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Don Pullen
Don (* 1941) was raised in Roanoke, Virginia. Growing up in a musical family, he
learned the piano at an early age. He played with the choir in his local church.
He took some lessons in classical piano and knew little of jazz. At this time,
he was mainly aware of church music and the blues.
Don left Roanoke for Johnson C. Smith University in North Carolina to study for a medical career but soon he realized that his true vocation was music. After playing with local musicians and being exposed for the first time to albums of the major jazz musicians and composers he abandoned his medical studies. He set out to make a career in music, desirous of playing like Ornette Coleman and Eric Dolphy. In 1964 he went to Chicago for a few weeks, where he encountered Muhal Richard Abrams' philosophy of making music. He then headed for New York, where he was soon introduced to avant-garde saxophonist Giuseppi Logan, who invited Don to play piano on his two albums, Giuseppi Logan and More, both exercises in structured free playing. Subsequently, Don and Milford Graves formed a duo. Their concert at Yale University in May 1966 was recorded. They formed their own independent SRP record label (standing for "Self Reliance Project") to publish the result as two LPs. These were the first records to bear Pullen's name, second to Graves'. Although not greatly known in the United States, these avant-garde albums were well received in Europe, most copies being sold there. These recordings have never been reissued. Finding little money in playing avant-garde jazz, Don began to play the Hammond organ to extend his opportunities for work, transferring elements of his individual piano style to this instrument. During the remainder of the 1960s and early 1970s, he played with his own organ trio in clubs and bars, worked as a self-taught arranger for record companies, and accompanied various singers including Arthur Prysock, Irene Reid, Ruth Brown, Jimmy Rushing and Nina Simone. In 1972, Don briefly appeared with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. He appeared on no more commercial recordings until 1971 and 1972 when he played organ on three recordings by altoist Charles Williams, one being issued under the title of a Pullen composition, "Trees And Grass And Things". In 1973 drummer Roy Brooks introduced Don to bassist Charles Mingus, and after a brief audition he took over the vacant piano chair in the Mingus group. This gave great exposure to Don's playing and helped to persuade audiences and critics that Don was not just a free jazz player. Musical disagreements with Mingus caused Pullen to leave the group in 1975. In this year, an Italian record company gave Don, George Adams, and Dannie Richmond the opportunity to each make a recording under his own name. In 1977, Don was signed by Atlantic Records. But after two records, Don's association with Atlantic was terminated and he returned to European companies. Meanwhile, he recorded with groups led by Billy Hart (drums), Hamiet Bluiett (baritone sax), Cecil McBee (bass), Sunny Murray (drums) and Marcello Melis (bass). On the formation of the first Mingus Dynasty band Don occupied the piano chair and appeared on their recording Chair In The Sky in 1979, but he soon left the band, feeling the music had diverged too far from Mingus' intentions. In late 1979 Don, Adams, and Richmond performed as the George Adams/Don Pullen Quartet. They played music that was more structured than Don normally favored, but the immediate rapport among them led to the group touring the world with unchanged personnel until the death of Richmond in early 1988. In 1986 they signed to record for Blue Note Records. After the death of Dannie Richmond the quartet disbanded in mid-1988. On 16 December 1988 he went into the studio with Gary Peacock (bass) and Tony Williams (drums) to make his first trio album New Beginnings. In early 1990 Don added a new element to his playing and his music with the formation of his African Brazilian Connection ("ABC"). This featured Carlos Ward (alto sax), Nilson Matta (bass), Guilherme Franco and Mor Thiam (percussion) in a group which mixed African and Latin rhythms with jazz. During the last few years of his life, Don toured with his trio, with his African Brazilian Connection, and as a solo artist. As a sideman and session musician, he left his mark with a variety of noteworthy artists, including Jane Bunnett, Bill Cosby, Kip Hanrahan, David Murray's 1991 Shakill's Warrior, Maceo Parker, Ivo Perelman and Jack Walrath. He also toured and recorded with the group Roots from its inception. Don's final project was a work combining the sounds of his African Brazilian Connection, extended by Joseph Bowie on trombone, with a choir and drums of Native Americans. He began to experiment with American Indian music as late as July 1992. In early March 1995 he played on his final recording, Sacred Common Ground, a few weeks away from his death, returning to his heritage of the blues and the church. He died on 22 April 1995 of lymphoma. from Wikipedia |
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Charles Williams Mainstream Records MRL 312 released 1971 |
Charles Williams, alto sax David 'Bubba' Brooks, tenor sax Earl Dunbar jr, guitar Don Pullen, organ Gordon Edwards, bass Bill Curtis, drums |
Trees And Grass And Things Mainstream Records MRL 345 released 1971 |
Charles Williams, alto sax David 'Bubba' Brooks, tenor sax Cornell Dupree. guitar Don Pullen, piano, organ Jimmy Lewis, bass William Curtis, drums Montego Joe, percussion |
Mingus Moves Mainstream Records MRL 345 released 1974 recorded October 1973 in New York, NY/USA |
Charles Mingus, bass George Adams, tenor sax, flute Ronald Hampton, trumpet, tambourine Don Pullen, organ, piano Dannie Richmond, drums Honey Gordon, vocals Doug Hammond, vocals |
Booty Mainstream Records MRL 413 released 1974 |
Charles Williams, alto sax Chris Woods, alto sax, baritone sax Bubba Brooks, tenor sax Frank Wess, tenor sax, flute Randy Brecker, flugelhorn Cornell Dupree, guitar David Spinozza, guitar Paul Griffin, piano Don Pullen, organ Gordon Edwards, bass Clyde Lucas, drums Ray Barretto, congas David Carey, congas, marimba |
Resolution Black Saint BSR 0014 released 1978 recorded November 1977 in New York City/USA |
Hamiet Bluiett, baritone sax, flute, clarinet Don Pullen, piano, organ Fred Hopkins, bass Jabali, drums, percussion Dougoufana Famoudou Moye, percussion |
Milano Strut Black Saint BSR 0028 released 1979 recorded December 1978 in Milano/Italy |
Don Pullen, piano, organ Famoudou Don Moye, drums, percussion, congas, bells |
Decisions Timeless SJP 205 released 1984 recorded February 1984 in Monster/The Netherlands |
George Adams, tenor sax, flute Don Pullen, organ, piano Cameron Brown, bass Dannie Richmond, drums |
Conjure American Clavé 1015 released 1988 recorded September/October 1987 and January through March 1988 in New York City/USA |
Allen Toussaint, piano Don Pullen, organ, vocal Leo Nocentelli, guitar Elysee Pyronneau, guitar Johnny Watkins, guitar Lenny Picket, tenor sax Eddie Harris, tenor sax, vocal David Murray, tenor sax, vocal Hamiet Bluiett, baritone sax Olu Dara, trumpet, vocal, harmonica Fernando Saunders, bass, vocal Steve Swallow, bass Robbie Ameen, trap drums Ignacio Berroa, trap drums Manenquito Giovanni Hidalgo, congas Milton Cardona, congas Frisner Augustin, congas Ishmael Reeds, words Clare Bathé, vocals |
New York Duets EMI Music Canada 72435-24455-2-3 released 1989 recorded in New York City/USA |
Jane Bunnett, sax, flute Don Pullen, organ, piano |
Roots Revisited Minor Music MM 1015 released 1990 recorded in New York City/USA |
Maceo Parker, alto sax, piano, organ Vince Henry, alto sax Bootsy Collins, bass Bill Stewart, drums Rodney Jones, guitar Don Pullen, organ Pee Wee Ellis, tenor sax Fred Wesley, trombone |
Stablemates In+Out Records IOR 7021-2 released 1993 recorded December 1992 in Heidelberg/Germany |
Nathan Davis, soprano sax, alto sax, tenor sax Arthur Blythe, soprano sax, tenor sax Chico Freeman, soprano sax, alto sax, tenor sax Sam Rivers, alto sax, tenor sax Don Pullen, piano, Hammond B-3 organ Helmut Nieberle, guitar Helmut Kagerer, guitar Santi Debriano, bass Idris Muhhmad, drums |
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