Joe Temperley’s Ageless Sax
The Scottish baritone saxophone musician recalls his 60-year career and the famous singers he’s accompanied
- By Jeff Greenwald
- Smithsonian.com, October 13, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
There were two watersheds in Temperley’s New York career. The first came in 1974, when the Rev. John Gensel—known as “The Shepherd of the Night Flock” for his close ties to the jazz community—asked Joe to play at Harry Carney’s funeral. Carney had blown the baritone sax for Duke Ellington and was one of Joe’s heroes. “My main influence was—and still is—the Duke Ellington Orchestra,” says Joe. “That has always been my prime motivation for playing music, for playing jazz.”
Temperley’s performance gripped the mourners—including Mercer Ellington, who’d taken his late father’s place as band leader (Duke himself had died that May).
“A couple of weeks later, Mercer called me,” says Joe. “And invited me into the Duke Ellington Orchestra.”
Though Temperley left Ellington in 1984, he kept coming back—to tour Japan, and perform for two years in the Broadway run of Sophisticated Ladies. But his second real triumph came in late 1988, when he joined Wynton Marsalis and the newly created Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.
At rehearsal, I ask Marsalis what makes Temperley so attractive.
“With Joe, there's just the sound—and the integrity in the sound, the originality of it.” Marsalis shakes his head. “When you hear his sound you love him automatically, because it's so full of warmth and soul and feeling. It's like a warm voice.”
“Joe’s sound represents the history of jazz music,” agrees Victor Goines, a tenor sax player who’s been with JLCO nearly as long as Joe. “When you hear him, you hear everyone who came before him. All in one person. He’s someone who's willing to share with everyone else—and at the same time he can always express his own opinion in his own, very unique way.”
“So in a crowded room,” I ask, “would you recognize Joe’s sound?”
“Yes,” Goines answers, unhesitating. “In two notes.”
Though Jazz at Lincoln Center has been Joe’s gig for 23 years, it never gets less challenging.
“Most bands have a repertoire; they play the stuff they're famous for,” says Temperley. “The Ellington Orchestra used to do that. But JLCO plays different concerts every night. And we never know what we're going to play, because Wynton picks out the music at the last minute! When we tour this fall we'll take maybe 100 arrangements with us.”
When I ask if there’s a composer he finds the most challenging, Joe nods rapidly. “Yeah. Wynton Marsalis! He writes wonderful music. And Wynton’s written a lot of long pieces. He wrote The Vitoria Suite, which has about 12 movements, inspired by Basque music and flamenco music. And he's written a jazz symphony, Swing Symphony he calls it, which we premiered in 2010 with the Berlin Philharmonic.”
“Are Wynton’s pieces challenging because of their length or their difficulty?”
“Their length,” Joe says philosophically. “And their difficulty.”
What’s it like, I wonder, to work alongside one of the greatest musical minds in America?
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Comments (3)
I have been working as an usher in the festival theatre in Edinburgh at the jazz festival. The world jazz orchestra played, Single Petal of a Rose, with Joe Temperley and a pianist. The tears were pouring out of my eyes, and l am still moved by how perfect the sound and feeling were. I won't forget that..
Posted by denise marr on July 28,2012 | 08:55 PM
Why is there no mention of Joe's present wife of over 20 years, the lovely Laurie???? She supports him in all his endeavors and is his muse.
Posted by Eleanor Lechner on October 27,2011 | 01:41 PM
Joe Temperely's playing "A single petal of a rose" is just sublime! What a marvelous sound and what a treasure he is.
Posted by Roland A. Krauss on October 17,2011 | 02:33 PM