Jon Hendricks
Jon Hendricks (September 16, 1921 – November 22, 2017) was an American jazz singer, lyricist, and composer renowned for pioneering the vocalese style, which involves crafting lyrics to pre-existing jazz instrumental solos.[1][2] Born in Newark, Ohio, as the thirteenth of seventeen children to a Methodist minister father, Hendricks grew up primarily in Toledo, where he began singing at age eight for family gatherings and later on local radio.[2][1] In the 1950s, he co-founded the vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross with Dave Lambert and Annie Ross, whose innovative arrangements and Hendricks' lyrics to classics like Count Basie's "Jumpin' at the Woodside" brought vocalese to prominence, earning critical acclaim and influencing subsequent jazz vocal groups.[2] Later in his career, Hendricks collaborated with The Manhattan Transfer on their 1985 album Vocalese, which secured seven Grammy Awards and revived interest in the form.[3] He also served as Distinguished Professor of Jazz Studies at the University of Toledo for sixteen years, directing the student ensemble Vocalstra and mentoring young vocalists in vocalese techniques.[4] Recognized as an NEA Jazz Master in 1993, Hendricks contributed to jazz education and performance into his later decades, including stints on the Kennedy Center Honors committee.[1][3]Early life
Upbringing and family background
Jon Hendricks was born John Carl Hendricks on September 16, 1921, in Newark, Ohio, as the ninth child and seventh son in a family of fifteen children headed by Reverend Willie Hendricks, a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and his wife.[5][6][7] The large family frequently relocated across Ohio and nearby areas due to Reverend Hendricks' pastoral assignments, which required seeking new congregations and converts, instilling in young Jon adaptability and resilience amid economic hardships typical of working-class Black families in the early 20th century.[8][9] By age four, the family had settled in Toledo, Ohio, where Reverend Hendricks took a permanent post at a local AME church, providing relative stability during Hendricks' formative years.[4][10] His mother's role leading the church choir exposed the household to gospel music and communal singing traditions, though the emphasis on religious discipline and frequent sibling interactions shaped a competitive yet supportive environment.[11] This upbringing in a devout, itinerant ministerial family contrasted with the secular jazz world Hendricks later pioneered, reflecting a transition from sacred vocal roots to innovative improvisation.[12]Initial musical development
Hendricks began his musical journey in the church, singing from age seven alongside his mother, Willie Mae Hendricks, who led the choir and composed lyrics for spirituals at their family's African Methodist Episcopal congregation in Toledo, Ohio.[5][1] His father, Reverend Alexander Hendricks, a Methodist minister, emphasized verbal skills by having young Jon select biblical passages for sermons, fostering an early aptitude for language that later informed his lyrical style.[13] By age nine, during the Great Depression, Hendricks supplemented family income by performing gospel and improvised scat on street corners and at local venues, including a professional gig at Chateau La France nightclub earning $60 per night.[1][13] In his early teens, Hendricks received informal training from pianist Art Tatum, a Toledo neighbor and prodigy who lived five houses away and introduced him to advanced improvisation and bebop chord structures starting around age 11 in 1932.[13][5] The two collaborated on performances, including duo sets at Waiters and Bellmen's Club from age 14 in 1935, where Hendricks sang standards like "Mighty Like a Rose" and honed scat techniques by emulating Tatum's harmonic complexity.[13][6] At age 15 in 1936, Tatum recommended him for the Swing Buddies quartet, leading to a radio debut on WSPD and earnings of $107 to $125 weekly, which supported his family amid economic hardship.[1][5] Exposure to jazz pioneers accelerated his development, as traveling ensembles like those of Count Basie and Louis Armstrong lodged at the Hendricks home and performed at local clubs, allowing direct observation and interaction.[1][13] A pivotal encounter occurred in Toledo's Civic Auditorium, where Hendricks, then a teenager, witnessed Charlie Parker and was invited onstage to scat over "The Song Is You," receiving encouragement from Parker to pursue jazz professionally in New York—advice he initially deferred due to family obligations.[5][6] These experiences blended gospel roots with emerging bebop, laying the groundwork for his innovative vocal approach without formal conservatory training.[13]Military service
