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There's a great new musician now living, working, and teaching in New York City. He's new, but he has tremendous musical knowledge, unsurpassed credentials, and the highest levels of artistry at his command. ![]() To the astonishment and joy of all, Henry Grimes is playing at the very height of his artistic powers (or indeed anyone's), just as though he had never stopped at all! He is still healthy and strong, and his gentle, humble bearing and courageous life story have inspired all those privileged to know him, hear him, play music with him. ![]() In addition, Henry's trio with Andrew Lamb and Newman Taylor Baker was named best jazz trio of the year by "NYPress" in 'O4; Jez Nelson of BBC Radio's "Jazz on 3" chose the Henry Grimes Quartet's performance in Vision Festival 'O5 one of the year's dozen best live broadcasts; the Jazz Journalists Association nominated Henry Grimes for "Acoustic Bassist of the Year" ('O6), the other nominees in this category being Ron Carter, Charlie Haden, Dave Holland, Christian McBride, and William Parker; Henry strolled onto the "Downbeat" critics' poll for bassists at #12 in Aug., 'O6 (many of the others having learned from Henry to begin with, as they'll tell you themselves if you ask them); and the Cecil Taylor Trio with Henry Grimes and Pheeroan akLaff was designated a critic's choice for one of the 1O best concerts of the year by "All About Jazz" at the end of 'O6 (thanks, Russ Musto!), and another by the same trio by "Time Out New York" at the end of 'O7 ("Chalk it up to [Cecil Taylor's] reunion with bass heavy Henry Grimes and four-on-the-floor drummer Pheeroan akLaff"). So fans, if you're anywhere within reach of a Henry Grimes concert ... buy a ticket and be there! Musicians, clubs, schools, festivals: When you're looking for a great teacher, master musician, powerful bandleader, eloquent poet, brilliant improviser... please get in touch with Henry Grimes! A Lost Giant Found By Michael Fitzgerald [An edited version of this essay appeared in Signal To Noise magazine, Winter 2003 issue, accompanied by a 2002 interview of Henry Grimes conducted by Marshall Marrotte.] In an age when giants of jazz depart from this life on a regular basis, a resurrection is unheard of. Yet this is what has come to pass. Henry Grimes was rediscovered in autumn 2002, over thirty years after he left the music world. He was long the subject of rumor and speculation, and in 1986 Cadence Magazine even reported Grimes as having died "in late 1984." However, as Mark Twain once said, these reports of his demise were "greatly exaggerated." ![]() Don Cherry & Henry Grimes, photo © Francis Wolff,
Van Gelder Studios, 1966 (Click on photo to enlarge.) Grimes was a significant player who stood out due to the strength of his sound and his exceptional bowed work, developed through classical studies at the Juilliard School of Music. He was born November 3, 1935 in Philadelphia, home to an outstanding musical community. His twin brother Leon played clarinet and tenor saxophone and their older sister owned a record player, making her an important figure in their circle. Bebop was the music of the day, and Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Clifford Brown were favorites. Henry began his musical career at Barrett Junior High School in south Philadelphia, where he met drummer Albert "Tootie" Heath, pianist Bobby Timmons, and trumpeters Ted Curson and Wilmer Wise. The bass had not yet entered the picture, and Grimes was playing violin in both the school orchestra and in jazz groups outside of school. Wise recalled one of the earliest of these extracurricular units. "The first band I played in was a band called the Barsity Boys, like 'varsity' but spelled with a B - why? I don't know. The personnel was...a fellow named Edward Gregg played on my trumpet case, Henry, I think played the violin. He was a violinist when I first met him. And Leon played clarinet. And it must have been a godawful sounding group." Soon after this, Grimes was performing with more professional ensembles. While Leon Grimes and Wilmer Wise attended Bok Technical High School, Henry studied at Mastbaum Technical High School in northeast Philadelphia, alongside trumpeters Lee Morgan and Ted Curson. The school's curriculum was very demanding, on the level of college programs, and students studied harmony, solfeggio, orchestration, and ear training. It was at Mastbaum that Grimes added the bass to his musical arsenal. He was almost immediately a first-class player and was selected for the all-city orchestra, which performed challenging symphonic literature. Ted