Collins, John

views updated May 29 2018

John Collins

Guitarist

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Anyone who has listened to the music of Nat King Cole, Roy Eldridge, Ella Fitzgerald, or Sarah Vaughan has probably heard the work of jazz guitarist John Collins. In a professional career that spanned seven decades, Collins helped to create some of the most memorable jazz-pop recordings of his era, including Coles artistic masterpiece, After Midnight, in 1957. After Coles death in 1965, Collins continued to perform with singer Patti Page and eventually formed his own touring band. He also worked on the film score to Lady Sings the Blues, a biography of former colleague Billie Holiday. Collins released just one album under his own name, The Incredible John Collins, in 1984, and spent his final years as a private teacher to a new generation of jazz guitarists. Collins died in Los Angeles in 2001; though his talent was always in the shadow of the great singers he accompanied, Collins was remembered as one of the great jazz musicians of his generation.

John Elbert Collins was born on September 20, 1913though some sources give his date of birth as one year earlierin Montgomery, Alabama. The greatest early influence on his future career as a professional musician came from his mother, who herself was a jazz-age pioneer. A talented pianist, Georgia Gorham had worked in New York City before her sons birth, as an accompanist to W.C. Handy. Best remembered as the composer of classics such as St. Louis Blues and Beale Street Blues, Handy earned the nickname The Father of the Blues for his work to bring the blues to a wider audience in the early part of the twentieth century. After working with Handy, Gorham returned to her native Alabama, where Collins was born. She continued to pursue her career in music, however, and worked as a pianist and bandleader after moving her family to Chicago, where Collins grew up.

Collins initially studied the clarinet before switching over to guitar as his primary instrument. By the time he was in his teens, Collins was playing rhythm guitar for several Chicago-area jazz outfits. Around 1930 Collins joined his mothers band on tours across the United States. In 1935 he received his first big break by joining a Chicago-based quartet led by Art Tatum, regarded as one of the best jazz pianists of his generation. After playing with Tatum, Collins went on to collaborate with a series of jazz greats. In 1936 he joined the Three Deuces, a band led by Roy Eldridge, whose trumpet playing was regarded as the best of the swing era of the 1930s and 1940s. As part of Eldridges band, Collins appeared on numerous recordings from 1936 through 1940, including Little Jazz in 1935 and a collection later released as Early Years. Collins played with Eldridge for four years before striking out on his own in New York City.

When Collins arrived in New York City in 1940, he entered the most exciting musical scene of the day. Over the next two years he played with singer Billie Holiday, tenor saxophonist Lester Young, and alto saxophonist and trumpeter Benny Carter. All the while, Collins improved his improvisational skills in the numerous clubs that lined New Yorks 52nd Street neighborhood. He also jammed with musicians who would later take the jazz movement into more experimental, modernist directions, such as bebop leader Dizzy Gillespie. This phase of Collinss career was cut short in 1942 when the young guitarist was drafted into the U.S. Army. He served throughout the duration of World War II, playing in Army bands, and returned to New York City in 1946.

After returning to civilian life, Collins played again with Tatum and added pianists Erroll Garner and Billy Taylor to his list of colleagues. In 1947 Esquire magazine gave Collins its New Star Award as Best Guitarist. The recognition was somewhat ironic for a musician who had been playing professionally since the 1930s. It also marked the end of the first phase of Collinss career. In 1951 Collins joined the lineup of supporting musicians for one of the greatest stars of the era, Nat King Cole, a collaboration that continued until Coles untimely death in 1965.

By the time Collins joined Coles recording and performance lineup, Cole was one of the most popular singers and musicians in the United States. Performing as the leader of the Nat King Cole Trio, the singer and pianist had scored major hits in the 1940s with Straighten Up and Fly Right, I Love You for Sentimental Reasons, and The Christmas Song. In 1949 Cole began recording as a solo artist, though his former Trio colleagues Irving Ashby on guitar and Joe

For the Record

Born John Elbert Collins on September 20, 1913, in Montgomery, AL; died on October 4, 2001, in Los Angeles, CA; son of bandleader and pianist Georgia Gorham; married to Naomi Collins; children: Patricia, Jan.

Played with Roy Eldridge, Art Tatum, and Billie Holiday early in career; played in Nat King Coles supporting band, 1951-65; worked on film soundtracks and toured with his own band, 1970s-1980s.

