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Claude Bolling, French pianist who melded jazz and classical music, dies at 90
Claude Bolling, a French pianist, composer and bandleader who became one of the most successful jazz musicians in Europe and gained a devoted following across the Atlantic with his pleasing fusions of the jazz and classical traditions, died Dec. 29 in Garches, a suburb of Paris. He was 90.
A devotee since childhood of Duke Ellington, Fats Waller and other eminences of American jazz, Mr. Bolling grew up listening to their music on the radio until World War II intervened. “Jazz was all but banned by the Nazis in my country,” he told the Hartford Courant. “So I got most of my jazz from 78 rpm recordings.”
Mr. Bolling said Ellington took him in “as part of his family” when they met in the 1960s, by which time the Frenchman had embarked on his career as a bandleader. Describing the effect of Mr. Bolling’s music, trumpeter Louis Armstrong was reputed to have declared that “my heart will never forget the sounds he made.”
Those sounds were not daring — Mr. Bolling generally hewed to traditional jazz — but they won him steady audiences in Europe and the United States for decades.
Beyond his tours and recordings, Mr. Bolling was a prolific composer of scores for French TV and films such as “Borsalino” (1970), a gangster movie set in 1930s Marseilles and starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Alain Delon, and “Le Magnifique” (1973), a sendup of espionage sagas featuring Belmondo and Jacqueline Bisset. In the pop genre, Mr. Bolling arranged music for Brigitte Bardot and Juliette GrΓ©co, among other French stars of the day.
In the United States, he was best known for his crossover compositions, which he recorded with classical musicians including flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal, cellist Yo-Yo Ma and pianist Emanuel Ax. Writing in the New York Times in 1982, music critic Allan Kozinn described Mr. Bolling as “the leader of the pack in the crossover world.”
Many musical purists looked down on the genre, disdaining renditions of Bach on the synthesizer and performances by Luciano Pavarotti in which the Italian tenor sweatily belted out Neapolitan standards. Mr. Bolling distinguished himself, Kozinn observed, because “rather than tamper with the standards,” he created works of his one.
“Mr. Bolling’s compositional strategy involves giving his classical soloist a through-composed part, written in a style replete with Baroque and classical gestures and allusions to the featured instrument’s repertory and idiomatic uses,” Kozinn wrote. Meanwhile, “his own piano, bass and percussion trio interacts with a lightweight jazz counterpoint. It is a formula that seems to have been consistently successful.”
Mr. Bolling’s most famous crossover number was his “Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano,” recorded with Rampal on a 1975 album that was nominated for a Grammy for best chamber music performance. The album became one of the top-selling classical recordings of all time, landing on the Billboard charts and staying there for 10 years.
Mr. Bolling received Grammy nominations in 1979 for his album “Suite for Violin and Jazz Piano,” recorded with violinist Pinchas Zukerman, and in 1987 for “Suite No. 2 for Flute and Jazz Piano Trio,” again with Rampal.
His melding of jazz and classical music succeeded, he said, because he kept to his lane and allowed his classical collaborators to stay in theirs.
“There are no syncopations, no blue-notes and no jazz feeling in their parts,” he told Kozinn. “Those things are reserved for the piano, bass and drums. Have I ever been tempted to stretch their parts into jazz? No. Why should I? It would spoil the contrast.
“As classical players, these musicians are so good, and they handle melody and expression so beautifully,” he continued. “Yet, they rarely have the opportunity to do that with new pieces, because contemporary classical music is — well, you know what it is. So, although I began writing these pieces just for fun, I now realize that they serve another purpose. They allow these performers to add new material in a classical style to their repertories, music with plenty of melody and, because of the jazz element, a new kind of sound.”
Claude Bolling was born in Cannes, on the French Riviera, on April 10, 1930. His father was a hotel manager.
Except for a wartime sojourn in Nice, Mr. Bolling spent much of his upbringing in Paris, where he said he gained an appreciation of jazz at nightclubs and music halls. He told the Jerusalem Post that by the time he developed an interest in classical music he was too old to enroll at the conservatory and therefore pursued private lessons.
In his teens, he won a prize from the Hot Club de France, an organization founded to promote jazz in France. According to his website, he formed his first orchestra at 16 and was 18 when he made his first record.
In the early years of his career, he performed with visiting American jazz musicians including cornetist Rex Stewart, trumpeter Buck Clayton and vibraphonist Lionel Hampton. Such was his allegiance to Ellington that the French writer Boris Vian dubbed Mr. Bolling “Bollington.”
He first experimented with crossover music in 1970, when he was invited to perform an original composition on television. He proposed a four-hands performance with a friend of his, the classical pianist Jean-Bernard Pommier, and the two concluded that the combination of their talents worked.
The Guardian reported that Mr. Bolling’s wife, IrΓ¨ne Dervize-Sadyker, died in 2017 after nearly six decades of marriage, and that his survivors include two sons, David and Alexandre.
Mr. Bolling jokingly described some classical music disciples as “more royalist than the king when it comes to claiming a superiority over jazz.” For his own part, he was little concerned with the labels others put on his opus.
“What people say the music is, or is not, does not disturb me,” he told Kozinn. “I’m not writing pieces that are very concerned with . . . presenting the image of genius. I am only writing music for fun. I try to maintain a certain level of taste and quality, of course. But my main purpose is to make the musicians happy, and if possible, to make the audience happy too.”
MF Doom, the masked rapper, died in October, family announces on Instagram
Dumile posted an Instagram message to her husband, real name Daniel Dumile, with the New Year’s Eve revelation stating the elusive rapper had “transitioned October 31, 2020.” The influential rapper was the force behind beloved hip-hop albums “Mm..Food” and his collaboration with Madlib, “Madvillainy.”
“The greatest husband, father, teacher, student, business partner, lover and friend I could ever ask for. Thank you for all the things you have shown, taught and given to me, our children and our family. Thank you for teaching me how to forgive beings and give another chance, not to be so quick to judge and write off,” Jasmine Dumile wrote. “Thank you for showing how not to be afraid to love and be the best person I could ever be. My world will never be the same without you.”
Rolling Stone confirmed the rapper’s death with MF Doom’s representative Richie Abbott. No further information on the cause of death was available.
USA TODAY has reached out to his representatives for comment.
His wife’s Instagram post also addressed the tragic death of the couple’s son Malachi in 2017.
“Words will never express what you and Malachi mean to me,” Jasmine wrote. “I love both and adore you always.”
The hip-hop world reacted in shock to the news. Rapper QTIP tweeted Thursday, “RIP to another Giant your favorite MC’s MC .. MF DOOM!! crushing news ...”
Rapper El-P tweeted, “MF DOOM FOREVER.”
Rapper ScHoolboy Q tweeted, ”Damn. NOT DOOM HOMIE.”
The private rapper Dumile (pronounced doom-ee-lay) wore a mask — onstage and in public — modeled after the Marvel comic book villain Doctor Doom, which he unveiled with the 1999 album “Operation: Doomsday.”
“I wanted to get onstage and orate, without people thinking about the normal things people think about,” he told Ta-Nehisi Coates in a 2009 profile titled “The Mask of Metal Face Doom” for the The New Yorker. ”Like girls being like, ‘Oh, he’s sexy,’ or ‘I don’t want him, he’s ugly,’ and then other dudes sizing you up. A visual always brings a first impression. But if there’s going to be a first impression, I might as well use it to control the story. So why not do something like throw a mask on?”
In March, MF Doom tweeted a message letting fans knowing to take COVID-19 precautions seriously. ”DOOM STAY IN QUARANTINE” he wrote in an Instagram post.