed, pertinent, dizzy. Very
Dizzy.
</p>
<p> Did anyone ever call him John? When Dizzy Gillespie died
last week at age 75, after a bout with pancreatic cancer, he
was known the world over by his nickname. He was busted out of
the Cab Calloway band in 1941 for excessive clowning, so legend
has it; Calloway, no sobersides himself, could not have
foreseen the full implications of the Gillespie handle. In any
case, Dizzy required elbow room; he was preparing to break a
mess of musical rules. Jazz, always loose, was about to be set
free.
</p>
<p> Bebop: a revolution in two syllables. It jumped off of
swing into the high ozone, on the wings of two unlikely angels,
Gillespie and Charlie Parker. Together, and with the
collaboration of a tight core of players like Thelonious Monk,
Kenny Clarke and a few others, Dizzy and Bird drove jazz back
into itself, straight through its heart and out again, sounding
brand-new. Parker--the racked jazz saint and junkie genius--fit the hipster stereotype more than his good-timing,
glad-handing buddy. But in matters of chops and talent,
Gillespie played a supporting role to no one.
</p>
<p> There have been three jazz trumpet players who could be
called, with no second thought, great: Louis Armstrong, Dizzy
and Miles Davis. Satch played a sweet, raucous sound that kept
its roots strong in the gumbo of hometown New Orleans. Dizzy
knew how to nurse a tune too, but his armor-piercing solos tore
those roots right up and replanted them farther north, in the
new welter of urban angst. But his music, always intrepid,
remained fleet. It was spontaneous reinvention in rhythm, a kind
of fun that tweaked the far edges but never crossed them.
</p>
<p> "Dizzy was the catalyst, the man who inspired us all," the
great drummer Max Roach has said. "By the time he came to New
York he was playing in all the Big Bands. He was the one who
told us about a saxophone player in Kansas City named Charlie
Parker or a bass player in Minneapolis named Oscar Pettiford."
Dizzy brought them all together to play at a fabled Harlem joint
called Minton's, where, after the regular sessions, strange
scrambled rhythms and impossible harmonies would float toward
the dawn. It was, indeed, a new day.
</p>
<p> Bop was fractured, urgent, wired. It did not go down easy.
In fact, its strenuous experimentation not only polarized the
jazz audience but lost jazz itself much popular support. As if
realizing this and trying to reach some sort of no-sweat
accommodation, Gillespie turned up the volume on his
personality. His goatee, heavy-black-frame specs and frequent
beret became prototypical hepcat mufti. His voice, which sounded
like a thunderclap wanting to purr, could be heard on cool
novelties like Swing Low, Sweet Cadillac. His cheeks expanded
so far past normal size when he played his horn that he looked,
on the bandstand, as if he were on exhibit in an aquarium.
</p>
<p> And the horn. It was as much a trademark as Armstrong's
handkerchief. Story goes that in 1953, Dizzy returned to a
recording session and found that his trumpet had been sat upon,
or fallen upon, or in some way molested. It was bent into a
near-perfect 45 degrees angle. He played it anyway and liked
what he heard; he used to say he could hear himself better. And
that was pretty much the way he was heard, too, from then on.
</p>
<p> The horn was no more a stunt than all his roguish jokiness
though. The music flowed from a kind of high spirit, a
purposeful passion that the horn symbolized and the silliness
deflected. There was nothing slight or offhand about the way he
played, or how he lived. Born in South Carolina in 1917, he
began to teach himself trombone and trumpet two years after his
father--a bricklayer by trade and a weekend bandleader by
calling--had passed on; before he left his teens he was
playing professionally with the Frankie Fairfax band and had got
himself his nickname.
</p>
<p> It was in those years too that he met the dancer Lorraine
Willis, to whom he would be married ever after. He steered wide
of the sundry social temptations of the musical life and, in
1968, became a member of the Baha'i faith. Personally, Dizzy was
on the square and strictly legit; he fronted the first jazz
band ever sent on a subsidized tour by the State Department,
referred to President Dwight Eisenhower as "Pops," got Jimmy
Carter to sing Salt Peanuts at the White House and copped one
of those fancy medals from the Kennedy Center. He even ran for
the highest office a couple of times himself (sample campaign
lyric: "Your politics oughta be a groovier thing/ So get a good
President who's willing to swing"), announcing that he would
make Malcolm X Attorney General. None of this prankishness or
social acceptance blunted the edge of his music: he initiated,
almost singlehandedly, what's now called Afro-Cuban jazz, and
as late as last year was still on the road, chops intact,
wringing every note he could out of life.
</p>
<p> He claimed he seldom listened to his records "because
after you've played it, it's all gone anyway." When Dizzy laid
it down, though, it changed tomorrow, and it will last forever.
That's bebop, and about that there is no question.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>