Curson commented that while Henry was somewhat introverted, his artistic abilities extended beyond the musical sphere and made him a popular figure in high school. "He wasn't a really talkative guy. I don't remember him maybe saying a hundred words. But even through school, he did something that no one else did. He had a comic strip. He was a great artist and had a good sense of humor. He had all of us in this comic strip. And we'd be waiting for the end of the week for it to come out. He had us like hanging by our fingernails waiting to see what he was.... Henry definitely had this comic strip all through Mastbaum and it was wild! A lot of stuff you agreed with, a lot of this stuff made you angry. But that's the way it was! He was the only one I knew that had something like that. He'd draw the pictures of you and put all the text in and it would be passed all around school." This appreciation of cartoons did not end there, as Grimes titled his later compositions "Farmer Alfalfa" and "Son of Alfalfa" after an animated character. At Juilliard (1952-54), Grimes played bass with the opera orchestra and studied with the great classical bassist Fred Zimmermann of the New York Philharmonic. Henry was also working jazz engagements with artists such as Anita O'Day and it was while performing with her at the Red Hill Inn in Pennsauken, NJ that Grimes was heard by Gerry Mulligan. Upon leaving Juilliard and moving to New York City, the Mulligan quartet was the next big step for Grimes. In the span of just a few weeks, they recorded several albums for the Pacific Jazz label including meetings with trumpeter Chet Baker and with vocalist Annie Ross. From the Gerry Mulligan quartet, Grimes joined another piano-less group, this one led by Sonny Rollins, who was working in a trio format. At the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival, Grimes played with no fewer than five acts: Rollins, Benny Goodman, Lee Konitz, Tony Scott, and Thelonious Monk (though his name never even appeared in the festival's printed program). He can be seen in the film "Jazz on a Summer's Day" playing with Monk. Gerry Mulligan also performed that year and Grimes's replacement in the bass position, Bill Crow, recalled Grimes working hard to keep up with the saxophonist. "He sounded very good to me. He seemed rather shy and it was not easy to draw him out or hang out with him because he didn't have much to say. He looked like he was suffering a little with Sonny because Sonny had cut the group down. But I thought Henry was doing yeoman work, hanging in there with Sonny. That was a hard combination. It looked like he would have liked to have a piano player (laughs)." ![]() Sonny Rollins, Henry Grimes, Billy Higgins, & Don Cherry,
photo © Riccardo Schwamenthal, Milan, Italy, 1963 (Click on photo to enlarge.) In 1963, Sonny Rollins took a huge step away from the mainstream when he added Don Cherry to his group. With this quartet Rollins again toured Europe, being broadcast on the radio frequently. The influence of Ornette Coleman was strong and Grimes fit perfectly in the freer setting. Upon returning to the United States, the Rollins group played at the Newport Jazz Festival and made a landmark recording for RCA Victor, both with the father of the tenor saxophone, Coleman Hawkins. When Albert Ayler made his first recordings in America in 1964, Grimes was present and joined Ayler again for the Spirits Rejoice album, recorded in 1965. On the latter, Grimes worked as part of a two-bass team with Gary Peacock. Such a setup became more frequent during this time and Grimes also performed in this tandem configuration with Bill Folwell, Alan Silva, J-F Jenny-Clark, and Charlie Haden. He was flexible in playing pizzicato or arco and worked well no matter which was his partner's strength. The 1964 sessions by Ayler show the saxophonist fully developed in his style and moving between original compositions like "Witches and Devils" and "Saints" and traditional and contemporary spirituals like "When the Saints Go Marching In" and "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot." Ayler's intense personal sound and conception made a huge impact on the musical community and as Bill Folwell said recently, "I think people are still scratching their heads trying to figure it out." Perry Robinson had met Grimes in the late 1950s at a New York jam session and had kept in touch with him, visiting the bassist regularly after Grimes had moved to New York. They had recorded Funk Dumpling for Savoy in 1962, which features their compositions almost exclusively. A short time later the two worked together at Birdland along with pianist Richard