World War II experiences
Hendricks enlisted in the United States Army following a brief period singing professionally in Detroit after completing high school. He served overseas during World War II, participating in the Allied D-Day landings at Normandy, France, on June 6, 1944.[14][2] As an African American soldier, age 22 at the time of the invasion, Hendricks was assigned to a segregated unit, reflecting the U.S. military's policy of racial separation until Executive Order 9981 in 1948. Black troops comprised about 10% of the Army's strength and were often relegated to support roles, though some, including barrage balloon and quartermaster units, supported the Normandy assault amid heavy combat. His wartime experiences, including exposure to frontline dangers during the European campaign, influenced his later reflections on resilience and injustice, though specific personal accounts of trauma or discrimination from officers remain noted primarily in retrospective interviews.[15][1]Professional career
Development of vocalese
Hendricks began experimenting with writing lyrics to jazz instrumental solos in the early 1950s as a means to memorize complex scat lines, initially influenced by his exposure to bebop and figures like Art Tatum.[9] This practice evolved into vocalese, a style involving the composition of original lyrics fitted precisely to the melodic contours of recorded solos, allowing singers to reinterpret improvisation vocally.[1] Although Eddie Jefferson and King Pleasure had introduced the technique earlier—Jefferson penning lyrics for James Moody's 1949 solo on "I'm in the Mood for Love," popularized by Pleasure in 1952—Hendricks expanded its scope by applying it systematically to big-band arrangements.[12][9] A pivotal early effort came in 1955 when Hendricks, collaborating with arranger Dave Lambert, recorded lyrics for "Four Brothers," based on Woody Herman's 1947 sax section feature, marking one of his initial forays into multi-voiced vocal simulation of ensemble parts.[12] This work demonstrated his innovation in layering voices to mimic horns and rhythm sections, foreshadowing fuller realizations. By 1957, partnering with Lambert and singer Annie Ross to form Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, he refined vocalese through dense, contrapuntal arrangements that replicated entire big bands using multitracked vocals—a technical advancement enabled by studio overdubbing.[1] The trio's 1958 debut album, Sing a Song of Basie, showcased Hendricks' lyrics on eight Count Basie instrumentals, including "Every Day I Have the Blues" and "One O'Clock Jump," where he crafted narrative verses that adhered note-for-note to solos by Lester Young and others while evoking the band's swing dynamics.[1][12] This release elevated vocalese from niche experimentation to a viable jazz subgenre, with Hendricks authoring most texts and scat sections to preserve improvisational energy.[9] Subsequent trio efforts, such as adaptations of Duke Ellington and Horace Silver works, further developed the form's harmonic complexity and rhythmic fidelity, influencing later vocal groups and soloists.[12] Hendricks' approach emphasized causal fidelity to source recordings, prioritizing empirical transcription over loose paraphrase to maintain jazz's improvisatory essence.[1]Lambert, Hendricks & Ross
Lambert, Hendricks & Ross was a vocal jazz trio formed in 1957 by Dave Lambert, Jon Hendricks, and Annie Ross, who specialized in vocalese—a technique of crafting lyrics for pre-recorded jazz instrumentals and mimicking brass and rhythm sections with voices.[16] [17] The group built on prior collaborations between Lambert and Hendricks, including their 1955 recordings of vocalese tracks like "Four Brothers" and "Cloudburst" for Decca Records.[18] Their debut album, Sing a Song of Basie (1957), featured Hendricks' lyrics applied to Count Basie Orchestra instrumentals such as "One O'Clock Jump" and "Jumpin' at the Woodside," accompanied by a small combo, and earned a Grammy nomination.[19] Follow-up releases included The Hottest New Group in Jazz (1960) on Columbia Records, which showcased their harmonic arrangements and scat-inspired phrasing, and High Flying (1961), winner of the Grammy Award for Best Performance by a Vocal Group.