Charlie Parker at 100: What to Read, Watch and Dig


"Charlie Parker’s brief swing through this world kicked off a century ago on Saturday with his birth in Kansas City, Kan. Eleven years later, he would take up the saxophone. A couple of years after that, inspired by the hot bands tearing up K.C. in the ’30s, the man who was later known as Bird dedicated himself to his instrument, the alto, woodshedding for 11 to 15 hours a day, he would later say. A decade later, the complexity, beauty and 'tommy-gun velocity' (as Stanley Crouch once put it) of his improvisations would hasten jazz’s departure from the dance hall. With his bebop cohort of Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach and others, Bird declared 'Now’s the Time,' thrilling audiences and scarifying critics, who mostly took a while to catch up to the advanced harmonics and polyrhythms. His brash modernism jolted New York and then the world. And then, just 34 years into a life of epochal consequence, Parker died, his body ravaged by appetites as outsized as his genius. ..."
NY Times (Video)
Discogs: 100 Reasons We Love Charlie Parker For His 100th Birthday (Video)
PBS - Celebrating Bird: The Triumph of Charlie Parker (Video)
Charlie Parker - The 1949 Downbeat Interview
A Bird’s Life: How Charlie Parker Changed The Course Of Jazz History (Video/Audio)

Charlie Parker at Jimbo’s Bop City, 1950s.

2011 July: Charlie Parker and Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, et al 1950, 2012 July: The Charlie Parker Story, 2014 May: Afro-Cuban jazz, 2014 December: The Complete Savoy and Dial Studio Recordings 1944-1948, 2017 February: Bird in Boston · Live at the Hi-Hat 1953-1954, 2018 February: Bop City, 2019 November: What Is Bebop? Deconstructing Jazz Music’s Most Influential Development

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