Wyands. Over the next few years, there was much opportunity for discussion and Robinson recalled Grimes analyzing his bass playing. "Henry said that when he played he used to imagine himself walking on an endless conveyor belt, just constantly moving forward at a regular pace. Because what is it to swing? It's a magic momentum that's always moving; you're walking, but at the same time you're being conveyed because the rhythm is carrying you." [from Perry Robinson: The Traveler by Perry Robinson and Florence Wetzel] Beginning in 1965, Grimes, Robinson, and drummer Tom Price shared an apartment in the East Village at 272 E. 3rd Street between Avenues C and D (with Slugs' a block away at 242 East 3rd St.). It was there that they developed their musical concepts, jamming together almost every day. Price says, "So much so that people began to complain after a while (laughs)." They were joined by neighborhood friends such as trumpeter Marc Levin and saxophonists Archie Shepp and Frank Wright. They also met the drummer Frank Clayton and his wife, vocalist Jay Clayton. Grimes was working steadily with clarinetist Tony Scott at The Dom, a nearby club, and the environment was fertile for creative expression. Grimes and Robinson played numerous gigs in many different settings, including a psychiatrists' convention in Atlantic City, NJ. "We had a big lobster dinner and played a little jazz," says the clarinetist. Robinson has a great fondness for the bassist and over the decades has continued to perform and record pieces by Grimes and also dedicated a composition "Henry's Dance" to him on his 1977 Chiaroscuro album The Traveler. ![]() Pharoah Sanders & Henry Grimes, Slugs', NYC, photo © Raymond Ross
![]() Photo © Francis Wolff for Blue Note Records
As well as recording for ESP and Impulse, Grimes participated in some of the most important avant-garde recordings made by the Blue Note label and all of Cecil Taylor's and Don Cherry's Blue Note recordings include Grimes. The autumn of 1966 was an exceptionally fruitful with what are now considered to be essential historical albums being recorded every week or so: Don Cherry's Symphony for Improvisers and Where is Brooklyn?, Cecil Taylor's Conquistador, all on Blue Note and Pharoah Sanders's Tauhid on Impulse. On each, he adds to the power and beauty of the music. As Taylor once said, "Henry's a giant." Even with such great artistic success, the financial realities were bleak and Grimes was coming to grips with long-term personal issues that would radically change his life. He abruptly moved to California in 1967 and continued playing for a short time in San Francisco, but gave up the bass entirely when he relocated in Los Angeles about a year later, his bass having been damaged in transit. In her masterpiece, As Serious As Your Life, Valerie Wilmer wrote, "Henry Grimes, who was, with Charlie Haden, the other great bass player of this era, went to California and became involved in acting before he, too, disappeared," and in the most recent reprinting (1999), Wilmer's preface reads: "And, although details have never emerged, it is generally believed that Henry Grimes died in California in the 1970s." Communication with his colleagues ceased and his whereabouts were unknown to those in the musical community. Rumors spread over the next thirty years but were mostly silenced by the cryptic announcements in the spring of 1986 that he was 'reported' to have died in late 1984. The idea that Grimes might still be living in Los Angeles circulated around early 1999, but there was no confirmation immediately forthcoming. During all this time, his fellow musicians as well as music fans all over the world frequently wondered what had happened to him. Only now do we have the answer. Those musicians who have learned of Grimes's rediscovery are elated and are happy to reminisce about their past encounters. Burton Greene summed up the musical philosophy of the time: "All of us that had the chance to play with Henry remember how he could help kick a band out to the outer stratosphere and back, which of course was just what the explosive sixties were about. We weren't there to be a slave to forms like so much banal, predictable, yuppie 'jazz' of today or to 'recreate the museum,' as Cecil Taylor calls it. On the contrary, the forms we set up became "sitting ducks" for the amazing energy and creativity which blew those forms apart and perhaps created new forms to again be exploded." Many of Grimes's recordings have been made available on CD. With the reissue of these classic sessions, we again have the opportunity to experience the very special sound of this master musician. With any luck, we will hear more from Grimes in the future. Thanks to Bill Crow, Ted Curson, Andrew Cyrille, Bill Folwell, Burton Greene, Marshall Marrotte, Perry Robinson, Florence Wetzel, Wilmer Wise. [Also included were photographs by Marshall Marrotte, Ray Ross, Francis Wolff, and others. Back issues of Signal To Noise #28 are available for $4 each postpaid - please visit their website at signaltonoisemagazine.org.] Henry Grimes & Olive Oil (as of August, 2003) by Margaret Davis ![]() Henry Grimes & William Parker,