[2] [20] Additional albums like Sing Ellington (1960) extended their approach to Duke Ellington's repertoire, with Hendricks handling most lyric-writing duties.[21] The trio's live performances, often featuring up to a dozen voices simulating big-band sections, earned them DownBeat magazine's poll for Best Vocal Group and the nickname "the hottest new group in jazz."[20] [22] Ross departed in 1962 due to health issues, replaced by Yolande Bavan; the renamed Lambert, Hendricks & Bavan recorded three live albums before disbanding in 1964, after which Lambert's death in a 1966 car crash precluded reunions.[23] Hendricks' contributions to the group's vocalese innovations influenced subsequent jazz vocal ensembles by demonstrating scalable, instrument-mimicking arrangements without traditional instrumentation.[24]Solo recordings and performances
Following the death of Dave Lambert in 1966 and the earlier departure of Annie Ross, Jon Hendricks focused on solo endeavors, releasing albums under his own name that emphasized his vocalese innovations and scat singing over jazz standards and originals. His early solo output included the live album Recorded in Person at the Trident (Smash, 1965), captured during performances at a Sausalito restaurant and featuring vocal adaptations of tunes like Herbie Hancock's "Watermelon Man" and Mongo Santamaría's "Yeh Yeh" with Hendricks' lyrics.[25] This was followed by studio efforts such as Times of Love (Philips, 1972), which showcased orchestral ballads delivered with introspective phrasing.[25] Later solo recordings highlighted Hendricks' collaborations with select musicians while maintaining his leadership, including Tell Me the Truth (RCA Victor, 1969; reissued Arista, 1975), a studio set blending scat, originals, and social commentary on tracks like the title song addressing institutional hypocrisy.[25] The 1985 Denon album Freddie Freeloader (also released as Jon Hendricks and Friends, 1990) featured vocalese treatments of Miles Davis tunes, with Hendricks scatting the iconic trumpet solo on the title track.[25] By the 1990s, live albums dominated, such as Boppin' at the Blue Note (Telarc, 1990) and its expanded Live! edition (Telarc, 1995), documenting high-energy club sets with improvisational flair; Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival (Monterey Jazz Festival Records, 1993), preserving a festival appearance; and the reflective studio closer Love (Telarc, 2000). Hendricks' solo performances spanned clubs, festivals, and television, often incorporating family members or guests but centered on his commanding stage presence and lyrical improvisations. Notable examples include a 1968 set at Club 43 in Manchester, England, released posthumously as Live at Club 43 and featuring unaccompanied vocal explorations; appearances at the North Sea Jazz Festival (1982) and Lugano Estival Jazz (1986), where he delivered swinging renditions of Basie and Ellington repertoire; and a 1997 Late Night with Conan O'Brien spot with Wynton Marsalis, performing "Gimme That Wine" to highlight trumpet-vocal interplay.[26] These outings underscored his endurance, with sets routinely extending solos into narrative vocalese, as observed in archival footage from Sweet Basil (1980).[27]Teaching and educational roles
In the early 1970s, Hendricks held teaching positions at California State University, Sonoma, and the University of California, Berkeley, where he instructed courses in jazz history and performance.[2][10] During this period, he also contributed as a jazz critic for the San Francisco Chronicle, providing analytical commentary that complemented his classroom work on jazz improvisation and vocal techniques.[28][2] In 2000, Hendricks returned to his hometown and joined The University of Toledo as Distinguished Professor of Jazz Studies, a role he maintained for 16 years until his retirement shortly before his death in 2017.[4][29] At Toledo, he focused on mentoring students in vocalese, scat singing, and jazz ensemble performance, drawing on his pioneering experience to emphasize analytical approaches to improvisation and lyrical adaptation of instrumental solos.[30] The university recognized his contributions with an honorary Doctorate of the Performing Arts.[30] Hendricks' pedagogical style integrated practical performance with theoretical critique, fostering a deep understanding of jazz's structural elements among students, as evidenced by his reputation for dissecting complex solos in both academic and workshop settings.[2][1]Recognition and critical reception