Awards: Esquire magazine, New Star Award as Best Guitarist, 1947; Los Angeles Jazz Society Tribute Honoree, 1985; induction, Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame, 1993.

Comfort on bass continued to play with him on some dates through the early 1950s. In their place, Cole explored a lusher, more pop-oriented sound than was possible with a small jazz combo. Collins, who had gained a reputation for being able to play just a-bout anything on the guitar, fit in well with Coles new direction.

Collins was playing with longtime friend Tatum when Cole asked him to replace Ashby for a Los Angeles performance at the Tiffany Club. Collinss debut with Cole came on September 5, 1951, and on some of the subsequent dates, Tatum joined the group for a jam session. In addition to becoming a regular part of Coles touring band, Collins joined the superstar in the recording studio beginning with the 1953 release Nat King Cole Sings for Two in Love. Collins also appeared on the albums Unforgettable (1953) and The Christmas Song (1954). Perhaps the best-known example of Collinss work with Cole came with the After Midnight album, recorded in 1956 and released the following year. Billed once again as the Nat King Cole Trio, the musicians produced a classic jazz-pop album that included some of Coles best work, such as Sweet Lorraine, Route 66, and Two Loves Have I. Collins also played on recordings by Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Carmen McRae during his career.

An acclaimed guitarist in his own right, Collins took a pragmatic approach to his work with Cole. As a London Guardian obituary quoted Collins from a 1963 interview, Im relegated to the role of commercial musician. Its very good music and it feeds my family. With his wife, Naomi, Collins raised two daughters, Patricia and Jan; at the time of his death in October of 2001, the Collins family included five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The family made its home in Los Angeles.

Collinss tenure with Cole was cut short by Coles death from lung cancer on February 15, 1965, at the age of 45. Collins served as one of the honorary pall bearers at his friends funeral, along with dignitaries such as California Governor Pat Brown and Senator Robert Kennedy, as well as musicians Frank Sinatra, Count Basie, and Sammy Davis, Jr. Following Coles death, Collins played in a number of lineups, including the supporting bands for singers Patti Page and Bobby Troup. Collins also formed a band under his own name and toured Europe. In 1984 he recorded his only solo project, The Incredible John Collins. Collins also worked in the film industry on the soundtrack for the 1972 biography of Billie Holiday, Lady Sings the Blues, and with the Count Basie Orchestra for its appearance in the 1974 comedy Blazing Saddles.

Collins continued to play concert dates in the 1980s and 1990s but worked mostly as a private music teacher in the last decades of his life. In 1985 the Los Angeles Jazz Society named Collins its Tribute Honoree and in 1993 he was inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame. He was also cited by the Smithsonian Institution for his work in helping to preserve the history of jazz in America. Collins was also cited by a number of young musicians as an example of one of the best, if unheralded, talents in the jazz world. As guitarist Russell Malone told Tom Chandler of the Rasputin Music website in May of 2000, There are a lot of great musicians. Theres a guy named John Collins, for example. He was a great guitarist who worked in Nat King Coles band for 15 years. What he did in Nats band is great, but thats not even a tenth of what this man is capable of. He stayed there for 15 years and people didnt really get a chance to hear him. Hospitalized in Los Angeles for cancer treatment, John Collins died on October 4, 2001.

Selected discography

(With Roy Eldridge) Early Years, Capitol, 1935.

(With Roy Eldridge) Little Jazz, Capitol, 1935.

(With Nat King Cole) Nat King Cole Sings for Two in Love, Capitol, 1953.

(With Nat King Cole) Unforgettable, Capitol, 1953.

(With Nat King Cole) The Christmas Song, Capitol, 1954.

(With Nat King Cole) After Midnight, Capitol, 1957.

(With Nat King Cole) Love Is the Thing, Capitol, 1957.

(With Nat King Cole) The Very Thought of You, Capitol, 1958.

(With Nat King Cole) To Whom It May Concern, Capitol, 1959.

(With Nat King Cole) Wild Is Love, Capitol, 1960.

(With Nat King Cole) Ramblin Rose, Capitol, 1962.

The Incredible John Collins, Niva, 1984.

Sources

Books

Epstein, Daniel Mark, Nat King Cole, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1999.

Swenson, John, editor, Rolling Stone Jazz and Blues Album Guide, Random House, 1999.

Periodicals

Guardian (London, England), December 13, 2001, p. 24.

Los Angeles Times, October 13, 2001, p. B17.

