Drummer
Stan Levey was the backbone of the
Dizzy Gillespie-led unit that influential jazz critic
Leonard Feather dubbed "the first genuine all-bebop group to play on 52nd Street," virtually defining the shape and sound of jazz in the modern era.
Levey was born April 5, 1926 in Philadelphia; the son of a car salesman and boxing promoter, he was a self-taught prodigy who at 16 entered a local club headlined by
Gillespie, convincing the trumpeter to let him sit in on drums.
Gillespie was so impressed by the teen's powerful yet tasteful playing that he extended an offer to join the group full-time --
Levey quit high school immediately thereafter, playing clubs at night and cleaning cars on his father's lot by day.
Fellow jazz musicians derided
Gillespie for recruiting a white, Jewish 16-year-old to anchor his band -- "Show me a better Black drummer and I'll hire him,"
Gillespie responded, and when he relocated to New York City, he convinced
Levey to move with him. There the drummer joined a small band led by
Coleman Hawkins and featuring
Thelonious Monk, cutting his first recording session in support of
Art Tatum; he also supported
Ben Webster and sat in with Woody Herman's First Herd when regular drummer
Dave Tough was unavailable. From 1943 to 1949,
Levey also boxed professionally, competing at Madison Square Garden and even appearing on the same bill as the immortal Joe Louis.
In 1945
Levey served in
the Charlie Parker Quintet, and when
Gillespie and
Parker joined forces later that same year, they recruited
Levey to play drums -- bassist
Al Haig and pianist
Curly Russell completed the group, widely considered the first and most innovative bebop lineup in history. During their existence
Gillespie wrote standards like "A Night in Tunisia," "Manteca," and "Groovin' High" before the quintet self-destructed after completing a long residency at the Los Angeles club Billy Berg's -- unable to locate
Parker in the hours prior to their return flight to New York, his bandmates were forced to leave the troubled saxophonist in L.A., where he proceeded to set fire to his hotel and was incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital.
After spending much of the late '40s touring with
Norman Granz's
Jazz at the Philharmonic showcase,
Levey returned to Philadelphia in 1951, forming a new quartet with tenorist
Richie Kamuca, pianist
Red Garland, and bassist
Nelson Boyd, that both headlined its own dates and backed vocalists appearing in the area. When
the Stan Kenton Orchestra played Philadelphia in 1952,
Kenton saw the group perform and hired
Levey and
Kamuca on the spot. Bolstered by the likes of
Zoot Sims and
Lee Konitz, this lineup would prove the strongest of
Kenton's career, touring Europe the following year to enormous acclaim.
Kenton dissolved the band immediately following a 1954 appearance in Los Angeles and
Levey remained on the West Coast, soon beginning a five-year stint playing with
Howard Rumsey's
Lighthouse All-Stars in relief of drummer
Max Roach.
Levey's drumming would prove a major influence on the emerging West Coast jazz sound, shaping its crisp, fluent rhythms. During this time he greatly expanded his session slate, and over the course of his career appeared on over 2,000 recordings in support of vocalists including
Frank Sinatra,
Billie Holiday,
Ella Fitzgerald, and even
Barbra Streisand. He additionally contributed to the soundtracks of more than 300 movies and countless TV productions. Despite his demanding studio and concert schedules,
Levey nevertheless found time to translate a longtime interest in photography into a secondary career as a professional photographer, shooting a number of record covers.
In fact, upon retiring from music in 1973 he turned to photography full-time, contracting with major advertising agencies and photographed everything from fashion magazine spreads to industrial photos.
Levey's photos still adorned LP jackets as well, often for musicians with whom he once played. He never performed professionally again, insisting the music business changed and that he did not miss it at all. A few months after the DVD release of the documentary profile Stan Levey: The Original Original, he died in Van Nuys, California, on April 20, 2005 at the age of 79. ~ Jason Ankeny