Bud Freeman
When Bud
Freeman first matured, his was the only strong alternative approach
on the tenor to the harder-toned style of Coleman Hawkins and he
was an inspiration for Lester Young. Freeman, one of the top tenors
of the 1930s, was also one of the few saxophonists (along with the
slightly later Eddie Miller) to be accepted in the Dixieland world
and his oddly angular but consistently swinging solos were an asset
to a countless number of hot sessions. Freeman, excited (as were
the other members of the Austin High School Gang in Chicago) by the
music of the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, took up the C-melody sax in
1923, switching to tenor two years later. It took him time to
develop his playing, which was still pretty primitive in 1927 when
he made his recording debut with the McKenzie-Condon Chicagoans.
Freeman moved to New York later that year and worked with Red
Nichols'' Five Pennies, Roger Wolfe Kahn, Ben Pollack, Joe Venuti,
Gene Kardos and others. He was starred on Eddie Condon''s memorable
1933 recording "The Eel." After stints with Joe Haymes and Ray
Noble, Freeman was a star with Tommy Dorsey''s Orchestra and
Clambake Seven (1936-38) before having a short unhappy stint with
Benny Goodman (1938). He led his short-lived but legendary Summe
Cum Laude Orchestra (1939-40) which was actually an octet, spent
two years in the military and then from 1945 on alternated between
being a bandleader and working with Eddie Condon''s freewheeling
Chicago jazz groups.
Freeman travelled the world, made scores of fine recordings and
stuck to the same basic style that he had developed by the
mid-''30s (untouched by a brief period spent studying with Lennie
Tristano). Bud Freeman was with the World''s Greatest Jazz Band
(1968-71), lived in London in the late ''70s and ended up back
where he started, in Chicago. He was active into his 80s and a
strong sampling of his recordings are currently available on CD. ~
Scott Yanow, All Music
Guide
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