Jazz drummer Chico Hamilton passes away at 92
He was not on the list.
NEW YORK (AP) — Foreststorn “Chico” Hamilton, an influential jazz drummer and bandleader who was an architect of the West Coast cool jazz style and was known for discovering young talent, has died. He was 92.
His publicist, April Thibeault, said Hamilton died Monday night of natural causes at his home in New York.
Hamilton recorded more than 60 albums as a bandleader, beginning in the 1950s, and also appeared in and scored films. He was saluted as a Living Jazz Legend by the Kennedy Center.
He continued playing into his 90s and recorded an album, “Inquiring Minds,” last month with his Euphoria ensemble scheduled for release in early 2014.
Born in 1921 in Los Angeles, Hamilton performed in a school jazz band that included saxophonist Dexter Gordon, bassist Charles Mingus and other classmates destined to become jazz greats. He told jazz writer Marc Myers that he believes he acquired the name Chico because “I was always a small dude.”
He worked as a sideman in the 1940s with Lionel Hampton, Count Basie and others. He toured with singer Lena Horne from 1948-55, and between tours did studio work and played with bands in Los Angeles.
That’s where he hooked up with baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan in 1952. Hamilton’s subtle, creative drum playing was a key component of Mulligan’s groundbreaking piano-less quartet featuring trumpeter Chet Baker that was pivotal in the creation of the mellower, more lyrical West Coast cool jazz sound. Hamilton’s understated, seductive approach to the drums contrasted with the driving, hard-bop style typified by East Coast drummer Art Blakey.
“I’ve always seen the drums as a melodic instrument, not a percussive one,” Hamilton told Myers in 2009. “I developed a touch. It may not be as loud, but it’s mine.”
Among those inspired by Hamilton was Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts, who as a teenager heard a recording by Mulligan’s quartet.
“As it happened, Chico Hamilton was playing drums on the first record I bought,” Watts said in a Los Angeles Times interview. “I can’t really explain how the music made me feel. It was just something with the sound of the brushes. But I just fell in love with it.”
Watts later was interviewed for the 1994 documentary “Chico Hamilton: Dancing to a Different Drummer” and made a guest appearance on Hamilton’s 2001 album “Foreststorn.”
In 1955, Hamilton began his career as a bandleader.
Later that year, he formed an unusually instrumented chamber jazz quintet — which included cellist Fred Katz, flutist Buddy Collette and guitarist Hall — that became one of the most influential West Coast jazz bands and gained national prominence.
The group — with flutist Paul Horn and guitarist John Pisano — made a cameo appearance in the 1957 Burt Lancaster-Tony Curtis film, “Sweet Smell of Success.”
In the mid-1960s, Hamilton formed a company to score films and commercials.
In 1987, Hamilton was a founding member of the jazz faculty at the New School University, where his students included John Popper of Blues Traveler and Eric Schenkman of The Spin Doctors. That same year he formed a new band called Euphoria that toured and recorded extensively for the independent Joyous Shout! label, including releasing four new albums to celebrate his 85th birthday in 2006.
Hamilton is survived by his daughter, Denise; his brother Don; one granddaughter and two great-granddaughters. His wife, Helen, died in 2008.
Discography
As leader
1955: Chico Hamilton Quintet featuring Buddy Collette
(Pacific Jazz)
1955: The Original Chico Hamilton Quintet (World Pacific) -
released 1960
1955: Live at the Strollers (Fresh Sound) released 2008
1956: Chico Hamilton Quintet in Hi Fi (Pacific Jazz)
1953-56: Chico Hamilton Trio (Pacific Jazz)
1957: Chico Hamilton Quintet (Pacific Jazz)
1957: Sweet Smell of Success (Decca) - Film soundtrack
1957: Delightfully Modern (Jazztone) with the Laurindo
Almeida Quartet
1958: South Pacific in Hi-Fi (World Pacific)
1958: Chico Hamilton Trio Introducing Freddie Gambrell
(World Pacific)
1958: The Original Ellington Suite (Pacific Jazz) with Eric
Dolphy - released 2000
1958: The Chico Hamilton Quintet with Strings Attached
(Warner Bros.)
1958: Gongs East! (Warner Bros.)
1959: Ellington Suite (World Pacific)
1959: The Three Faces of Chico (Warner Bros.)
1959: That Hamilton Man (Sesac)
1960: Bye Bye Birdie-Irma La Douce (Columbia)
1960 The Chico Hamilton Special (Columbia)
1962: Drumfusion (Columbia)
1962: Passin' Thru (Impulse!)
1963: A Different Journey (Reprise)
1963: Man from Two Worlds (Impulse!)
1965: Chic Chic Chico (Impulse!)
1966: El Chico (Impulse!)
1966: The Further Adventures of El Chico (Impulse!)
1966: The Dealer (Impulse!)
1968: The Gamut (Solid State)
1969: The Head Hunters (Solid State)
1970: El Exigente: The Demanding One (Flying Dutchman)
1973: The Master (Enterprise)
1974: Montreux Festival (Stax) - live album shared with
Albert King and Little Milton
1975: Peregrinations (Blue Note)
1976: Chico Hamilton and the Players (Blue Note)
1977: Catwalk (Mercury)
1979: Reaching for the Top (Nautilus)
1980: Nomad (Elektra)
1988: Euphoria (Swallow)
1990: Transfusion (Studio West/V.S.O.P.)
1991: Reunion (Soul Note)
1992: Arroyo
1993: Trio!
1993: Dreams Come True (Joyous Shout!) with Andrew Hill -
released 2008
1994: My Panamanian Friend (The Music of Eric Dolphy)
1994: Dancing to a Different Drummer (Soul Note)
1998: Complete Pacific Jazz Recordings of the Chico Hamilton
Quintet
1999: Timely (All Points Jazz)
2001: Foreststorn
2002: Thoughts Of...
2006: Juniflip (Joyous Shout!)
2006: Believe (Joyous Shout!)
2006: 6th Avenue Romp (Joyous Shout!)
2006: Heritage (Joyous Shout!)
2007: Hamiltonia
2007: Mysterious Maiden (180 gram vinyl LP)
2008: It's About Time EP
2008: Alternative Dimensions of El Chico (Joyous Shout!)
2008: Trio! Live @ Artpark
2009: The Alternative Dimensions of El Chico (12"
double vinyl)
2009: Twelve Tones of Love (Joyous Shout!)
2011: Revelation (10" vinyl EP)
2011: Euphoric (EP)
2011: Revelation
2013: The Inquiring Mind (Joyous Shout!)[19]
As sideman
With Louis Armstrong
Louis Armstrong and His Friends (Flying Dutchman/Amsterdam,
1970)
With Buddy Collette
Tanganyika (Dig, 1956)
With Paul Horn
House of Horn (Dot, 1957) - credited as "Forest
Thorn"
With Fred Katz
Zen: The Music of Fred Katz (Pacific Jazz, 1957)
Soul° Cello (Decca, 1958)
With John Lewis
Grand Encounter (Pacific Jazz, 1956)
With Gerry Mulligan
Gerry Mulligan Quartet Volume 1 (Pacific Jazz, 1952)
Gene Norman Presents the Original Gerry Mulligan Tentet and
Quartet (GNP, 1953 [1997])
California Concerts (Pacific Jazz, 1955)
With Ken Nordine
Word Jazz (Dot, 1957) - credited as "Forest Horn"
With Gábor Szabó
Spellbinder (Impulse!, 1966)
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