Английская Википедия:Art Vincent

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Art Vincent (December 30, 1926 - October 27, 1993) was an American jazz disc jockey, concert producer and MC.

Vincent's broadcasting career spanned almost 30 years, from about 1960 through 1989. For much of that time, his program, "The Art of Jazz," aired on FM radio stations in New Jersey and was heard throughout the New York metropolitan area. Vincent was known for his smooth, resonant voice and encyclopedic knowledge of jazz. He championed jazz as a unique American art form on a par with western classical music.

A popular part of Vincent's radio broadcasts were his interviews with jazz greats, including Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Dave Brubeck, Ray Charles, Roy Eldridge, Duke Ellington, Tal Farlow, Art Farmer, Dizzie Gillespie, Jimmy Hamilton, Woody Herman, Richard "Groove" Holmes, Kenyon Hopkins, Stan Kenton, Gerry Mulligan, Peter Nero, Anita O'Day, Houston Person, Arthur Prysock, Lou Rawls, Don Sebesky, Jimmy Smith, Maxine Sullivan, Dr. Billy Taylor, Cal Tjader, Dinah Washington - and many others.

Career

Radio and concert work

In 1956, Art Vincent developed the engineering plans for radio station WFHA. He and the station manager built WFHA from the ground up, completing it in 1959. Vincent became the station's chief engineer.[1] Around 1960, Vincent hosted his first broadcast on WFHA, a short-lived country music show. In 1961 he debuted his show, "The Art of Jazz."

Vincent broadcast a wide range of jazz recordings, from obscure to popular, including all genres, such as blues, Dixieland, manouche, bebop, contemporary, avant garde, etc. His shows often included contests and topical call-in segments.[2] Jazz musicians were frequent in-studio guests, and Vincent would often play interviews he had recorded on-location. Through this rich and varied format, he strove to give his audience a quality listening experience.

Vincent was a maverick, refusing to follow some of the commercial broadcasting conventions of his day. He wouldn't speak over the beginning or end of a track, as was the norm for most DJs of the time. He would play several tracks in sequence, talk-free and without commercials. He declined to use management-endorsed playlists, instead developing unique playlists for each broadcast, based on his personal taste and feedback from listeners and musicians.

In 1967 Vincent moved his show to WJLK[3] and then to WRLB in 1969. He was popular in the NY area jazz community, and developed close relationships with fans and musicians alike. In 1972, he was a guest on the WOR television program, "The Joe Franklin Show," along with flutist Bobbi Humphrey. Vincent also appeared on the Franklin show in the late 1960s or early 1970s, with his longtime friend, guitarist Tal Farlow. Additionally, Farlow composed theme music for the "Art of Jazz," writing two iterations of the theme: "Blue Art" and "Blue Art, Too." Farlow released the latter version on LP in 1981, much to the delight of Vincent and his fans.

Throughout his career, Vincent served as master of ceremonies for jazz concerts in New Jersey and elsewhere. In 1972, he was instrumental in starting what became a long-running jazz performance series at the Monmouth County Library in New Jersey.[4] Vincent proposed the idea, and worked with library management to plan the first jazz concerts held in a U.S. public library reading room. He served as MC[5][6] for the initial three years of the series. Vincent also produced dozens of jazz concerts, at various venues, featuring performers such as Ruth Brown, Tal Farlow, Jimmy Heath, Etta Jones, Hank Jones, Wynton Marsalis, Ray Nance, Zoot Simms, Grady Tate, Teddy Wilson and other top players.[7] (Vincent can be heard as MC on the final track of guitarist Eddie Hazell's 1976 album "Take Your Shoes Off, Baby.") In the mid-1970s, with friends and colleagues, he started the AOJ & Company, a non-profit organization devoted to the promotion of jazz through live concerts, lectures and member networking.[8]

In 1979 the "Art of Jazz" show moved to NPR affiliate WBGO.[9] That same year, Vincent was heard on NPR hosting the EBU's French Jazz Festival (and again in 1981). In 1980, Vincent co-hosted the "Kool Jazz Festival" on NPR, live from Gracie Mansion in New York City. For the 1980-81 Golden Apple Awards, NYC Jazz Magazine readers nominated Vincent as the best DJ in the local jazz community. Vincent left WBGO in 1981, but continued to be active in the New York area jazz scene. In the mid-1980s he was heard on WBJB.[10]

In the late 1980s, Vincent recorded a series of jazz musician interviews for Florida-based "Backstage America," a nationally syndicated program of arts-related news and commentary.[7][11] Vincent's 15 minute "Jazzcast" segments were heard on radio stations in 17 states. He interviewed over 75 musicians for this series, including Toshiko Akiyoshi, Betty Carter, Buck Clayton, Panama Francis, Chico Hamilton, Milt Hinton, Clifford Jordan, Branford Marsalis, David "Fathead" Newman, and Sun Ra, to name a few.

Vincent's radio show received a mention in Batt Johnson's book, "What is This Thing Called Jazz?" (iUniverse, 2000). Part of Vincent's 1973 interview with bassist Gene Ramey is quoted in Richard Lawn's textbook, "Experiencing Jazz" (McGraw-Hill, 2006; Routledge, 2nd ed. 2012).

Writing

Art Vincent wrote the liner notes for several jazz albums, including:

Houston Person, "Soul Dance!" Prestige Records, original release 1969 (reissued on CD as part of the two disc set "Truth!")
Boogaloo Joe Jones, "Right On Brother" Prestige Records, original release 1970 (reissued on CD)
Ray Rivera, "Big City Blues" Zanzee Records, 1972
Tal Farlow, "Chromatic Palette" Concord Jazz, original release 1981 (reissued on CD; includes the theme music "Blue Art, Too")

References

  1. 1965 Broadcasting Yearbook, p. B-97
  2. New York Times, May 20, 1973, p. 101
  3. Billboard, Vol. 79 No. 17 April 29, 1967, p. 34
  4. Jersey Jazz, Journal of the New Jersey Jazz Society Шаблон:Webarchive, April 2008, Vol 36 Issue 34 p. 20
  5. Daily Register, May 15, 1973, p. 25
  6. Daily Register, January 21, 1974, p. 13
  7. 7,0 7,1 Asbury Park Press, January 3, 1989, p. C6
  8. Daily Register, October 15, 1974, p. 13
  9. Asbury Park Press, May 25, 1980, p. H14
  10. Down Beat, April 1984 p. 14
  11. Down Beat, January 1989