Clifford Brown
Trumpet · born 30 October 1930 – died 26 June 1956
▸ Click for Richard Cook Bio
While other figures of the bop era had drugs as their tragedy, it was left to a car accident to terminate Brown's wonderful contribution to jazz, a cruelty which a half-century later still seems devastating. Born in Wilmington, Delaware, he began on trumpet at 13 and quickly developed a breathtaking facility on the horn. In Philadelphia jam sessions he was a sensation: Fats Navarro especially liked him. He was in a first car crash in 1950, which took him off the scene for a while, but was back in action by 1952 and began making records (with an R&B group led by Chris Powell). He joined Lionel Hampton's touring band in 1953 and went with them to Europe, where he made some informal recordings (away from Hamp's watchful eye). In February 1954 he was back in New York and with Art Blakey's new Jazz Messengers: their Birdland recordings on Blue Note are enthralling, as were the results of Brown's next and as it turned out final association, a quintet co-led with Max Roach, based in California. What Brown did was sew together the best qualities of the bop players who had preceded him – Gillespie's full-tilt ebullience, Navarro's big sound, Miles Davis's melodious appeal – and intensify them, in one forthright style. He could get all over the horn with incomparable fluency, his high range as easily covered as his middle and low, but this was amplified by his voluptuous sound and vibrato and the joyful assurance he seemed able to switch on without any warming-up passages. As a ballad player he might have been the best the trumpet could muster at that time, making even the promising Davis seem like a beginner, and Emarcy recorded him with strings and as an accompanist to Sarah Vaughan. Following his work through – luckily, he was extensively set down both in the studios and in live recordings in his brief heyday – he seems to get better and better as he goes on, his later live recordings almost unbelievably skilled and exciting. The final icing was his composing, which again had the marks of natural greatness: Joy Spring, Daahoud, Blues Walk and others have the easy stride of a writer who had music spilling out of him. But it all came to an abrupt end in June 1956, in a crash on a rainy Pennsylvania night, which also killed pianist Richie Powell and robbed jazz of one of its golden princes. Who can tell what he might have gone on to achieve?
Biography from Richard Cook's Jazz Encyclopedia (2005).
If you'd like more information, check out The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz (2002) or The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz (2007), both of which are still in print.
As leader
Clifford Brown / Max Roach – Brown and Roach Incorporated
Clifford Brown and Max Roach – Study in Brown
Clifford Brown – Memorial Album
Clifford Brown and Max Roach – At Basin Street
Clifford Brown – Memorial
Clifford Brown – Clifford Brown All-Stars
Plays on
Jay Jay Johnson – The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Volume One
Jay Jay Johnson – The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Volume Two
Art Blakey – A Night At Birdland, Volume One
Art Blakey – A Night At Birdland, Volume Two
Sonny Rollins – Plus Four
Thad Jones – The Magnificent Thad Jones
Mentioned in text
Tony Fruscella – Tony Fruscella
Miles Davis – The Musings of Miles
Cannonball Adderley – Presenting Cannonball
Billy Taylor – Evergreens
Phineas Newborn Jr. – Here is Phineas
Bud Powell – The Amazing Bud Powell, Volume One
Bud Powell – The Amazing Bud Powell, Volume Two
Jimmy Smith – A New Sound, A New Star, Volume One
Jimmy Smith – A New Sound, A New Star, Volume Two
Jimmy Smith – At The Organ, Volume Three
Carl Perkins – Introducing…
James Moody – Hi Fi Party
Sonny Rollins – Worktime
Elmo Hope – Hope Meets Foster
Tadd Dameron – Fontainebleau
Sonny Rollins Quartet – Tenor Madness
Quincy Jones – This Is How I Feel About Jazz
Jimmy Smith – At Club Baby Grand, Volume One
Jimmy Smith – At Club Baby Grand, Volume Two
Lee Morgan – Indeed!