New York Times, October 17, 2001, p. A19.

Online

Arriving, Rasputin Music: Manifesto, http://www.rasputins.com/manifesto/archives/russellmalone.html (July 7, 2002).

Biographies: Johnny Collins, PBS: Jazz, http://www.pbs.org/jazz/biography/artist_id_collins_Johnny.htm (July 7, 2002).

Jazz Guitarist John Collins Dead, Hollywood.com, http://www.hollywood.com/news/detail/article/1096361 (July 7, 2002).

John Collins, The Los Angeles Jazz Society, http://www.lajazzsociety.org/LAJS/Programs/Tribute/Past/JohnCollins.htm (July 7, 2002).

John Collins Dies at 88, Jazz Times, http://www.jazztimes.com/JazzNews/XcNewsPlus.asp?cmd=view&articleid=388 (July 7, 2002).

John Elbert Collins, Alabama Music Hall of Fame, http://www.alamhof.org/collinsj.htm (July 7, 2002).

William Christopher Handy, W.C. Handy Music Festival, http://www.wchandyfest.com/history/handybio.htm (July 8, 2002).

Timothy Borden

Collins, John

views updated May 14 2018

Collins, John

(b. Wood Eaton, near Oxford, England, 5 March 1625; d. London, England, 10 November 1683),

algebra.

Removed from local grammar school after the death of his father, a “poore Minister”, orphaned him, Collins was briefly apprenticed (at thirteen) to an Oxford bookseller “who failing I lived three years at Court [as kitchen clerkland in this space forgot the Latin I had.” From 1642, on the outbreak of the Civil War, he spent seven years in the Mediterranean as a seaman “in the Venetian service against ye Turke.” On his return to London he set himself up as “Accountant philomath” (mathematics teacher). After the Restoration in 1660 Collins held a variety of minor government posts, notably “in keeping of Accompts” in the Excise Office, and for fifteen years managed the Farthing Office, but after its closure became once more a lowly accountant with the Fishery Company. He thought long about becoming a stationer but lacked the necessary capital; yet in a private capacity he did much to revive the London book trade after the disastrous 1666 fire, using to the full his own limited resources and the foreign contacts his employment gave him. Although he had “no Universitie education,” he was deservedly elected fellow of the Royal Society in 1667.

On his own assessment Collins’ mathematical attainments were “meane, yet I have an ardent love to these studies… endeavouring to raise a Catalogue of Math’ Bookes and to procure scarce ones for the use of the Royall Society and my owne delight.” His published works—Merchants Accompts, Decimal Arithmetick, Geometricall Dyalling, and Mariners Plain Scale, among others—are essentially derivative but reveal his competence in business arithmetic, navigational trigonometry, sundial construction, and other applications of elementary mathematics; his papers on theory of equations and his critique of Descartes’s Géométrie are uninspiring.

Collins’ scientific importance lies rather in his untiring effort, by correspondence and word of mouth, to be an efficient “intelligencer” of current mathematical news and to promote scientific learning: with justice, Isac Barrow dubbed him “Mersennus Anglus.” Between 1662, when he first met Barrow, and 1677, when the deaths of Barrow and Oldenburg (following on that of James Gregory in 1675), coupled with a growing reluctance on the part of Newton and Wallis to continue a letter exchange and the worries of his own straitened financial circumstances, effectively terminated it, Collins carried on an extensive correspondence with some of the finest exact scientists of his day, not only with his compatriots but with Bertet, Borelli, and (through Oldenburg) with Huygens, Sluse, Leibniz, and Tschirnhausen, Further, deploying his specialized knowledge of the book trade to advantage, Collins saw through press in London such substantial works as Thomas Salusbury’s Mathematical Collections, Barrow’s Lectiones and Archimedes, Wallis’ Mechanics and Algebra, Horrocks’ Opera posthuma, and Sherburne’s Manilius. He sought likewise, but in vain, to have several of Newton’s early mathematical works published. For the modern historian of science, Collins’ still-intact collection of some 2,000 books and uncounted original manuscripts of such men as Newton, Barrow, and Halley is a major primary source.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. Original Works. “The first thing I published was about a quire of Paper concerning Merchants Accompts [a rare folio broadsheet (London, 1652), repr. in G. de Malyne, Consuetudo: vel, Lex Mercatoria (London, 1656)] which upon later thoughts I found myself unable to amend and was reprinted in May last” (to Wallis, 1666). This reappeared in augmented form as An Introduction to Merchants-Accompts (London, 1674).

