Hubbard in the hood

He
lifted his trumpet to his
lips and squashed a high G
like it was a bug.
Freddie
Hubbard hit the stage
at the very last
moment one could hit it and
still be considered on time.
He picked up his horn,
turned to his assembled
quintet and grunted
''Thermo,'' the title of one
of his better compositions.
''We'll see what happens,''
he muttered, scowling
fiercely.
And they
were off.
The whole
sick crew was up there: Carl
Burnett, the fiery ex-Horace
Silver drummer; John B.
Williams, bassist from
Arsenio Hall's posse; John
Beasley, a bright young
pianist about town;
saxophonist Bob Shepherd,
formerly with Miles Davis,
and trombonist Phil Ranelin,
the Indianapolis flash.
Hubbard lifted his trumpet
to his lips in his
characteristic way, as
though he were aiming a cue
stick, a nd squashed a high G
like it was a bug. The
instrument cursed and
snarled through 120 fast
paced measures of his own
complex work, and before you
knew it, you were having
fun. It's true
some nubile young brassmen
have wafted through town
recently: Phil Harper and
Marlon Jordan and Roy
Hargrove were here, and so
was Wynton Marsalis. But
Hubbard need fear no evil.
Because
he demonstrated once again
that 1997 Thursday at
Catalina's that he has
something that comes
straight from the guy who
started it all on jazz
trumpet, Louis Armstrong: A
sublime confidence and a
unique kind of bittersweet
joy.
''Dear
John'' was next, a piece
Hubbard wrote for Coltrane,
and on this one Williams and
Burnett began to really jell
as Hubbard played flugel,
building in a flash the most
intricate phrases out of the
tiniest scraps. Again, he
wrestled his solo to the
ground, pounding it home
with a string of one beat
notes before Shepherd, on
soprano, turned in a chorus
that was a model of
gentlemanly invention,
succeeded by Beasley and
Williams, who did the
same.
' 'To Her
Ladyship'' was a Hubbard
ballad with a Duke Ellington
feel, where Shepherd waxed
fluent on flute and Ranelin
warm on trombone while
Hubbard spread out his short
flugel phrases into a fine,
long arching structure.
For
the finale, ''Without
a Song,'' Billy Childs came
up from ringside to take
over the piano. Like
Hubbard, Shepherd, and
Beasley, Childs has a new
album out, and Williams is
preparing one. But these are
the fast guys from the
studios, and they're always
prepared for a number like
this: Full tilt, no holds
barred, and make it work.
Thick with
invention, it gave the young
and stylish crowd a chance
to see what happens at a
Freddie Hubbard opening, all
right: Jazz happens.
Then
came a bittersweet birthday
party...

The
birthday boy in his suit and
hat.
Freddie
Hubbard slipped onstage
midway through Hub in the
Hood, a musical program in
his honor, looking rather
blithe in what he called his
CIA suit. It was a gray
chalk stripe double-breasted
model that showed nary a
bulge in his 60-year-old
figure.
He sat
down at the piano and laid
in the changes for
"Birdlike," his
equally blithe composition.
It was a fast-moving bit of
bebop that challenged
saxophonist George Harper
Jr., not to mention
Hubbard's old Indianapolis
high school buddy, Phil
Ranelin, the trombonist who
was leading the band.
His blithe
spirits were all the more
remarkable considering what
had happened to him: Freddie
Hubbard lost his chops. It
happened a couple of years
ago after an operation to
remove a growth that came
from years of brilliant and
hard driving trumpet playing
with the heaviest of the
jazz heavies, from Art Blakey and John Coltrane to
Sonny Rollins and Wayne
Shorter, not to mention his
many first rank combos.
Now
down in the hood,
even the affluent Leimert
Park neighborhood where this
down home tribute was being
held, they're liable to take
away your cat papers if you
ain't got your chops.
But where
Freddie Hubbard is
concerned, that would be
unthinkable, as the audience
that nearly filled the
Vision Theater at 43rd and
Crenshaw made clear with
their numerous warm-hearted
ovations, outpourings that
pretty much amounted to a
call for the return of the
prodigal.
"We
want to hook up Freddie
Hubbard with people like
Horace Tapscott, who stayed
deep in the community and
did a lot," said Dalili,
the founder of Build
Crenshaw Arts, the group
that organized the program.
Local avant garde pianist
Tapscott had brought his
quintet of instrumentalists
to accompany the 12 member
Voices of Ugmaa, which
stands for Under God
Musicians and Artists in
Ascension, a bright and
mighty group he helped
found.
"Why don't you listen," they
chanted. "Listen, listen,
listen!" Two trap drummers,
Donald Dean and Bill
Madison, provided rhythmic
urgency as the singers, led
by the electrifying vocalist
Dwight Tribble, made their
way through stirring
Afro-centric material
"written by those who lived
in the neighborhood and died
in the neighborhood," as the
gaunt Tapscott put it.
"Prince
of Africa,
won't you stay with me,"
cried Tribble, in a keening
Islamic warble.
Ranelin and his group stayed
in this zone with their
first number, an original
composition Ranelin called
"Tears in Elmina," a tribute
to the newly enslaved
Africans who were confined
there hundreds of years ago.
His trombone work was clear,
sorrowful and beckoning.
Cali fornia
Rep. Maxine Waters had read
the City Council's
resolution designating him a
cultural ambassador for the
city of Los Angeles to the
world audience and
designating April 7, his
birthday, as Freddie Hubbard
Day.
Hubbard seemed delighted by
this as he was by numerous
gifts bestowed on him by
admirers from the
neighborhood, including a
large water color of him
from John Outterbridge in
Watts and a vivid jacket
from revered local tailor
John Farris.
The trumpeter, who has been
woodshedding for more than a
year and is slowly getting
his chops back, ducked out
of the CIA suit and donned
the new jacket, which fit
beautifully.
"I
came here in 1961 with Sonny
Rollins
and played Marla's before it
was Marla's," he said, as
Marla Gibbs, who was in the
audience, nodded at the
reference to her club on
Martin Luther King Drive.
"I may not make as much
money as I would in
Hollywood or wherever," he
added gruffly, "but I'm
gonna come back and be with
the people. Tonight will
encourage me to come back in
the neighborhood -- and
bring some of the cats."
And with that, Ranelin
launched into Hubbard's
classic jazz waltz, "Up
Jumped Spring," played by
old Hubbard bandmates like
Carl Burnett, drums, and
Henry Franklin, bass, with
perhaps a little more heart
than usual.
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