Smithsonian Jazz


Jazz Oral Histories


Welcome! These transcriptions of oral histories of NEA Jazz Masters are part of the Smithsonian Jazz Oral History Program. Established by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History in 1992, the Program seized the opportunity to document more than one hundred senior jazz musicians, performers, relatives, and business associates. Each interview was conducted by a jazz authority and was recorded on digital audiotape by a professional audio engineer. The interviews average six hours in length and cover a wide range of topics including early years, initial involvement in music, generally, and jazz specifically, as well as experiences in the jazz music world, including relationships to musicians.

NEA logoThe National Endowment for the Arts supported transcribing these interviews and posting them to this website. For more information on NEA Jazz Masters, click here.

For more information on the Smithsonian Jazz Oral History Program collection, click here. For information on the museum’s Archives Center, where the collection is housed, visit http://americanhistory.si.edu/archives/home.htm.

Oral histories on this page include: David Baker, Danny Barker, Louie Bellson, Dave Brubeck, Frank Foster, Chico Hamilton, Roy Haynes, Nat Hentoff, Quincy Jones, J.J. Johnson, John Levy, James Moody, Dan Morgenstern, Marian McPartland, Jimmy Scott, Artie Shaw, Dr. Billy Taylor, Clark Terry

David Baker Recorded June 19-21, 2000

audio Complete Transcript (152 pages) View PDF

David Baker

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
David Baker on Lincoln University
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
David Baker on Freddie Freeloader

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
David Baker on playing at the Five Spot and looking like Thelonious Monk (Part I)

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
David Baker on playing at the Five Spot and looking like Thelonious Monk
(Part II)
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:
David Baker on coming to Indiana University

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 6:
David Baker on imitation-assimilation-innovation

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 7:
David Baker on street musicians recognizing Jamey Aebersold

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 8:
"It's why I worked very hard...to get us in a situation where we're not perceived of as special"

MP3 | Windows Media

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Danny Barker Recorded July 21-23, 1992

audio Complete Transcript (106 pages) View PDF

Danny Barker

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Danny Barker on encountering Sidney Bechet.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
Danny Barker tells how he bought his first Ukulele.

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
Danny Barker discusses the circumstances of moving to New York City for the first time.

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
Danny Barker talks about his first experiences in New York City.

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:
Danny Barker on his relationship with Jelly Roll Morton.

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 6:
Danny Barker on working with Jelly Roll Morton for the first time.

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 7:
Danny Barker on David Jones influencing Coleman Hawkins.

MP3 | Windows Media

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Louie Bellson October 20-21, 2005

audio Complete Transcript (108 pages) View PDF

Louie Bellson

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Louie Bellson on joining Benny Goodman’s band.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
Louie Bellson on joining Duke Ellington’s band.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
Louie Bellson on learning Ellington music with no drum charts.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
Louie Bellson on giving his first arrangement to Duke Ellington..
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:
Louie Bellson on meeting his wife Pearl Bailey.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 6:
Louie Bellson on playing Benny Carter’s difficult arrangement of Errol Gardner’s performance of For Once In My Life.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 7:
Louie Bellson on performing with Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 8:
Louie Bellson tells how Louis Armstrong joked with him and Pearl Bailey.
MP3 | Windows Media

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Dave Brubeck August 6-7, 2007

audio Complete Transcript (84 pages) View PDF

Dave Brubeck

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Dave Brubeck discusses meeting Stan Kenton for the first time.
MP3

Clip 2:
Dave Brubeck talks about playing at the Band Box club.
MP3 

Clip 3:
Dave Brubeck describes the difficulty of getting a phone after WWII.
MP3 

Clip 4:
Dave Brubeck discusses his move from Fantasy to Columbia Records.
MP3

Clip 5:
Dave Brubeck describes how Joe Morello joined his quartet.
MP3

Clip 6:
Dave Brubeck talks about the inspiration for Blue Rondo a la Turk.
MP3

Clip 7:
Dave Brubeck talks about when he told his parents of his ambitions to be a musician.
MP3 

Clip 8:
Dave Brubeck describes when he performed for Mikhail Gorbachev.
MP3

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Frank Foster Recorded September 24-25, and November 22, 1998

audio Complete Transcript (166 pages) View PDF

Frank Foster

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Frank Foster on his musical inspiration.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
Frank Foster on the names of his songs for the album Manhattan Fever.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
Frank Foster describes playing at Indianapolis’s Sunset Terrace with the Wilberforce Collegians and Sarah Vaughan sitting in.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
Frank Foster gives his definition of Hard-Bop.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:
Frank Foster on joining Count Basie’s band.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 6:
Frank Foster on being awe-struck by Count Basie.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 7:
Frank Foster discusses playing for segregated audiences.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 8:
Frank Foster on how Basie would fine members of the bands.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 9:
Frank Foster talks through his composition Four, Five, Six.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 10:
Frank Foster describes the different kinds of ‘shakes’.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 11:
Frank Fosters talks about pranks from members of the Basie band.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 12:
Frank Foster tells a funny story about Joe Williams.
MP3 | Windows Media

