Zoot Sims

Tenor Saxophone · born 29 October 1925 died 23 March 1985

Click for Richard Cook Bio

Did Zoot (John Haley) Sims ever make a poor record, or deliver a less than enjoyable performance? Mere consistency is the enemy of the creative jazz player, but Sims belied the maxim: a modest titan who made a virtue out of his impeccable reliability. His family were vaudeville performers and he started on clarinet before taking up the saxophone in his teens. His first important work was with Benny Goodman, starting in 1943, and after army service he was one of the 'Four Brothers' in Woody Herman's 1947 band. From there he worked with Buddy Rich, Goodman again, Elliot Lawrence and Stan Kenton, but from around 1953 his career was spent working as a freelance. He struck up an invincible partnership with his former Herman sideman Al Cohn: they toured and recorded as the leaders of an occasional but frequently convened quintet, which endured into the 80s. Besides this he gigged and recorded as a solo himself, as well as doing high-profile sideman work with Goodman, Gerry Mulligan, Clark Terry and others. He turns up on many record dates as an almost unannounced soloist, and always gives his best: one isolated example might be his solos on the debut record by songwriter Phoebe Snow (Phoebe Snow, 1974). For a long time his recording career as a leader had something of a laissez-faire quality to it, but in the 70s Norman Granz signed him to his Pablo label and finally took the cheerfully wayward Sims in hand: his Pablo albums, especially those with such simpatico spirits as Jimmy Rowles, place his wonderful, burnished-but-homely sound and compulsively swinging phrasing in a rounded context at last. Sims was routinely characterized as a Lester Young follower, but even at the time of Young's death Lester's shade had been comprehensively sidelined in Zoot's own playing: it surely belongs only to the man blowing the horn. There should have been much more of it for listeners to hear, but cancer brought about his passing just short of his 60th birthday.

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.