ghost of miles Posted May 18, 2003 Report Posted May 18, 2003 Evidently this happened a couple of weeks ago, but I hadn't heard about it until Steve Schwartz from WGBH-Boston posted the news over on Jazz Corner. He also posted this remembrance from Bill Crow via the jazzwestcoast list: Allen was an interesting guy. A real chameleon. He could learn things faster than anyone I ever met. He went to Aspen once for his first adventure on skis, and stayed on for a while as an instructor. He entered a brand new Ferrari he had bought in New York and driven to Florida at Sebring. He won his heat, having never driven in a race before. ("I read a book about it once," he said.) When he was young, Allen fell in love with Ben Webster's playing and memorized all his solos from Duke's records. He went uptown and found the hotel where Ben was living, knocked on his door and asked if Ben would take him as a pupil. He got out his tenor and played Ben's solo on "Cottontail," sounding just like him. Ben ran down the hall and knocked on a friends door: "Come in here and hear what this little white boy is playing!" He wouldn't teach Allen, but he let him hang around, and Allen sort of became his protegé. Then Allen went to California, where he heard and fell in love with Lester Young. He changed his mouthpiece and reed and began sounding just like Lester. When he returned to NYC, he got a gig on the Street, and Ben heard about it and went down to see his boy. He couldn't believe his ears. Unfortunately, Allen's ability to learn fast was coupled with the ability to lose interest in things quickly, and he also spent a lot of his time getting high in various ways. He turned up in Provincetown while I was playing up there one summer with Zoot, and sat in with us on alto. He sounded like he was out of practice, and I think he was trying to avoid imitating Bird. Anyway, I didn't enjoy his playing as much as I had when he was playing tenor. But whenever I ran into him, it was always an enjoyable encounter, because Allen was a charming, interesting man of many talents. I hadn't heard of him for years, other that that he was living in Florida, and then last year a friend sent me a picture of him that he had taken at a jazz festival in California. RIP, Allen. Bill Crow Quote
JSngry Posted May 18, 2003 Report Posted May 18, 2003 By all accounts, Eager was indeed a most interesting character. I keep finding references to him having played with Frank Zappa in the early days of the Mothers. Anybody know more about this? Also intersting is an interview he did with Cadence in the 70s where he humorously tells of having enrolled in a Jazz Studies program somewhere recently, and was met with skepticism and disdain by the students because he "couldn't play"! I can imagine the scenario - this old mellow guy playing Prezbop showing up in the middle of a bunch of careerminded Clonetranes. It would be funnt if it weren't so damned true... R.I.P. Mr. Eager - you lived your life to the fullest. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted May 18, 2003 Report Posted May 18, 2003 (edited) The Uptown cd will be available within the next couple of weeks. It is a package similar to the Uptown Mingus project, with a big booklet outside the jewel box. It contains 2 interviews with Eager by Ira Gitler and Bob Sunenblick. The music is astounding - Duels with Serge Chaloff, a quartet date with Dick Twardzik and an apartment jam with Bird. Mr E was looking forward to this release to reintroduce himself to the world, and his (almost) new home in California. Edited May 19, 2003 by Chuck Nessa Quote
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