March 12, 1955—The drug-related death of alto
saxophonist Charlie Parker at age 34
did more than just highlight how many in the postwar jazz community were
victimized by substance abuse. It also cut short the life of an extraordinary
figure who, by rights, should have gone on influencing musicians of all kinds for at
least another generation.
Parker’s friend and patron, Nica de
Koenigswarter, discovered his body slumped over in an easy chair in front of
the TV set in her New York City home. What stunned me when I first heard about
it—and, I bet, anyone else with no firsthand knowledge of drugs—was that the
coroner had originally believed the deceased to be at least two decades older
than his real age.
One not surprised was biographer Stanley Crouch, who,
in profiling Parker decades after his death in Considering Genius: Writings on Jazz (2006), noted that his musical gifts were “laid low by his
inability to stop fatally polluting and tampering with the flesh and blood
source of his energy, with his own body.”
Crouch used another word, “velocity,” to describe
the life-altering events crammed into Parker’s life between ages 16 and 20. But
that term applies equally well to the creativity of the musician. “Bird” was a
most appropriate nickname for him, because of the manner in which his
imagination took flight.
I just spoke of my surprise over how rapidly his
body aged, but I am perhaps even more astounded by how quickly he matured in mastering
his instrument—from a teenager who was often laughed at or pitied as he first
fumbled around, to a musician who, a mere decade later, set the standard in
helping to pioneer the bebop movement. Cootie Williams of Duke Ellington's band once said, "Every instrument in the band tried to copy Charlie Parker, and in the history of jazz there had never been one man who influenced all the instruments."
Critic Gary Giddins may have summed up the towering
achievement of Parker’s life better than anyone in his anthology, Visions of Jazz: The First Century (1998): “Parker altered the rhythmic and
harmonic currents of music, and he produced a body of melodies—or more to the
point, a way of melodic thinking—that became closely identified with the idea
of jazz as a personal and intellectual modern music.”
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