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Chico Hamilton January 9-10, 2006

audio Complete Transcript (153 pages) View PDF

Dave Brubeck

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Chico Hamilton describes the challenge of time keeping.
MP3

Clip 2:
Chico Hamilton discusses meeting Dexter Gordon.
MP3 

Clip 3:
Chico Hamilton discusses drummer Jo Jones and the Count Basie Orchestra.
MP3 

Clip 4:
Chico Hamilton talks about drummer Art Blakely with the Billy Eckstein Orchestra.
MP3

Clip 5:
Chico Hamilton discusses his encounter with Illinois Jacquet.
MP3

Clip 6:
Chico Hamilton discusses meeting Larry Coryell.
MP3

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Roy Haynes May 15, 1994

audio Complete Transcript (72 pages) View PDF

Dave Brubeck

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Roy Haynes describes how he avoided being drafted to the Army.
MP3

Clip 2:
Roy Haynes discusses the culture of Harlem and New York City.
MP3 

Clip 3:
Roy Haynes talks about playing at the Apollo Theater.
MP3 

Clip 4:
Roy Haynes tells what Lester Young calls a job.
MP3

Clip 5:
Roy Haynes wants Sonny Rollins to call him back.
MP3

Clip 6:
Roy Haynes describes being misunderstood as a drummer.
MP3

Clip 7:
Roy Haynes talks about John Coltrane.
MP3

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Nat Hentoff February 17-18, 2007

audio Complete Transcript (73 pages) View PDF

Nat Hentoff

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Listen.

Clip 1:
Nat Hentoff discusses George Frazier.
MP3

Clip 2:
Nat Hentoff discusses interviewing Malcolm X.
MP3

Clip 3:
Nat Hentoff talks about interviewing Bob Dylan.
MP3

Clip 4:
Nat Hentoff on expressing individuality.
MP3

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J.J. Johnson Recorded February 26-27, 1994

audio Complete Transcript (116 pages) View PDF

J.J. Johnson

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
J.J. Johnson on being articulate

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
"I am not at all preoccupied with speed"

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
J.J. Johnson on opening for Coleman Hawkins at the Three Deuces

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
J.J. Johnson on Dizzy Gillespie

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:

J.J. Johnson on Miles Davis' caring nature

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 6:

J.J. Johnson on why he bought his first car and the reason behind it, a great JJ and Kai Winding story

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 7:
J.J. Johnson on the red Ferrari and Miles Davis

MP3 | Windows Media

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Quincy Jones Recorded September 7, 2008

audio Complete Transcript (41 pages) View PDF

Artie Shaw

audio Audio Coming Soon.

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John Levy Recorded December 10-11, 2006

audio Complete Transcript (77 pages) View PDF

John Levy

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
John Levy on friendships and segregation
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
John Levy on how he learned bass

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
John Levy on entering the world of music

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
"The president of the black musician's union called..."

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:
John Levy on Duke Ellington

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 6:
John Levy on the publishing business

MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 7:
John Levy on Wilson Pickett

MP3 | Windows Media



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James Moody August 19-20, 1993

audio Complete Transcript (123 pages) View PDF

James Moody

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Listen

Clip 1:
James Moody talks about when he became interested in music.
MP3

Clip 2:
James Moody discusses being drafted into the Air Force and learning that white German prisoners of war had more rights than Negro American soldiers.
MP3 

Clip 3:
Moody pretends to be Milt Shaw's valet in order to get a bath.
MP3 

Clip 4:
The circumstances under which Moody recorded Moody's Mood for
Love and found out he had a hit
MP3

Clip 5:
Jazz at the Philharmonic with Moody, Clark Terry, and T-Bone
Walker: "Woman, you must be crazy."
MP3

Clip 6:
James Moody tells a few stories about his relationship with Dizzy Gillespie.
MP3

Clip 7:
James Moody talks about his favorite musicians.
MP3 

Clip 8:
James Moody describes how he would like to be remembered.
MP3

Clip 9:
James Moody talks about his first recorded solo.
MP3 

Clip 10:
James Moody discusses what he could do if he could do anything.
MP3 

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Dan Morgenstern March 28-29, 2007

audio Complete Transcript (73 pages) View PDF

Dan Morgenstern

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Audio Clips Coming Soon.

