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Hampton, Lionel

Contemporary Musicians | 1992 | | Copyright 1992 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Lionel Hampton

Bandleader, percussionist, singer

For the Record

Selected writings

Selected discography

Sources

For more than 50 years jazz musician and bandleader Lionel Hampton has captivated world audiences with his rhythmic drive and exuberant showmanship. A pioneering jazz vibraphonist with the Les Hite and Benny Goodman orchestras in the 1930s, Hampton went on to form his own big band, one of the most popular and enduring large jazz ensembles of all time. Specializing in stirring his musicians and fans into a rhythmic frenzy, the bandleader is notorious for letting numbers go on and on until every soloist has improvised into exhaustion; once, in Harlems Apollo theater, his audiences enthusiastic stomping and jumping cracked the balcony and forced an evacuation.

The temporary base of jazz greats Quincy Jones, Charlie Parker, Fats Novarro, and Dinah Washington over the years, the Hampton band has played an important part in the history of jazz. It was one of the first jazz ensembles to use the electric bass guitar and organ. Yet, for all Hamptons significant contributions to music, the performer wantsaccording to George T. Simon in The Best of the Music Makers to be remembered most for spreading happiness and good will. Hampton cavorts about the stage like a neophyte trouper trying to impress his first paying customers, wrote Arnold Jay Smith in Down Beat, describing the showman in his fiftieth year of performing, at age sixty-nine.He is always smiling, enjoying his playing and that of others, expressing that pleasure by yeah-ing whenever the spirit moves him.

Hampton displayed his musical leanings as a child, forever thumping on the rungs of chairs or on his grandmothers pots and pans. Christmas gifts were usually a set of childrens drums, which seldom survived his enthusiasm for very long. Wanting to play real drums, Hampton got a job during high school as a newsboy for the Chicago Defender, and within a week realized his wish in the newsboys jazz band. After graduating from high school in 1928 he headed for Los Angeles to play in the orchestra of family friend Les Hite and remained there for the next four years, developing his skills and acquiring local celebrity as a jazz drummer.

Once, when jazz great Louis Armstrong fronted for Hites band in a recording session, Hampton discovered an unused vibraphone in the studio and mastered it within the hour; Armstrongs 1930 recording, Memories of You, features Hampton in the first jazz vibraphone solo ever recorded. The young musician was absolutely smitten with the versatility of his new percussion instrumentits ability to be both animated and lyrical. Other jazz performers had used the vibraphone before, but none had approached Hamptons invention and rhythmic mastery on an instrument useduntil

For the Record

Born Lionel Leo Hampton, April 20, 1909 (some sources say April 12, 1908, or 1913, or 1914), in Birmingham, AL, raised in Chicago, IL; son of Charles (a pianist and singer) and Gertrude (Whitfield) Hampton; married Gladys Riddle (a seamstress who became his business manager), November 11, 1936 (deceased, 1971). Education: Attended the University of Southern California, 1934. Politics: Republican. Religion: Christian Scientist.

Drummer in Chicago Defender newsboys jazz band during high school; drummer and vibraphonist in Les Hites band, Los Angeles, 1928-32; performed in own jazz group, Los Angeles, 1933-35; vibraphonist with the Benny Goodman Quartet and occasional performer in Goodmans full band, 1936-40; bandleader, vibraphonist, drummer, pianist, and singer for the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, 1940-65; leader and performer in jazz combo The Inner Circle, 1965. Has appeared in motion pictures, including The Benny Goodman Story, 1955; has appeared on radio and television; musical director of television station WOOK, Washington, D.C., 1962; founder of recording labels Glad-Hamp and Whos Who in Jazz, 1978.

Professor of music at Howard University, Washington, D.C., 1981. Has made numerous international goodwill tours; human rights commissioner of New York City, 1984-86; creator of Lionel Hampton Jazz Endowment Fund, 1984; United Nations ambassador of music, 1985.

Addresses: Record company Glad-Hamp, 1995 Broadway, New York, NY 10023.

that timedecoratively, like chimes.That watery deposit-bottle sound, redolent of vaudeville, somehow makes his rhythmic force more impressive, judged Kevin Whitehead, discussing Hamptons Hot Mallets recordings in Down Beat.

