Harry "The Bear" Babasin

Harry Babasin was one of the
most creative and innovative bassists of all time. His musical
contributions include the
style of jazz known as the Bossa Nova, being the first bassist
to play pizzicato jazz cello in 1947, and being one of the
only bassists of his time to lead his own group, Harry Babasin
and the Jazzpickers. He was also a highly regarded
record producer of his own short-lived jazz label called Nocturne
Records. Harry was born on March 19, 1921 in
Dallas, Texas, the son of an Armenian immigrant dentist and a
Texas school teacher. His mother taught music
and Harry showed an immediate affinity to all things musical,
studying many different instruments before focusing
on the bass. He went to North Texas State University and contributed
to that school's excellent reputation
for jazz, along with such players as Herb Ellis, Jimmy Giuffre,
Gene Roland and Tommy Reeves.
(Harry
with Jimmy Giuffre, in The Bill Ware Orchestra, 1941)
In 1942, he and Herb Ellis
went to see the Charlie Fisk Orchestra, and, upon hearing the
rhythm section he had, boldly
told Fisk they could outplay the guys he had playing. So Charlie
gave them a shot, and, of course, they got the gig. He
left school to join the band, starting Harry off on his road days,
touring the country extensively over the next five years
with a number of different groups: Jimmy Joy, Bob Strong, Billie
Rogers, Gene Krupa, Charlie Barnet, Boyd Raeburn,
Benny Goodman, Woody Herman, Frank DeVol, Jerry Gray, and many
others. In these groups he met, and played
with, some of the finest names in jazz history. A recording of
the Boyd Raeburn Orchestra has been released on a CD
called "Boyd Meets Stravinsky" on Savoy Jazz, SV-0185,
where Harry plays on six of the tracks.
(Harry with The Boyd Raeburn Orchestra, 1946)
While playing with the Charlie
Barnet Orchestra in 1945, Harry moved to Los Angeles. There, he
joined the Benny Goodman Orchestra
and made many recordings with that group. A couple of those tracks
appear on a CD called "Slipped Disc, 1945-1946" on Columbia
Jazz
Masterpieces, CK 44292. Shortly after that, he appeared in a motion
picture starring Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo called "A Song
Is Born",
for The Goldwyn Studios. The movie was a showcase of jazz aristocracy,
featuring Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Lionel Hampton,
Charlie Barnet, Mel Powell, Tommy Dorsey, Louis Bellson, Al Hendrickson,
and, of course, Harry. This was an extremely significant time
for him.
(Harry in the movie, "A Song Is Born", 1947)
On that movie set, he met
a Brazilian guitarist who was an extra in the film. His name was
Laurindo Almeida. They hit it off and started to jam with
a couple of friends, drummer Roy Harte and saxophonist Bud Shank.
Harry's idea was to see what would happen if you blended modern
jazz
with traditional Brazilian "baiao" rhythms. In 1954,
they recorded two ten inch LPs that are the true basis for the
style known as the Bossa Nova.
Both LPs were reviewed wonderfully in Downbeat magazine, receiving
five stars, and saying, "The blending of the two strains
in a flowing,
complementary interplay provides the unique flavor that these
two LPs have added to recorded modern jazz." Both have been
remastered and
combined onto one CD called "Brazilliance - Vol. 1"
on World Pacific, CDP 7 96339 2. Although most people credit Getz
and Jobim with
it's birth, the Bossa Nova was created by this group six years
before it resurfaced and became popular. Unfortunately,
Harry was way ahead of his time and is still almost completely
unrecognized for this achievement.
(The
Laurindo Almeida Quartet, 1953)
Also, on that movie set, Harry
started what I believe to be his most significant contribution
to jazz: his development of the pizzicato jazz cello.
When touring with big bands, he found the bass was such a low
register, the audience had a hard time fully appreciating what
he was trying to say on
his instrument. So, while passing time on the set, he picked up
a cello that was lying around and started playing it. What he
ended up doing was tuning it in
fourths and playing it in the actual role of the bass - holding
down the bottom most of the time - while allowing his soloing
to be heard in a more audible range.
The first-ever jazz cello tracks were recorded on December 3,
1947 with the Dodo Marmarosa Trio. They have been remastered and
included in the CD,
"Up in Dodo's Room", on Jazz Classics, CD-JZCL-6008.
From there, he decided to add a bass, freeing up the cello to
play as a full-time melodic instrument.
He recorded an LP with Pacific Jazz as the Harry Babasin Trio,
one with Discovery as the Harry Babasin Quartet, and a very unique
and unusual duet cello
session with Oscar Pettiford that released on Imperial Records
in 1952. After the Pettiford sessions, Harry began experimenting
with different
instrumental combinations "...that worked well with the cello
sound in the contrapunctal style." He then recorded a ten
inch LP on his own label,
Nocturne Records, as the Harry Babasin Quintet, adding vibes for
the first time.
(Harry
with Oscar Pettiford playing duet cellos, 1952)
At this time, I must also
mention his association with drummer Roy Harte. Harry had met
Roy on the road in New York in 1944. They remet on the
West Coast and played frequently with everyone you can think of.
In 1952, they got together with a few of their friends (Bud Shank,
Marty Paich,
Bob Enevoldson, Howard Roberts, Herbie Harper, et al.) and decided
to make records. They weren't getting the responses they wanted
from the big
record companies (where have we heard that one before?) and thought
they might as well start doing it themselves. So, Harry and Roy
started
Nocturne Records. They produced ten 10" LPs, each being reviewed
with four- and five-star ratings in Downbeat, applauding the state-of-the-art
hi-fidelity recording quality and excellent musicianship. This
set of LPs was called the "Jazz in Hollywood" series
and has been remastered now,
re-released on CD by Fresh Sound Records in Barcelona, Spain,
and Fantasy Records. EMI in Japan has also released four of them
in their
original vinyl formats. After Nocturne,
Harry continued his passion for the cello. He started the group,
Harry Babasin and the Jazzpickers
and recorded and released three 12" LPs, two for Mercury/EmArcy
and one for Mode Records. One album added Buddy Collette on flute,
the other two featured Red Norvo and Terry Gibbs on vibes, respectively.
Again, these albums were highly regarded
in reviews, declaring the sound to be truely unique with a general
feeling "...of warm, swinging chamber music made for evening
ears."
The Mode album has been re-released by V.S.O.P. Records on vinyl
and is slated for CD release sometime in 1998.
Currently, there is no definite plan to remaster the other Jazzpickers
tapes, although there will be a release of a
complete compilation of those recordings on CD sometime in the
future.
(Harry with Shorty Rogers, Shelley Manne and Marty
Paich, 1952)
The sixties were unkind to
jazz musicians. With the advent of rock 'n roll, jazz was taken
off the popular charts and driven underground.
Harry continued to play with such names as Skinney Ennis and Charlie
Barnet, touring once with Bob Hope to entertain troups in Alaska,
but gigs became fewer and farther between. Harry and Roy tried
to resurrect Nocturne Records but it didn't garner the respect
of old.
In the seventies, they started the Los Angeles Theaseum, a non-profit
archive of West Coast jazz history, and acquired one of the first
Sony digital audio systems in Los Angeles. They transferred much
of their library of recordings to a digital format for preservation
purposes and even pressed a series of records under the Jazz Chronicles
name. One recording of note was made in 1952 at the
Tradewinds nightclub in Inglewood. It features Charlie Parker,
Chet Baker, Sonny Criss, Al Haig, Lawrance Marable, and Harry
in one of Bird's only West Coast appearances. It has since been
released on CD by Fresh Sound Records, FSR-CD 17.
(Harry with Charlie Parker and Chet Baker, 1952)
Harry made one last tour to
New York in 1985 with pianist John Banister, the man who gave
Harry his nickname, "The Bear",
for his imposing presence on stage as he "clawed" at
his bass. He was greatly encouraged by the reception they received
and was
looking forward to going back. But soon after he returned, he
was diagnosed with emphysema that eventually took his life in
1988.
Although not as publicly well known a name as Ray Brown or Charlie
Mingus or Oscar Pettiford, Harry Babasin is an
unsung hero of jazz bass. He had estimated he'd appeared on 1,500
records as a bassist alone, not counting his cello work.
He was always the staunch defender of the West Coast jazz movement
while he actually helped to define it. He was indeed
a musician's musician and he commanded the respect of those who
heard him and those he played with.
Own
the Nocturne collection!
[Jazz In Hollywood
- Roy Harte]
[Back home]
© Copyright 1954-2010 - N.R. Music Co.
Photos courtesy of The Harry Babasin Archives