Clip 1:
Dan Morgenstern describes how his family newspaper was taken away by the Nazis.
MP3

Clip 2:
Dan Morgenstern describes escaping from Austria to Denmark.
MP3 

Clip 3:
Dan Morgenstern remembers his first encounter with jazz.
MP3 

Clip 4:
Dan Morgenstern describes jazz in Denmark.
MP3

Clip 5:
Dan Morgenstern describes escaping to Sweden Part I.
MP3

Clip 6:
Escaping to Sweden Part II.
MP3

Clip 7:
Dan Morgenstern talks about becoming interested in jazz after the war.
MP3 

Clip 8:
Dan Morgenstern discusses how he began collecting jazz books.
MP3

Clip 9:
Dan Morgenstern talks about meeting and becoming friends with Tad Dameron.
MP3 

Clip 10:
Dan Morgenstern describes booking Art Tatum for his first solo piano concert.
MP3 

Clip 11:
Dan Morgenstern describes discovering a record of Coleman Hawkins singing.
MP3 

Clip 12:
Dan Morgenstern describes his interview with Ornette Coleman.
MP3 

Clip 10:
Dan Morgenstern discusses his role as the editor of Downbeat.
MP3 

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Marian McPartland Recorded January 3-4, 1997
and May 26, 1998

audio Complete Transcript (159 pages) View PDF

Marian McPartland

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Marian McPartland on audiences talking while she plays

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 2:
Marian McPartland on perforaming with Coleman Hawkins and Roy Eldridge

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 3:
Marian McPartland on talking to an audience

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 4:
Marian McPartland on Thelonious Monk

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 5:

Marian McPartland on original vs. familiar tunes

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 6:

Marian McPartland on Ray Charles

Real Audio | Windows Media

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Jimmy Scott Recorded September 23-24, 2008

audio Complete Transcript (62 pages) View PDF

Artie Shaw

click to enlarge

Photo by Tom Pich, courtesy of the National Endowment for the Arts

audio Audio Coming Soon.

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Artie Shaw Recorded October 7-8, 1992

audio Complete Transcript (91 pages) View PDF

Artie Shaw

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Artie Shaw on Begin the Beguine

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 2:
Artie Shaw on a recording trick

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 3:
Artie Shaw on hiring Billie Holiday

Real Audio | Windows Media

Clip 4:
Artie Shaw on hiring Billy Butterfield

Real Audio | Windows Media

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Dr. Billy Taylor November 19, 1993

audio Complete Transcript (111 pages) View PDF

James Moody

audio Listen

Clip 1:
Dr. Billy Taylor describes his first paying gig as a jazz musician.
MP3

Clip 2:
Dr. Billy Taylor discusses his motivation to play the piano as a kid.
MP3 

Clip 3:
Dr. Billy Taylor discusses Jelly Roll Morton in Washington, DC.
MP3 

Clip 4:
Dr. Billy Taylor talks about first learning of Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker.
MP3

Clip 5:
Dr. Billy Taylor remembers picking his major in college.
MP3

Clip 6:
Dr. Billy Taylors recalls how his father secretly supported his college education.
MP3

Clip 7:
Dr. Billy Taylor remembers moving to New York for the first time.
MP3 

Clip 8:
Dr. Billy Taylor talks about moving to New York and going straight to Minton’s and playing with Ben Webster.
MP3

Clip 9:
Dr. Billy Taylor describes auditioning for Ben Webster and meeting Art Tatum at the same time.
MP3 

Clip 10:
Dr. Billy Taylor describes his relationship with Charlie Parker Part I.
MP3 

Clip 11:
Dr. Billy Taylor discusses his relationship with Charlie Parker Part II.
MP3 

Clip 12:
Dr. Billy Taylor describes how he came to name one of Dizzy Gillespie’s tunes.
MP3 

Clip 13:
Dr. Billy Taylor discusses the impact of Charlie Parker’s death on the jazz community.
MP3 

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Clark Terry Recorded June 15 and 22, 1999

audio Complete Transcript (140 pages) View PDF

Clark Terry

audio Listen:

Clip 1:
Clark Terry on being late to Ellington engagement.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 2:
Clark Terry talking about opening with the George Hudson band for Illinois Jacquet.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 3:
Clark Terry tells how he accidentally insulted Duke Ellington.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 4:
Clark Terry talks about playing high notes.
MP3 | Windows Media

Clip 5:

Clark Terry describes how Jimmie and Ernie Wilkins joined Count Basie’s band.
MP3 | Windows Media

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