Chico Hamilton, a subtle and creative drummer, will probably always be remembered for the series of quintets that he led during 1955-1965 and for his ability as a talent scout than for his fine drumming.
Hamilton first played drums while in high school with the many fine young players (including
Dexter Gordon,
Illinois Jacquet, and
Charles Mingus) who were in Los Angeles at the time. He made his recording debut with
Slim Gaillard, was house drummer at
Billy Berg's, toured with
Lionel Hampton, and served in the military (1942-1946). In 1946,
Hamilton worked briefly with
Jimmy Mundy,
Count Basie, and
Lester Young (recording with
Young). He toured as
Lena Horne's drummer (on and off during 1948-1955), and gained recognition for his work with the original
Gerry Mulligan piano-less quartet (1952-1953).
In 1955,
Hamilton put together his first quintet, a chamber jazz group with the reeds of
Buddy Collette, guitarist
Jim Hall, bassist
Carson Smith, and cellist
Fred Katz. One of the last important West Coast jazz bands,
the Chico Hamilton Quintet was immediately popular and appeared in a memorable sequence in 1958's Jazz on a Summer's Day and the Hollywood film The Sweet Smell of Success. The personnel changed over the next few years (with
Paul Horn and
Eric Dolphy heard on reeds, cellist Nate Gershman, guitarists
John Pisano and
Dennis Budimir, and several bassists passing through the group) but it retained its unusual sound. By 1961,
Charles Lloyd was on tenor and flute,
Gabor Szabo was the new guitarist, and soon the cello was dropped in favor of trombone (
Garnett Brown and later
George Bohanon), giving the group an advanced hard bop style.
In 1966,
Chico Hamilton started composing for commercials and the studios and he broke up his quintet. However, he continued leading various groups, playing music that ranged from the avant-garde to erratic fusion and advanced hard bop. Such up-and-coming musicians as
Larry Coryell (1966), Steve Potts (1967),
Arthur Blythe,
Steve Turre (on bass, surprisingly), and
Eric Person (who played in
Hamilton's '90s group Euphoria) were among the younger players he helped discover. In 1989,
Chico Hamilton had a recorded reunion with the original members of his 1955 quintet (with
Pisano in
Hall's place), and in the 1990s he made a number of records for Soul Note. He continued playing gigs and recording throughout the 2000s, releasing four albums in 2006 for the label Joyous Shout! in celebration of his 85th birthday.
Chico Hamilton died in Manhattan on November 25, 2013; he was 92 years old. His last album, The Inquiring Mind, recorded shortly before his passing, was released in early 2014. ~ Scott Yanow