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BOLLING, CLAUDE (b 1930 )
After first winning world-acclaim as a jazz performer,
pianist-arranger and conductor Claude Bolling wrote
music for films and backed Brigitte Bardot, Sacha
Distel, Juliette Greco and other vocalists in commercial
recording sessions. Later still, however, he was to win
even greater renown for some ingenious semi-classical
jazz essays in cross-over. Born in Cannes, Southern
France, on 10th April 1930 he has spent the greater part
of his life in Paris where, as a child prodigy, his
formative musical influences were many and varied.
After a broad initial training with the pianist, trumpeter
and percussionist Marie-Louise Bob Colin in Nice,
where he lived during the years of the Occupation, he
discovered his passion for jazz while still at school.
Strongly drawn towards ragtime and (on records) the
great early exponents of jazz piano, he was particularly
inspired by the stride style of Fats Waller. By 1944 he
was already active semi-professionally in small groups
and the following year, in Paris, won an amateur jazz
competition, organised by Jazz Jot and the Hot Club de
France.
Given his inordinate talent and avid interest,
Bollings progress as a jazzman was sure and rapid. His
youthful heroes Earl Hines and Willie The Lion Smith
were among his private tutors, while Erroll Garner was
a prominent first-hand live influence, and in 1946,
aged sixteen, he set up Les Parisiennes, an
Ellingtonesque small group whose repertoire veered
between New Orleans revival, ragtime and bebop. By
the close of 1948 he had accompanied Chippie Hill at
the Nice Festival and made his first recordings (with
Rex Stewart). The pressures of a professional career,
however, soon made him aware of a need for greater
technical proficiency, and to that end he underwent
various courses of training with Germaine Mounier
(classical piano), Lo Chauliac (jazz piano) and
Maurice Durufl (harmony), and with the Parisian
violinist, arranger, film-scorer and pioneering jazz critic
Andr Hodeir. Apart from a formal study of
counterpoint and orchestration, he found renewed
inspiration in the voluminous back-catalogue of jazz
scripture.
Associated from the early 1950s onwards in
concerts, at festivals and in the studios with top visiting
American swing-bop bands, Bolling was swiftly
recognised as a major force in jazz circles in France and
elsewhere. On and off-disc the list of his associates
reads like a post-war jazz Whos Who? and includes,
among others, Don Byas and Buck Clayton (both 1951),
Roy Eldridge (from 1950; they recorded the duo album
Wild Man Blues for Vogue in 1951), Paul Gonsalves
(recordings 1964-65) and Lionel Hampton (recordings
1953 and 1956), Thad Jones, the vocalist Carmen
McRae and Albert Nicholas (1953-55). For many years
regarded as the foremost French ragtime and boogiewoogie
pianist, Bollings own keyboard style derived at
least in part from such greats as Art Tatum and Teddy
Wilson. Admired by Louis Armstrong (Your playing
is something Ill always remember, cooed the trumpet
ace) he was also a some time protg of Duke Ellington,
another admirer of both his technical skill and feeling
for the idiom.
Often referred to as Ellingtons spiritual son, in
1959 Bolling recorded a tribute album (Claude Bolling
Plays Duke Ellington). In 1964-65 and 1969 he teamed
with Cat Anderson and in 1968 and 1969 he
recorded two solo albums. From the late 1940s
he led small groups and at intervals between 1955 until
the mid-1990s fronted his own much-vaunted orchestra.
In format essentially a big-band and generically billed
the Show Bizz Band, its varying ranks have included
such star sidemen as Grard Badini, Roger Gurin,
Claude Tissendier and Andr Villger.
From the 1960s onwards Bolling the composerarranger
also wrote prolifically for films. Best known in
that sphere for his contribution to the Alain Delon-
Jacques Deray gangster spoof Borsalino in 1970, he has
more than a hundred film and TV soundtracks to his
credit. During the early 1970s, complementing a steady
output of mainstream jazz albums, his longheld
fascination with cross-over, an interest now
enshrined in a longer series of works juxtaposing
standard classical and jazz forms and rhythms, bore
fruit.
Bollings more recent career as a performer, albeit
intermittent and secondary to composing, has also
produced some significant successes, notably in 1991,
when his collaboration with Stphane Grappelli on the
album First Class won both the Django dOr and Prix
du HCF awards. With his Show Bizz Band Bolling
toured the United States in 1989, 1991 and 1996 and
Central America in 1995 and 1998 and he has variously
joined forces with the Illinois Jacquet and Mercer
Ellington orchestras, his ongoing interest in the music
of his idol prompting him to make the first complete
recording of Ellingtons Black, Brown and Beige (1989)
and to perform, in Paris in 1996, the suite A Drum is a
Woman. In 1994, at the Caen monument, the Bolling
big-band opened a series of concerts marking the fiftieth
anniversary of D-Day. Claude Bollings list of honours
includes the Mdaille dOr Maurice Ravel and Officier
Arts et Lettres and he is a Chevalier of the French orders
Nationale du Mrite and Lgion dHonneur.
Peter Dempsey
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