Next Collins wrote “a despicable treatise of quadrants [The Sector on a Quadrant… Accomodated [sic] for Dyalling: For the Resolving of All Proportions Instrumentally (London, 1659), a revision of his Description and Use of a General Quadrant (London, 1658)]…. And among these Luxuriances I met with a Dyalling Scheme of Mr Fosters and commented upon y1[Geometricall Dyalling (London, 1659)] which it is too late to wish undone.” Also in 1659 he issued his Mariners Plain Scale New Plain’d and Navigation by the Mariners Plain Scale.

Posthumously there appeared his Decimal Arithmetick, Simple Interest, “s(London, 1685), an augmentation of his rare 1669 single-sheet equivalent, “Compendium for a Letter Case.” Of his other nonscientific publications his monograph Salt and Fishery (London, 1682) deserves mention for its passages on salt refining and fish curing. In addition, the Philosophical Transactions has several unsigned reviews by Collins and four short articles—2 no. 30 (Dec. 1667), 568–575; 4 , no. 46 (Apr. 1669), 929–934; 6 no. 69 (Mar. 1675), 2093–2096; 14, no. 159 (May 1684), 575–582—dealing with topics in arithmetic and algebra.

His correspondence is preserved in private possession (Shirburn 101.H.1–3), except for a group of letters relating to Newton’s invention of fluxions deposited from it, at Newton’s request, in the Royal Society’s archives in 1712 (now, with some losses, MS LXXXI [Collins’ Descartes critique is no, 39] and smaller collections in the British Museum, the University of St. Andrews, and Cambridge University library.

II. Secondary Literature. Edward Sherburne, in his Sphere of Manilius Made an English Poem (London 1675), app., pp.116–118 (also found as a separate broadsheet,) gives a creditable contemporary impression of Collins’ work up to 1675. Brief sketches by Agnes M. Clerke, in Dictionary of National Biography, XI (1887), 368–369; and H.W. Turnbull, in James Gregory Memorial Volume (London 1939), pp. 16–18, must seve in place of a standard biography, Collins’ letters are printed in Newton’s Commercium Epistolicum (London, 1712): S. P. Rigaud’s Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century (Oxford, 1841); and in modern editions of the letters of Newton, James Gregory, and Oldenburg.

D. T. Whiteside

Collins, John

views updated May 23 2018

John Collins

1933–

AMERICAN

U.S. NAVAL OFFICER (RETIRED)

John Collins is recognized as the developer of the world's most famous triathlon, the Hawaii Ironman. Collins had been stationed with the United States Navy near San Diego in 1974 and 1975. It was there that he participated in some of the early triathlons organized by the local running and biking community. When Collins was transferred to Hawaii in 1977, he and a group of local athletes, including his wife Judy, discussed what type of athlete was the best, the toughest, and the fittest.

From those discussions, Collins developed the idea of combining the courses and distances of three existing Hawaiian races into one ultimate athletic challenge. The Waikiki Rough Water swim (2.4 m, or 4 km), the Around Oahu Bike Race (112 m, or 191 km), and the Honolulu Marathon (26.2 m, or 42.2 km) were the distances combined by Collins into one event.

The first Ironman competition did not have this name when the race was held on February 18, 1978. Collins had declared prior to the race that, "Whoever finishes first we'll call the Iron man." Fifteen athletes took up the challenge and twelve, including Collins, were able to finish the race.

Collins placed a note in the race kits given to each of his entrants in 1978, a saying that was adopted and subsequently registered as a trademark for the Hawaii Ironman: Swim 2.4 miles! Bike 112 miles! Run 26.2 miles! Brag for the rest of your life!

The Ironman went on to achieve considerable international media attention in the early 1980s as the world's toughest sporting challenge. It spawned an entire series of international qualifiers. More importantly, the Ironman and the shorter distanced triathlons became synonymous with the concept of cross training. The various events in the Ironman require distinct training methods; an athlete could not focus upon one of the three disciplines and expect to succeed.

The Ironman and triathlon boom of the 1980s and the 1990s also inspired the development of specialized clothing, such as wetsuits, as well as bicycles configured to permit easier operation and aerodynamic effect for the triathlete.

Collins has been inducted into both the Triathlon and the Ironman Halls of Fame located in San Diego.

see also Cross training; Ironman competitions; Triathlon.

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