photo © Jaci Downs, Philadelphia, 2/O4, jdowns64@hotmail.com (Click on photo to enlarge.) When Marshall Marrotte found Henry Grimes, Henry told him that he very much wished he had a bass so he could start playing again. For me, a planet where the great Henry Grimes does not have a bass is not a place I want to be, and being unprepared for space travel, I decided to undertake a month-long nationwide search for a bass for him. I wrote to, called, or otherwise contacted about 5O of the musicians he played and/or recorded with before he disappeared, as well as many bassists who would know him as a music hero even if he was before their time. I put particular concentration on the West Coast because shipping a bass is a big expense in itself, I also thought the Western music community would want the opportunity to gather around him, and I thought it would be easy especially for those connected with academia or major cultural institutions out West to hook him up with practice space and an instrument to play, at the very least. So with Marshall Marrotte's approval, I put the word out far and wide, and then we waited for a bass for Henry Grimes. For quite a while, nobody moved. Slowly a few people began to say they'd be willing to do something -- make a donation, hold or play in a benefit concert, contribute a bow -- kind, good offers, but not a bass for Henry Grimes to play. A couple of afflicted souls responded negatively, cynically, or even with hostility. Most just didn't answer at all. Then, just when I was beginning to despair, to question my lifelong belief in the term "music community" as something more than a concept or an ideal, but as an actual living entity that embraces and sustains its own, the great William Parker came home to New York City from another of his tours, got around to reading his accumulated Emails, and called me up to say he would send a bass and a bow to Henry Grimes. First he wanted New York's great bass specialist David Gage to make a small repair, and then David's shop would build a shipping crate for the bass and arrange and pay for the shipping. One of David Gage's employees, a bassist called Sprocket, even put up $100 of his own money to help with shipping costs. Henry Grimes received the bass William Parker named Olive Oil (more, I think, due to the green tinge of her finish than for Popeye's girlfriend) on December 16th, 2002, was ecstatic to have Olive Oil, and has been practicing hard ever since. After only a couple of months with Olive Oil, he began to emerge from his room, with sensitive, caring encouragement and assistance from a young music student named Nick Rosen and classmates at the Oakwood School, where the youngsters persuaded the staff to pay Henry to give them improvisation lessons. Meanwhile, Henry practiced with quite a few area musicians and played beautiful concerts at Billy Higgins's World Stage, the Howling Monk, and the Jazz Bakery in the Los Angeles area. After having had his new bass for only five months, Henry returned to New York to play as special guest in New York City's great Vision Festival on Memorial Day, May 26, 'O3, in William Parker's big band, as well as a surprise trio set with Mr. Parker and Rob Brown. At that time, Henry also participated in a five-day WKCR Henry Grimes Radio Festival (May 28 through June 1st), speaking and playing on the air daily, and he offered a bass clinic at David Gage's shop on May 28th before nearly 5O New York-area bassists who haven't stopped talking about him since. Shortly thereafter, he presented his own quintet for three nights at the Iridium Jazz Club in New York City in July to universal acclaim. Henry Grimes received a Lifetime Achievement Award in jazz from Long Island Public Radio (WLIU) and a Meet the Composer grant for one of his California performances. As of August, 'O3, Henry Grimes was happily living, working, and teaching in New York City, he was designated "Musician of the Year" by "All About Jazz"/ New York (Dec., 'O3), and his stellar musical path continues into the future. Let us give thanks! Margaret Davis Grimes (editor/publisher) Art Attack! jazznewyork.org | ||||