Photo by Hugo van Gelderen / Anefo (CC0)
Gerry Mulligan
Baritone Saxophone · born 6 April 1927 – died 20 January 1996
▸ Click for Richard Cook Bio
Mulligan was a man of paradoxes. He wrote many of the most precise and considered scores in modern jazz, yet he loved the freedom and spontaneity of jam sessions. He was one of the prime architects of cool, yet his own playing could be as fiercely hot as that of any hard bopper. He ran one of the most famous small groups in jazz, but his heart was surely with the big-band form. Born in New York, he started on piano (which he sometimes returned to on recordings), then tried out virtually the whole saxophone family. Moving to Philadelphia in 1944, he began writing arrangements, and then joined Gene Krupa as staff arranger in Los Angeles. Back in New York, he wrote for Claude Thornhill and was a key contributor to the Miles Davis Birth Of The Cool sessions: it rankled with him in later years that he never got that much credit for his involvement. He made some sides with a tentet in New York, then went back to Los Angeles and formed a new quartet with trumpeter Chet Baker and no pianist. Their residency at a little club called The Haig caused a sensation, with queues around the block, and the subsequent recordings for Dick Bock's Pacific Jazz label showed why: irresistible Mulligan originals such as Walkin' Shoes mixed with standards in clean, sonorous lines, and the results sounded like evergreen classics from the first auditioning. But Mulligan was using heroin, and only a three-month incarceration enabled him to get off the habit. He carried on with various four-man line-ups after Baker's departure, with Bob Brookmeyer, Jon Eardley and Art Farmer among his partners, and 'met' various saxophonists in the Verve recording studios, including Johnny Hodges, Ben Webster and Stan Getz. On the celebrated Sound Of Jazz telecast, he plays in the band that accompanies Billie Holiday and stands tallest of all.
In 1960, he assembled his Concert Jazz Band, which also recorded for Verve: a very different animal to the typical shouting big band, its light feel and sometimes silky sound was a beautiful vehicle for Mulligan scores such as Blueport, but it flew in the face of jazz trends and economies and didn't last long. After this, Mulligan became a star sideman with Dave Brubeck and eventually mustered a new big band, The Age Of Steam (referring to the saxophonist's long-standing love of locomotives). The Concert Jazz Band was also occasionally brought together again, as was a 'Rebirth Of The Cool' band which took a fresh look at Mulligan's old scores (and settled them to his satisfaction). 'Jeru' went from the cool uniform of shades and crew-cut in the 50s to bearded longhair in his old age, but while he never again quite found the popular audience he had enjoyed with the quartet, his later music and recordings still have the mark of greatness on them, and his achievements as arranger and composer now seem among the most formidable in any jazz era. As a saxophonist, he made the baritone seem both light and limber while never shying away from its deep-sea timbre: another paradox.
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.
◆Outside Links
As leader
Gerry Mulligan – California Concerts
Gerry Mulligan – Mulligan Plays Mulligan
Gerry Mulligan – Presenting the Gerry Mulligan Sextet
Gerry Mulligan Quartet – Paris Concert
Gerry Mulligan – Mainstream of Jazz
Gerry Mulligan Quartet – At Storyville
Gerry Mulligan and Paul Desmond – Mulligan Desmond Quartet
Gerry Mulligan – What Is There To Say?
Paul Desmond / Gerry Mulligan – Two of a Mind
Plays on
Various Artists – Conception
J.J. Johnson / Kai Winding / Bennie Green – Trombone By Three
Miles Davis – Birth of the Cool
Thelonious Monk – Mulligan Meets Monk
Mentioned in text
Dave Brubeck Quartet – Jazz at Oberlin
Dave Brubeck – At Storyville
Tony Fruscella – Tony Fruscella
Tal Farlow – The Interpretations of Tal Farlow
Stan Getz – At The Shrine
Chico Hamilton Quintet – Featuring Buddy Collette
Milt Jackson – Milt Jackson Quartet
Billy Taylor – Evergreens
Teddy Charles – The Teddy Charles Tentet
Modern Jazz Quartet – Fontessa
Jimmy Giuffre – The Jimmy Giuffre Clarinet
Thelonious Monk – Genius of Modern Music, Volume One
Thelonious Monk – Genius of Modern Music, Volume Two
Zoot Sims – The Modern Art of Jazz
Chet Baker Quartet – Jazz at Ann Arbor
Stan Getz / Zoot Sims / Al Cohn / Allen Eager / Brew Moore – The Brothers
Zoot Sims – Quartets
Jon Eardley – Jon Eardley Seven
Gil Melle Quartet – Melle Plays Primitive Modern
Zoot Sims and Bob Brookmeyer – Tonite’s Music Today
Zoot Sims – Plays Alto Tenor and Baritone
Zoot Sims – Zoot
Lars Gullin – Baritone Sax
Jimmy Giuffre – The Jimmy Giuffre 3
Modern Jazz Quartet – Modern Jazz Quartet
Milt Jackson – Plenty Plenty Soul
Lou Donaldson Quintet – Wailing With Lou
Sonny Rollins – Sonny Rollins, Volume Two
Serge Chaloff – Blue Serge
Miles Davis – Miles Ahead
Curtis Counce – You Get More Bounce With Curtis Counce
Al Cohn – The Al Cohn Quintet
Al Cohn Quintet – Al and Zoot
Zoot Sims – Goes to Jazzville
Chico Hamilton Quintet – The Sweet Smell of Success
Chet Baker – Chet Baker & Crew
Russ Freeman / Chet Baker – Quartet
Bob Brookmeyer Quintet – Traditionalism Revisited
Chet Baker – Chet Baker Big Band
Bob Brookmeyer – The Dual Role of Bob Brookmeyer
Billy Taylor – Cross Section
Hank Mobley / Al Cohn / John Coltrane / Zoot Sims – Tenor Conclave
Mose Allison – Back Country Suite
Gil Melle Quartet – Quadrama
Trigger Alpert – Trigger Happy!
Zoot Sims – Zoot!
Thelonious Monk – Thelonious Himself
Thelonious Monk – Monk’s Music
Billy Taylor – The New Billy Taylor Trio
George Wallington – Knight Music
Lou Donaldson Quintet – Swing and Soul
Red Mitchell – Presenting Red Mitchell
Hampton Hawes Quartet – All Night Session! Vols. 1-3
Gil Evans – Gil Evans & Ten
Mose Allison – Young Man Mose
Prestige Blues-Swingers – Outskirts of Town
Thelonious Monk Quartet – Misterioso
Max Roach – Deeds, Not Words
Lee Konitz – Very Cool
Stan Getz – Stan Getz in Stockholm
Ornette Coleman – The Shape of Jazz to Come
Lou Donaldson – Blues Walk
Jimmy Smith – The Sermon
Dave Brubeck – Gone With the Wind
Lou Donaldson – The Time is Right
Max Roach – We Insist! Freedom Now Suite
Bill Evans Trio – Explorations
Curtis Amy & Frank Butler – Groovin’ Blue
Gil Evans Orchestra – Into The Hot
Thelonious Monk Quartet – Monk’s Dream
Charles Mingus – The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady
Gary McFarland – Point of Departure
Gary McFarland – Tijuana Jazz
Miles Davis – And the Modern Jazz Giants
Miles Davis – Bitches Brew