Awards and honors
Hendricks received the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Fellowship in 1993, recognizing his lifetime contributions to jazz vocal innovation.[1] In 1986, he won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Male, for his vocalese adaptation of "Another Night in Tunisia" on The Manhattan Transfer's album Vocalese, to which he supplied lyrics for much of the content and performed on several tracks.[31] The Vocalese project, blending Hendricks' scatting lyrics with the group's harmonies, earned the album a total of five Grammy Awards, including categories for best jazz vocal performance by a group and best arrangement.[32] Earlier, as a member of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, the trio's 1961 album High Flying secured a Grammy Award for Best Performance by a Vocal Group.[33] His 1985 television documentary A Good Night's Sleep: The Life and Times of Jon Hendricks, which explored his career and vocalese technique, received an Emmy Award, a Peabody Award, and an Iris Award for excellence in documentary filmmaking.[32] In 2004, on the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landings, Hendricks was awarded the French Legion of Honor for his service as a U.S. Army infantryman during World War II's Normandy invasion.[28]Achievements and innovations
Hendricks pioneered the jazz vocal technique known as vocalese, which entails crafting original lyrics to match the precise phrasing and improvisation of instrumental solos by artists such as Clifford Brown and Miles Davis, thereby transforming scat singing into a narrative-driven art form.[1] This innovation, building on earlier efforts by figures like Eddie Jefferson, elevated vocal improvisation by demanding meticulous transcription of solos and rhythmic precision in lyric delivery, effectively bridging instrumental and vocal jazz traditions.[34] [33] Through his foundational role in Lambert, Hendricks & Ross starting in 1957, he demonstrated vocalese's scalability by simulating full big-band instrumentation—horns, bass, drums—with layered voices, as heard in reharmonized versions of Count Basie arrangements on albums like Sing Me a Swinging Song (1959).[7] This approach not only preserved complex jazz solos in accessible lyrical form but also expanded the genre's expressive range, influencing subsequent vocal groups by prioritizing technical lyricism over mere imitation.[35] A landmark achievement came in 1985 with his lyrical contributions to The Manhattan Transfer's album Vocalese, which applied the style to an entire project, earning Grammy recognition for its fusion of historical solos with contemporary vocals and yielding commercial success in markets like Japan.[3] Hendricks' rapid-fire scat delivery and witty, improvisational phrasing further innovated jazz vocals, enabling performers to convey instrumental nuance at tempos exceeding 300 beats per minute, as exemplified in tracks like his adaptation of "Moanin'."[9] His method shifted the lyricist's role toward technical exactitude, making vocalese one of jazz's most demanding subgenres and inspiring educators to teach it as a core skill in vocal jazz pedagogy.[13]Criticisms and debates
Hendricks faced occasional critiques from jazz purists who viewed vocalese practitioners like himself as "frustrated instrumentalists" emulating horn solos rather than innovating vocally. In a 1960s interview, he dismissed such characterizations as insensitive, arguing they overlooked the distinct artistry of lyrical adaptation and vocal phrasing.[36] Biographical analyses have highlighted professional disputes over authorship and royalties in Hendricks' career. He was accused of claiming full writing credits for tracks where he added lyrics to existing instrumentals by others, resulting in conflicts such as a 1950s confrontation with trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, who allegedly pursued him armed over disputed credits on "Centerpiece."[37] Such practices extended to royalty collection through his publishing entity, Hendricks Music Inc., which some contemporaries regarded as ethically questionable for profiting from unaltered core compositions.