Lucky Thompson the great tenor has left us.
by jazzcat on Aug.06, 2005, under Uncategorized

Lucky Thompson, a legendary tenor and soprano saxophonist who took his
place among the elite improvisers of jazz from the 1940's to the 1960's
and then quit music, roamed the country and ended up homeless or
hospitalized for more than a decade, died on Saturday in Seattle. He
was 81.
His death was confirmed by his son, Daryl Thompson; the cause was not
announced. Mr. Thompson was living in an assisted-care facility at the
Washington Center for Comprehensive Rehabilitation in Seattle.
Mr. Thompson connected the swing era to the more cerebral and complex
bebop style. His sophisticated, harmonically abstract approach to the
tenor saxophone built off that of Don Byas and Coleman Hawkins; he
played with beboppers, but resisted Charlie Parker's pervasive
influence. He also played the soprano saxophone authoritatively.
“Lucky had that same thing that Paul Gonsalves had, that melodic
smoothness,” one of his contemporaries, the saxophonist Johnny Griffin,
said in an interview. “He wasn't rough like Ben Webster, and he didn't
play in the Lester Young style. He was a beautiful balladeer. But he
played with all the modernists.”
Mr.
Thompson was born Eli Thompson in Columbia, S.C., on June 16, 1924, and
moved to Detroit with his family as a child. After graduating from high
school in 1942, he played with Erskine Hawkins's band, then called the
'Bama State Collegians; the next year he moved to New York as a member
of Lionel Hampton's big band.
After six months with Hampton, while still very young, he swiftly
ascended the ranks of hip. He played in Billy Eckstine's short-lived
big band, one of the first to play bebop, which also included Charlie
Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in
1944.
In 1945 he left Basie in Los Angeles, and in 1945 and 1946 he played
on, and probably created arrangements for, record dates for the
Exclusive label, including those by the black cowboy star and former
Ellington singer Herb Jeffries. When the Charlie Parker-Dizzy Gillespie
sextet came through Los Angeles, Mr. Thompson was hired by Gillespie as
a temporary replacement for Parker. Mr. Thompson was also on one of
Parker's most celebrated recording sessions, for Dial Records on March
28, 1946.
Fiercely intelligent, Mr. Thompson was outspoken in his feelings about
what he considered the unfair control of the jazz business by record
companies, music publishers and booking agents. Partly for these
reasons, he left the United States to live in Paris from 1957 to 1962,
making a number of recordings with groups including the pianist Martial
Solal. After returning to New York for a few years, he lived in
Lausanne, Switzerland, from late 1968 to 1970. He came back to New York
again, taught at Dartmouth in 1973 and 1974, then disappeared from the
Northeast, and soon from music entirely.
Friends say he lived for a time on Manitoulin Island in Ontario and in
Georgia before eventually moving west. By the early 90's he was in
Seattle, mostly living in the woods or in shelter offered by friends.
He did not own a saxophone. He walked long distances, and was reported
to have been in excellent, muscular shape.
He was hospitalized a number of times in 1994, and finally entered the Washington Center for Comprehensive Rehabilitation.
His skepticism about the jazz business may have kept him from a career
recording as a bandleader – “Tricotism,” from 1956, and “Lucky
Strikes,” from 1964, are among the few albums he made under his own
name – but he left behind a pile of imposing performances as a sideman.
Among them are recordings with Dinah Washington in 1945, Thelonious
Monk in 1952, Miles Davis in 1954 (the “Walkin' “ session, a watershed
in Davis's career), and Oscar Pettiford and Stan Kenton in 1956. His
final recordings were made in 1973.
In addition to his son, Daryl, of Stone Mountain, Ga., Mr. Thompson is
survived by a daughter, Jade Thompson-Fredericks of New Jersey; and two
grandchildren.
Part of Mr. Thompson's legend came from the fact that he was rarely
seen in public; at times it was hard for his old friends to find him.
But the drummer Kenny Washington remembered Mr. Thompson's showing up
when Mr. Washington was performing with Johnny Griffin's group at Jazz
Alley in Seattle in 1993. Mr. Thompson listened, conversed with the
musicians, and then departed on foot for the place where he was staying
– in a wooded spot in the Beacon Hill neighborhood, more than three
miles away.