His nickname was "Bebop." According to legend,
Joe Carroll was the man to call during the height of popularity for that style of jazz, especially if one was trying to locate an elusive genius such as
Charlie Parker. To some listeners, however,
Carroll is a pariah, not a messiah. He may be one of the earliest singers credited with recording jazz vocalese, a kind of sophisticated term for scat singing, but few fans of this type of performance pick him as a favorite. While the man did cut several albums under his own name beginning in the '50s, the recordings he is mostly known for were done with the extended band of trumpeter
Dizzy Gillespie between 1949 and 1953. Novice bebop fans have been known to cower in disgust at the first introduction to one of these sides, which fall pretty far in the musical toss from the sort of serious harmonic adventure that bebop is all about.
While
Gillespie is often considered a deity equal to
Parker in the bebop creation myth, the type of vocal comedy and novelty song material which featured
Carroll was actually more of a throwback to the repertoire of one of
Gillespie's former bosses,
Cab Calloway -- although simply not as funny.
Calloway, by the way, absolutely hated bebop, referring to it as "Chinese music."
Carroll wrote some of his own material, asking essential musical questions such as "Got a Penny, Benny?." Jazz vocalists from subsequent generations, such as
Mark Murphy and
Jon Hendricks, have cited
Carroll as an important influence; it was
Hendricks who reported calling
Carroll upon arriving at the Greyhound bus station in New York City, simply to ask "Where is
Bird?"
Undeniably,
Carroll represents an important transition in the role of vocalists in jazz, coming from an era when they were stuck on the sidelines, stepping forward to provide variety in the form of cornball humor, overt sentimentality, or simply sex appeal.
Carroll himself was influenced by one of the great novelty jazz singers,
Leo Watson. In contrast, singers such as
Murphy or
Hendricks became bandleaders and were considered fully capable of holding center stage for the entire length of a concert. While even a
Carroll booster might not want to wish for such an event, the supply of good vibes present in just five minutes of the man's singing is a pretty good remedy for the world's troubles, if only temporarily. The title of
Carroll's 1962 album on the
Charlie Parker label,
The Man with a Happy Sound, sums it up best. ~ Eugene Chadbourne