Donald Byrd

Art by Tim Foley

Donald Byrd

Trumpet, Flugelhorn · born 9 December 1932 died 4 February 2013

Click for Richard Cook Bio

Byrd was in some ways the archetypal hard-bop trumpeter: very prolific in the recording studio, adaptable to any set of material, he epitomized reliability, from his first dates with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers in 1956. The trumpeter worked alongside a huge number of leaders, and was recording for Savoy, Prestige and Riverside alike, but it is his Blue Note dates which are best remembered, mainly as he did most of his leadership records there. He spent some time in Europe (recording in Paris) in 1958, and back in the US he struck up a partnership with Pepper Adams. But his interest turned increasingly towards education, and he has secured several distinguished qualifications, as well as a degree in law. A New Perspective (1963) was a hit record for him, but his biggest success came with Black Byrd (1972), cleverly produced by Larry Mizell to tap into the funk audience, and thereafter Byrd drifted into poor music (clearly patterned after the thinnest areas of Miles Davis's electric period), where his trumpet playing counted for very little. Perhaps sensibly, he has since then spent most of his time away from actual music-making, and a couple of late-80s albums for Landmark suggested that a comeback of any sort was ill-advised. Fine tone, excellent technique, but even in his glory years Byrd missed out on the token of individuality which could have put him amongst the music's immortals.

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.