[8] The Lambert, Hendricks & Ross trio's format drew debate regarding its long-term viability. While pioneering in the late 1950s, the group's reliance on Hendricks' verbal transmission of complex arrangements—stemming from his illiteracy in standard notation—complicated onboarding replacements after Annie Ross's 1962 departure and Dave Lambert's 1966 death. Hendricks' reported aversion to formal rehearsals further strained ensemble cohesion, contributing to the original configuration's dissolution by 1964 and subsequent iterations' diminished impact.[37] Vocalese as a style has sparked broader discussion on its place in jazz authenticity. Proponents praise its harmonic precision and narrative depth, yet detractors argue it prioritizes transcribed imitation over spontaneous improvisation, potentially subordinating vocal expression to instrumental mimicry—a tension Hendricks navigated by emphasizing lyrics' poetic and social commentary roles.[38]Later years and death
Continued contributions
In 2000, Hendricks was appointed Distinguished Professor of Jazz Studies at the University of Toledo, his hometown institution, where he taught jazz singing and vocalese techniques until 2015.[6][9] There, he directed the Vocalstra ensemble, comprising university students and local vocalists, which specialized in vocalese arrangements and conducted international tours from 2000 to 2015.[6][39] Hendricks sustained his lyric-writing practice into advanced age, completing vocalese texts for the 1957 Miles Davis-Gil Evans album Miles Ahead in 2017, with recordings underway at the time of his death.[6] In 2015, aged 94, he recorded lyrics adapted to Thelonious Monk compositions.[24] He reunited with Annie Ross, his former Lambert, Hendricks & Ross partner, in 2015 for joint recordings and a performance at Birdland in New York.[6] Hendricks also formed the vocal ensemble The Royal Bopsters and continued live appearances, including at Ronnie Scott's in London, often integrating informal teaching by allowing students to observe and learn from his improvisational approach.[24][9] His final public performance occurred on September 16, 2016, during a 95th birthday celebration at the Iridium jazz club in New York.[6]Death
Jon Hendricks died on November 22, 2017, in a New York City hospital at the age of 96.[2][40] His daughter, Aria Hendricks, confirmed the death to The New York Times.[2] The cause was not disclosed publicly.[35] Hendricks had experienced declining health in prior years, including a stroke in 1998 that limited his performing ability, though he continued occasional appearances into his later decades.[3]Discography and media
Albums as leader
Jon Hendricks recorded a series of albums as leader, primarily emphasizing his pioneering vocalese technique, scat improvisation, and lyrical adaptations of jazz standards and originals. These works, spanning from the late 1950s to the 1990s, highlight his solo vocal prowess outside group collaborations like Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, often backed by small combos or big bands.[41] His debut leader effort, A Good Git-Together (Columbia, 1959), featured arrangements of tunes like "Moanin'" and "All the Things You Are," with Hendricks providing improvised lyrics over instrumental foundations.[42] Evolution of the Blues (Columbia, 1960) delved into blues structures, tracing their development through vocal renditions. This was followed by Fast Livin' Blues (Columbia, 1961), a high-energy set incorporating bebop influences and original compositions. In 1963, Hendricks issued Salud! João Gilberto, Originator of the Bossa Nova (Reprise), adapting bossa nova rhythms with English lyrics to Gilberto's melodies, reflecting his interest in international jazz fusions. After a hiatus, Tell Me the Truth (Arista, 1975) marked a return, blending gospel-tinged vocals with jazz-funk elements on tracks like the title cut.[43] Later solo outings included Freddie Freeloader (Denon, 1990), a Miles Davis tribute album with vocalese overlays on modal jazz staples, earning praise for its inventive wordplay.[44] Boppin' at the Blue Note (Blue Note, 1995) captured live performances from 1962, showcasing raw scat energy on bebop standards like "Ornithology."[45]| Year | Title | Label | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1959 | A Good Git-Together | Columbia | Studio[42] |
| 1960 | Evolution of the Blues | Columbia | Studio |
| 1961 | Fast Livin' Blues | Columbia | Studio |
| 1963 | Salud! João Gilberto, Originator of the Bossa Nova | Reprise | Studio |
| 1975 | Tell Me the Truth | Arista | Studio[43] |
| 1990 | Freddie Freeloader | Denon | Studio[44] |
| 1995 | Boppin' at the Blue Note | Blue Note | Live[45] |