Lee Morgan – Lee Morgan Sextet
Sonny Rollins – Sonny Rollins, Volume One
Lou Donaldson Quintet – Wailing With Lou
Thad Jones – The Magnificent Thad Jones, Volume Three
Hank Mobley Quintet – Hank Mobley Quintet
Lee Morgan – Lee Morgan, Volume Three
Sonny Rollins – Sonny Rollins, Volume Two
Johnny Griffin – A Blowing Session
Curtis Fuller – The Opener
Paul Chambers – Bass On Top
Bud Powell – Bud! The Amazing Bud Powell, Volume Three
Don Byrd / Gigi Gryce – Jazz Lab
The Jazz Messengers – Hard Bop
Curtis Counce – The Curtis Counce Group
Curtis Counce – You Get More Bounce With Curtis Counce
Max Roach – Plus Four
Nat Adderley – To The Ivy League From Nat
Jackie McLean Quintet – Jackie’s Pal
Tadd Dameron / John Coltrane – Mating Call
Phil Woods / Donald Byrd – The Young Bloods
Mal Waldron Quintet – Mal-1
Art Farmer / Donald Byrd / Idrees Sulieman – Three Trumpets
Ray Draper Quintet – Tuba Sounds
Ray Bryant Trio – Piano Piano Piano
John Coltrane – Coltrane
Gene Ammons – Jammin’ In Hi Fi
Idrees Sulieman / Webster Young / John Coltrane / Bobby Jaspar – Interplay for 2 Trumpets and 2 Tenors
Ernie Henry – Presenting Ernie Henry
Kenny Dorham – Jazz Contrasts
Sonny Rollins – The Sound of Sonny
Hank Mobley Quintet – Introducing Lee Morgan
Hank Mobley Sextet – Hank
Hank Mobley – Hank Mobley
Sonny Clark – Dial “S” For Sonny
John Coltrane – Blue Train
Lee Morgan – The Cooker
Cliff Jordan – Cliff Craft
Louis Smith – Here Comes Louis Smith
Lee Morgan – Candy
Lou Donaldson – Lou Takes Off
Louis Smith – Smithville
Kenny Burrell – Blue Lights, Volume One
Miles Davis – Milestones
Red Mitchell – Presenting Red Mitchell
Yusef Lateef Quintet – The Sounds of Yusef
Herbie Mann – Mann in the Morning
Benny Golson – The Modern Touch
Sonny Rollins – Freedom Suite
Johnny Griffin – Johnny Griffin Sextet
Max Roach – Deeds, Not Words
Hank Mobley / Lee Morgan – Peckin’ Time
Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers – Moanin’
Donald Byrd – Off to the Races
Bud Powell – The Scene Changes
Jimmy Smith – The Sermon
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – At the Jazz Corner of the World, Vol. 1
Gene Ammons – Blue Gene
Donald Byrd – Byrd in Hand
Lou Donaldson – The Time is Right
Donald Byrd – Fuego
Dizzy Reece – Soundin’ Off
Stanley Turrentine – Look Out!
Freddie Hubbard – Open Sesame
Tina Brooks – True Blue
Harold Land – The Fox
Eric Dolphy – Outward Bound
Booker Little – Booker Little
Curtis Fuller – Curtis Fuller, Volume Three
Kenny Burrell – Blue Lights, Volume Two
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – At the Jazz Corner of the World, Vol. 2
Lee Morgan – Lee-Way
Lou Donaldson – Sunny Side Up
Benny Bailey – Big Brass
Howard McGhee – Maggie’s Back in Town
Curtis Amy & Frank Butler – Groovin’ Blue
Max Roach – Percussion Bitter Sweet
Eric Dolphy – Far Cry
Jimmy Woods Sextet – Conflict
Roland Kirk – Rip, Rig and Panic
Miles Davis – Get Up With It
Jimmy Heath – Picture of Heath
Dexter Gordon – Homecoming: Live at the Village Vanguard