In 1936 the King of Swing, clarinetist Benny Goodman, heard Hampton performing on vibes and persuaded the percussionist to tour with him, pianist Teddy Wilson, and drummer Gene Krupa as the Benny Goodman Quartet. Much admired, the group became enormously successful with hits like Dinah and Moonglow. Hampton occasionally played drums and sang in Goodmans full band as well. Also recording with pickup bands of celebrated sidemen from other jazz ensemblesthe Victor recordings are now coveted collectors itemsHampton became one of the swing eras premiere figures, prompting him to form his own big band in 1940. Initially comprised of young, unknown, promising musicians from around the country, the Hampton orchestra reflected its leaders ebullient nature, with an emphasis on showmanship, energy, and excitement. Conducting, singing, and playing the vibes and the drums, Hampton also took to entertaining audiences on the piano with his unique trigger-finger style: forefingers only, like vibraphone mallets, ripping through single-note passages.

Starting with the 1941 hit Flying Home, Hampton and his orchestra dominated the big band field for the next two decades. When it became evidentduring the early sixtiesthat the days of the big bands were over, he pared down to The Inner Circle, a jazz combo of eight or so musicians, still assembling the big band for reunions and special occasions. Engaging in a number of goodwill tours since the 1950s, Hampton has brought the excitement of jazz to people around the globe; at home, he has worked hard to have Americas black musical heritage taught at colleges and universities, and for other social and political concerns.

While observers have noted a tendency in Hamptons groups to emphasize audience-pleasing and past achievements over invention and musicianship, most share the sentiments of Down Beat contributor John McDonough.He presides over an outstanding all-star band which is never called upon to do much more than huff and puff familiar riffs, allowed McDonough, reviewing a recording of the entertainers fiftieth anniversary concert at Carnegie Hall.But thats all Hamptons bands have ever had to do. And that, apparently, has been more than enough.

Selected writings

(With James Haskins) Hamp: An Autobiography, Warner Books, 1989.

Selected discography

Singles

Drum Stomp, RCA Victor, 1937.

Down Home Jump, Victor, 1938.

Hot Mallets, Victor, 1939.

Central Avenue Breakdown/Jack the Bellboy, Victor, 1940.

Flying Home, Decca, 1942.

Hamps Boogie Woogie, Decca, 1944.

Hey Ba-ba-rebop, Decca, 1945.

Air Mail Special, Decca, 1946.

Midnight Sun, Decca, 1947.

Real Crazy/I Only Have Eyes for You, Vogue, 1953.

Albums

Play Love Songs, Verve.

Travelin Band, Verve.

Gene Krupa-Lionel Hampton-Teddy Wilson with Red Callender, Verve.

The Hampton-Tatum-Rich Trio, Verve.

King of the Vibes, Verve.

Airmail Special, Verve.

Flying Home, Verve.

Swinging With Hamp, Verve.

Hamp, Verve.

Hamps Big Four, Verve.

Hamp and Getz, Verve.

Lionel Hampton and His Giants, Verve.

Here Come the Swingin Bands, Verve.

The Genius of Lionel Hampton, Verve.

Lionel Hampton 58, Verve.

Halleluja Hamp., Verve.

The High and the Mighty, Verve.

All-American Award Concert, Decca.

Crazy Rhythm, EmArcy.

Golden Vibes, Columbia.

Wailin at the Trianon, Columbia.

Lionel Hampton Swings in Paris, Contemporary.

Hamp in Paris, EmArcy.

Lional Hampton Swings, Perfect.

Open House, Camden.

Moonglow, Decca.

Jazz Flamenco, Victor.

Just Jazz All Stars, GNP.

Just Jazz, Decca.

Jivin the Vibes, Camden.

Jam Session in Paris, EmArcy/Harmony.

Apollo Hall Concert, 1954, Epic.

Newport Uproar, RCA.

At Newport 78, Timeless.

Ambassador at Large, Glad-Hamp.

Big Band Live, Glad-Hamp.

Chameleon, Glad-Hamp.

Made in Japan, Glad-Hamp.

Outrageous, Glad-Hamp.

Rarities, Glad-Hamp.

Sweatin with Hamp, MCA.

Midnight Blues, Glad-Hamp.

Composed King David Suite (a four-part jazz composition for symphony), 1953.

Sources

Books

Feather, Leonard, The New Edition of the Encyclopedia of Jazz, Horizon Press, 1960.

The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, edited by Barry Kernfeld, Macmillan, 1988.

Simon, George T., and others, The Best of the Music Makers, Doubleday, 1979.

Periodicals

Down Beat, August 10, 1978; April 1982; July 1985; April 1988; May 1990.

New York Times Book Review, December 3, 1989.

Nancy Pear

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Pear, Nancy. "Hampton, Lionel." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1992. Encyclopedia.com. 17 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Pear, Nancy. "Hampton, Lionel." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1992. Encyclopedia.com. (December 17, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3492400040.html

Pear, Nancy. "Hampton, Lionel." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1992. Retrieved December 17, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3492400040.html

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