2009-06-02

Johnny Windhurst

Trumpeter Johnny Windhurst is one of those excellent second-line jazz musicians who never was in the spotlight and just deserved a few lines in the most complete jazz encyclopaedias –no mention of him in 90% of the jazz history books densely populating my shelves-. A self-taught musician, his golden tone was mainly influenced by Bix Beiderbecke white followers such as Bobby Hackett.


From left to right: Johnny Windhurst, Milt Gabler, Jack Crystal, Eddie Condon and Henry "Red" Allen


Born in Bronx, New York, in November 5, 1926, at age 15 he was sitting in at Nick’s and by 1945 he replaced Bunk Johnson in Sidney Bechet’s band playing at the Savoy Café in Boston. He played at the Jazz at Town Hall concert in September 1946 and at the World’s Greatest Jazz Concert #2 on April 26, 1947, worked in Chicago for a time and then moved to California, where he played with clarinettist Edmond Hall. Other employers around this time included Louis Armstrong and Nappy Lamare. He also led his own band in Ohio and Boston, and was a latter day associate of Eddie Condon, playing and recording with the guitarist in the early '50s and back again in 1967. He recorded with singers Lee Wiley (1952) and Barbara Lea (1955-1957) and with trombonist Jack Teagarden (1955).

His only leader recording session, for the Transition label, took place on April 22, 1956, backed by Jimmy Andrews on piano, Buell Neidlinger on bass and Walt Gifford on drums. Bud Blacklock replaced Andrews on “When You’re Smiling”, where Hamilton Carson joined on tenor sax. The disc was called Jazz At Columbus Avenue (Transition TRLP-2).





Here’s Johnny Windhurst in 1958, leading an ensemble during one of those Art Ford Jazz Parties and waving though “Pennies From Heaven”. Roland Hanna is on piano, Mary Osborne on guitar, Mark Goldberg on bass and Morey Feld on drums.


4 comentarios:

  1. Wow! I've never seen the cover of the original Windhurst CD -- just its reissue as THE REMARKABLE JOHNNY WINDHURST (I may be mis-remembering the adjective) on Jazzology. Windhurst's work behind Barbara Lea is passionate and sensitive, and his playing on the Condon "Dr. Jazz" broadcasts -- collected, reshuffled, and otherwise scrambled on the Storyville CDs -- is peerless. And the Jazz Nocturne broadcasts that pair him with Sidney Bechet -- he was only 19, as you know -- show him to be fearless. A great loss to jazz! Cheers to you for celebrating him . . . Michael Steinman

    ResponderEliminar
  2. Se ha publicado comercialmente algun dvd con los JAZZ PARTY de ART FORD?

    ResponderEliminar
  3. Mario, que yo sepa no hay una edición completa de las Jazz Party. Como mucho, alguna actuación concreta en algún DVD (o CD) de algún artista puntual.

    Sería una magnífica idea hacer un listado de todas las Jazz Party.

    Un abrazo,
    Agustín Pérez

    ResponderEliminar
  4. Michael:

    Yes, Windhurst was both REMARKABLE (as your fertile mind reminisced) and IMAGINATIVE (as Jazzology LP J-3 listed). :)

    A few days ago, I found a copy of the Jazzology reissue, for $40 plus outrageous shipping costs. Hopefully it will make its way into a CD reissue someday!

    A list of GREAT LPs not reissued on CD would be a huge but fascinating effort!

    Regards,
    Agustín Pérez

    ResponderEliminar