Al Jarreau, singer who spanned jazz, pop and R'n'B worlds, dies at 76
12 February 2017
by Margalit Fox, Peter Keepnews & Jack Kadden
Al Jarreau, a versatile vocalist who sold millions of records and won a string of Grammys for his work in pop and R&B as well as his first love, jazz, died on Sunday, 12 February 2017, in Los Angeles. He was 76.
12 February 2017
by Margalit Fox, Peter Keepnews & Jack Kadden
Al Jarreau, a versatile vocalist who sold millions of records and won a string of Grammys for his work in pop and R&B as well as his first love, jazz, died on Sunday, 12 February 2017, in Los Angeles. He was 76.
His death was announced by
his manager, Joe Gordon, who said that Mr. Jarreau had been hospitalized for exhaustion two weeks ago. On the advice
of his doctors, he had canceled his tour dates and retired from touring.
Mr. Jarreau did not begin a
full-time musical career until he was nearly 30, but within a few years he had
begun attracting notice for a vocal
style that was both instantly appealing and highly unusual. Critics were
particularly taken by his improvisational
dexterity, in particular his virtuosic ability to produce an array of
vocalizations ranging from delicious nonsense to clicks and growls to
quasi-instrumental sounds.
Although he made his
initial mark in the jazz world, Mr. Jarreau’s style, and his audience, crossed
stylistic barriers. His music incorporated elements of pop, soul, gospel, Latin
and other genres. It was a mark of his eclecticism
that he won six Grammys across three different categories: jazz, pop and
R&B. He was also among the performers on a Grammy-winning children’s album,
“In Harmony: A Sesame Street Record.”
If Mr. Jarreau’s highly
accessible, intensely personal style defied easy classification, that very
accessibility — and, perhaps, the mere fact of his considerable commercial
success — left some jazz purists skeptical.
Reviewing a concert by Mr.
Jarreau at the Savoy in New York in 1981,
Stephen Holden of The New York Times encapsulated what many saw as both the
pros and the cons of Mr. Jarreau’s singular style:
“Al Jarreau may be the most
technically gifted singer working in jazz-fusion today,” Mr. Holden wrote. Of
the evening’s performance, however, he continued: “Mr. Jarreau’s concert lacked
the emotional range of great jazz. He is such a prodigious talent that the
absence of even the slightest blues inflections kept his music from cutting
deeply.”
But critics’ reservations
never deterred Mr. Jarreau, who prided himself, as he told The Los Angeles
Times in 1986, on his “jazz attitude,” which he defined as “the idea of being
open to each and every moment as a chance to create something different.”
“I try to be receptive,” he
added, “and to be listening, and to not be afraid to try something new.”
Alwin
Lopez Jarreau was born in Milwaukee on 12 March 1940, into a
musical family. His father, a minister, was a fine singer; his mother played
the piano in church. Young Al began singing at 4, harmonizing with his
siblings. As a youth he sang in church, as well as with street-corner harmony groups and local jazz bands.
Mr. Jarreau earned a
bachelor’s degree in psychology from
Ripon College in Wisconsin in 1962,
and a master’s in vocational rehabilitation from the University of Iowa in
1964. Afterward he moved to San Francisco, where he worked as a rehabilitation counselor for people
with disabilities.
But Mr. Jarreau found he
could not resist the pull of jazz and before long was singing in local nightclubs. By the late ’60s, he had quit his day job and embarked on a nightclub career, first on the West Coast
and eventually in New York.
He reached a national
audience with the album “We got by,” released by
Warner Bros. in 1975 to critical praise and commercial
success.
Though advertised as his
debut, it was actually his second album.
A decade earlier, Mr. Jarreau had quietly recorded an album, later released on
the Bainbridge label under the title
“1965.” Though Mr. Jarreau took legal action, without
success, to block its belated release in 1982, it is esteemed by jazz
connoisseurs today.
Appearances on “Saturday
Night Live” and other television shows raised his profile, as did extensive
touring. In 1981 he had his biggest hit with the song “We’re in this love together,” which reached No. 15 on the Billboard pop singles
chart.
He won his first Grammy in 1978, for best jazz vocal performance, for his album “Look to the rainbow.”
He won his last in 2007, for best traditional R&B vocal performance; the
award was shared by Mr. Jarreau, George
Benson and Jill Scott for their collaborative performance “God bless the child.”
In between, in 1982, Mr. Jarreau earned a Grammy for
best pop vocal performance by a male artist for the title track of his album “Breakin’ away.” That year, he also received the Grammy for best
jazz vocal performance by a male artist, for his version of Dave Brubeck’s “Blue
Rondo à la Turk,” from the same album.
His other Grammys came in 1979 for the album “All Fly Home” (in
the jazz category), and in 1993 for
the album “Heaven and earth” (in R&B). A seventh Grammy came in 1981 for “In Harmony: A Sesame Street
Record,” a compilation children’s album that featured a range of artists.
Among Mr. Jarreau’s
best-known recordings was the theme song for the long-running television
series ‘Moonlighting,’ for
which he wrote the lyrics to Lee Holdridge’s music. He appeared on Broadway as
a replacement in the role of the Teen Angel in the 1994 revival of “Grease.”
Mr. Jarreau’s first
marriage, to Phyllis Hall, ended in divorce. He is survived by his wife, the
former Susan Player; a son, Ryan; two brothers, Marshall and Appie; and a
sister, Rose Marie Freeman.
Mr. Jarreau canceled a
number of concert dates in 2010 after experiencing heart and breathing problems
during a European tour. He was hospitalized for 11 days but resumed his touring
schedule after his release, and had continued to perform until recently.
Shortly after his 2010
hospitalization, he said in an interview that his health problems had not been
as serious as reports suggested, but joked that he appreciated the attention
they received in the media because it proved that he was a celebrity. “I
figured,” he said, “‘Yeah, maybe I have arrived.’”
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