| In
Memoriam
1908-2002
By Rick Mattingly
"Lionel Hampton inspired me to play the
vibraphone," said Milt Jackson, the innovative vibraphonist
of the Modern Jazz Quartet. "He was the first one of note
to play it, but more important, I liked how dynamic he was. And
the way he blended with groups and the way he played in front of
a band were inspirational."
Although Lionel Hampton wasn't the first to
play the vibraphone -- that honor goes to Red Norvo -- "Hamp" is
generally credited as the one who brought vibes to the public's
attention through a combination of musicianship and showmanship. "I
always think of Hamp as the guy who really got us established," said
vibist Gary Burton in a 1999 Percussive Notes interview.
Hampton was born on April 20, 1908 in Louisville,
Kentucky. After his father was killed in World War I, Lionel and
his mother moved to Birmingham, Alabama, where Hampton first played
drums in a Holiness church. The Hamptons then moved north, and
Lionel played drums in a fife-and-drum band while attending Holy
Rosary Academy in Kenosha, Wisconsin, which was a school for black
and Native American children. Later, in Chicago, Lionel played
drums in the Chicago Defender Newspaper Boys Band, which is where
he began playing xylophone and marimba. "I worked hard learning
harmony and theory when I was growing up in Chicago in the 1920s," Hampton
once recalled in an interview.
He began his professional career as a drummer,
going on the road with such bandleaders as Detroit Shannon and
Les Hite before settling in Los Angeles in 1927, where he worked
with Curtis Mosby's Blues Blowers and Paul Howard's Quality Serenaders,
with whom he recorded in 1929 as a drummer, singer and pianist.
Hampton then played drums in the house band at Frank Sebastian's
Cotton Club, which was led at different times by Les Hite, Louis
Armstrong and Buck Clayton.
During a 1930 recording session with Armstrong,
Hampton first played vibraphone. "There was a set of vibes
in the corner," Hampton recalled. "Louis said, 'Do you
know how to play it?' I said, 'Yeah, I can play it.' It had the
same keyboard as the xylophone, and I was familiar with that." Lionel
proceeded to play vibes behind Armstrong on the tune "Memories
of You." Armstrong encouraged Hampton to pursue vibes playing.
Hampton took Armstrong's advice and soon became
a well-known vibraphonist, particularly through his work at the
Paradise Club in Los Angeles. One night, clarinetist Benny Goodman,
pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Gene Krupa heard Hampton's band
at the Paradise and invited Hampton to record with them. Subsequently,
Hampton joined the Benny Goodman Orchestra.
"Working with Benny was important for me
and for black musicians in general," Hampton once said. "Black
and white players hadn't appeared together in public before Teddy
Wilson and I began working with B.G. I feel honored to have been
a part of that dramatic change."
A year later, RCA Victor invited Hampton to
record under his own name, and he hired such musicians for his
sessions as Benny Carter, Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman Hawkins, Ben
Webster and Charlie Christian. In 1940, Hampton assembled his own
big band, whose members included at various times Shadow Wilson,
Dexter Gordon, Joe Newman, Earl Bostic, Milt Buckner, Illinois
Jacquet, Arnett Cobb, Cat Anderson, Johnny Griffin, Charles Mingus,
Wes Montgomery, Benny Powell, and the singers Dinah Washington,
Joe Williams and Betty Carter. In 1942 the band scored a hit with
their recording of Hampton's composition "Flying Home." Hampton
is credited as the first big band leader to use organ and electric
bass in his group.
Hampton continued leading a band for the next
several decades. His bands had the distinction of being respected
by jazz musicians as well as being popular with the public at large.
Hampton's riff-based music even had some success on rock stations
in the early 1950s and he appeared in a movie with rock 'n' roll
disc jockey Alan Freed.
Many musicians tell stories about how Hampton
encouraged them. "I saw Hampton when I was about 12 years
old," Gary Burton remembered. "He was playing at the
Evansville (Indiana) Armory for a dance. Since I couldn't go in
the evening when they would be serving alcohol, my father took
me down there in the afternoon, thinking we might run into the
band. Sure enough, they were doing a soundcheck and setup. My father
told Hamp that I played the vibraphone, and Hamp was really gracious.
He asked me to play, so I played a standard tune or blues in F
or whatever, and Hamp had the band join in and play with me."
Hampton also became involved with politics and
community activities. He underwrote low-income housing in Harlem
(the Gladys Hampton House, named for his wife) and Newark, New
Jersey. He also campaigned for a variety of Republicans including
Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George Bush.
In 1984, Hampton was elected to the PAS Hall
of Fame. The following year, the University of Idaho established
the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival and in 1987 the same university
established the Lionel Hampton School of Music, which was intended
to house Hampton's scores, recordings and memorabilia. But much
of that material was lost when a fire destroyed Hampton's New York
apartment in 1997.
By 1995, Hampton was confined to a wheelchair
as the result of two strokes, but he continued to perform, often
playing with just a single mallet. Ludwig/Musser marketing manager
Jim Catalano recalls seeing Hampton in 2001 at the Lionel Hampton
Jazz Festival in Moscow, Idaho. "What an event," Catalano
said. "Several thousand kids
participate and they bring in the top jazz artists from around the world to
perform. Even at the age of 93, Lionel was able to play his famous
'Midnight Sun' along with his jazz orchestra."
In 1997, President Bill Clinton presented Hampton
with the National Medal of Arts. In 2001, Musser introduced a new
vibraphone as a tribute to Hampton: a Musser Century Vibe with
special gold bars and resonators on a furniture-quality wooden
frame. In 2002, Hampton was honored at the Kentucky Music Hall
of Fame ceremony with the Governor's Lifetime Achievement Award.
"Playing is my way of thinking, talking,
communicating," Hampton told Modern Drummer magazine writer
Burt Korall in 1988. "I've always been crazy about playing.
Every day I look forward to getting with my instruments, trying
new things. Playing gives me as much good feeling now as it did
when I was a bitty kid. I think I love it more as I get older because
I keep getting better on drums, vibes and piano."
Lionel Hampton died of heart failure on
August 31, 2002. His wife, Gladys, died in 1971, and he had no
children.
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