Lester Young

Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet · born 27 August 1909 died 15 March 1959

Click for Richard Cook Bio

Young's father raised his family near to New Orleans and taught them all music, which led to Lester and his brothers playing in a family band and appearing in carnival shows. Having tried several instruments, Lester took up the alto in his teens and played on that horn with a band called Art Bronson's Bostonians during 1928. Eventually, by now playing tenor, he joined Walter Page's Blue Devils and based himself in Kansas City from 1933. He was soon enough a local hero on the horn, and on a famous night in December 1933 he traded choruses with a visiting Coleman Hawkins for hours, tiring out all the piano players and obliging Ben Webster to go and wake up Mary Lou Williams so she could take over. The following year he joined Count Basie and began his most famous association, but at the start he was there for only a matter of weeks, subsequently moving to Fletcher Henderson's band, where he took over Coleman Hawkins's chair. His style was so unwelcome in the band, though, that he left within a few months and after playing with different groups rejoined Basie in Kansas City. He was with the Count when the band made their move to New York at the end of the year, stopping in Chicago to make Young's first records: Shoe Shine Boy and Lady Be Good mark perhaps the most extraordinary debut on record jazz has ever seen, Young's lithe, trippingly exuberant but almost singing delivery causing a sensation among musicians (although audiences, by now accustomed to the Hawkins tenor sound, were often divided). For four years, Young was one of the leading voices of Basie's band, sparring with his friend Herschel Evans in the reed section and creating solos on records such as Lester Leaps In, Taxi War Dance, Tickle Toe and (his own favourite) Clap Hands! Here Comes Charlie which set a new style for tenor players. Instead of Hawkins, Young pointed to two surprise influences, Jimmy Dorsey and Frankie Trumbauer, whose light and clear playing and complete mastery of the architecture of a solo were paramount to him. Some of his best playing in the period comes on the session dates he did with Teddy Wilson, backing Billie Holiday's singing: she gave him his long-standing nickname, 'Pres', a reduction of 'President'.

Young left Basie in 1940 and led a sextet, and then a band with his brother Lee, which dispersed following the death of their father. He then freelanced in New York before rejoining Basie in 1943, appeared in Gjon Mili's film Jamming The Blues, and became a popular success with the public as well as with musicians: but it all came crashing down when he was drafted into the army in September 1944. An introvert with a language all his own and a curious kind of knowing naivety about him, Young could hardly have been less suited to army life, and he was court-martialled early in 1945, spending several months in detention (one army psychiatrist called him 'a constitutional psychopath'). On his release he began a round of touring with his own small groups, and playing regularly with Jazz At The Philharmonic. Many have suggested that Young's time in the army scarred him so badly that his playing never recovered, but that is scarcely borne out by his records: for much of the next few years he was still in wonderful form, and though his sound had begun to grow heavier and used a wider vibrato and more honking notes, many of his solos remain masterful. By 1950, though, a deterioration had started to set in, as his small-group records for Verve began to document. In this period, apologists for Young suggest his musical thinking was growing ever more modern as bebop drifted around him, but what hurts about all of Young's post-1950 music is its constant stumbling. Often he will start a solo beautifully, only for it to fall apart somewhere in the middle, and on track after track there is something to spoil what he does. While never a hard-drug user – 'New Orleans cigarettes' were about the worst he could tolerate in that line – Young had always been a drinker, and by the 50s he was a remorseless alcoholic.

He rejoined Basie on occasion during the decade, and he played with Billie Holiday on the celebrated 1957 telecast The Sound Of Jazz, but his solo sounded feeble. He was always something of a dandy, meticulous about his hair and cologne; his private language baffled many but was clear enough once you understood such phrases as 'Can Madam burn?' ('Can your wife cook?'), 'You rang the bell' ('You're right'), and so on. In January 1959, he played the start of an engagement at the Paris Blue Note club, but was too ill to complete it and returned home to New York, where he died a day later. His influence on a generation of tenor players – Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn and many more – was obvious enough, but his concern to play a flowing melodic line became a totemic part of modern jazz. In his memory, Charles Mingus wrote Goodbye Pork Pie Hat, a reference to Young's favourite headgear, and Wayne Shorter composed the even more poignant Lester Left Town.

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.