Bud Powell lyrics
Artist · 423 792 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Jazz Giant
2001 · album
The Amazing Bud Powell
2001 · album
Time Waits (Vol. 4)
1999 · album
Ultimate Bud Powell
1998 · album
Bud Plays Bird
1996 · album
Strictly Powell
1995 · album
Bud Powell In Paris
1995 · album
The Complete Bud Powell On Verve
1994 · album
The Best Of Bud Powell On Verve
1994 · compilation
Compact Jazz
1993 · album
Ups and Downs
1991 · album
The Best Of Bud Powell
1989 · compilation
Jazz Giant
1988 · album
Sonny Stitt, Bud Powell, J.J. Johnson
1982 · compilation
Piano Jazz: Bud Powell
2023 · album
1962 Stockholm-Oslo
2021 · album
The Art of the Piano, Vol. 3
2021 · album
1962 Copenhagen
2021 · album
Blue Notes III, Vol. 7
2021 · album
Live in Essen, Grugahalle, 1960
2010 · album
Honky Tonk Nights
2009 · single
Don't Break My Heart
2008 · single
The Scene Changes (Remastered)
2007 · album
The Very Best
2005 · album
Mad Bebop
2004 · album
The Amazing Bud Powell, Bud!
2002 · album
The Return Of Bud Powell
1964 · album
A Portrait of Thelonious
1965 · album
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Biography
One of the giants of the jazz piano, Bud Powell changed the way that virtually all post-swing pianists play their instruments. He did away with the left-hand striding that had been considered essential earlier and used his left hand to state chords on an irregular basis. His right often played speedy single-note lines, essentially transforming Charlie Parker's vocabulary to the piano (although he developed parallel to "Bird"). Tragically, Bud Powell was a seriously ill genius. After being encouraged and tutored to an extent by his friend Thelonious Monk at jam sessions in the early '40s, Powell was with Cootie Williams' orchestra during 1943-1945. In a racial incident, he was beaten on the head by police; Powell never fully recovered and would suffer from bad headaches and mental breakdowns throughout the remainder of his life. Despite this, he recorded some true gems during 1947-1951 for Roost, Blue Note, and Verve, composing such major works as "Dance of the Infidels," "Hallucinations" (also known as "Budo"), "Un Poco Loco," "Bouncing with Bud," and "Tempus Fugit." Even early on, his erratic behavior resulted in lost opportunities (Charlie Parker supposedly told Miles Davis that he would not hire Powell because "he's even crazier than me!"), but Powell's playing during this period was often miraculous. A breakdown in 1951 and hospitalization that resulted in electroshock treatments weakened him, but Powell was still capable of playing at his best now and then, most notably at the 1953 Massey Hall Concert. Generally in the 1950s his Blue Notes find him in excellent form, while he is much more erratic on his Verve recordings. His warm welcome and lengthy stay in Paris (1959-1964) extended his life a bit, but even here Powell spent part of 1962-1963 in the hospital. He returned to New York in 1964, disappeared after a few concerts, and did not live through 1966. In later years, Bud Powell's recordings and performances could be so intense as to be scary, but other times he sounded quite sad. However, his influence on jazz (particularly up until the rise of McCoy Tyner and Bill Evans in the 1960s) was very strong and he remains one of the greatest jazz pianists of all time. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi