Lionel
HamptonOne great jazz
musician was Lionel Hampton. Lionel was a bandleader,
actor, jazz vibraphonist and percussionist. He has worked
with other famous jazz musicians such as Buddy Rich, Quincy
Jones and Charlie Parker. Lionel was raised by his
grandmother in the south before he relocated to Chicago. In
the 1920's he started playing the xylophone and drums. His
first instrument was the fife drum.
When he was a teenager he played drums for the Chicago Defender
Newsboy's band. When he lived in California, he played for the
Dixieland Blue-Blowers. The first band that he recorded with
was The Quality Serenaders, then he left again to go play with
another band, Les Hite band. It was here that he began studying
the vibraphone. Louis Armstrong asked Lionel to play the
vibraphones on two songs. That is when he made the vibraphone a
popular instrument.
While still with the Les Hite band, Lionel went to the
University of Southern California taking music. He also worked
with the Nat Shilkrer orchestra. In 1936 he was in the film
Pennies From Heaven, starring Bing Crosby. He was next to Louis
Armstrong, but hid himself by wearing a mask when he was
playing the drums.
In 1936 he was fortunate to meet Benny Goodman who came to
watch him perform. Benny asked him to join his trio which
consisted of Benny, Gene Krupa and Teddy Wilson. It was then
renamed the Benny Goodman Quartet. The year before, Lionel
worked with Billie Holiday with Benny's orchestra. This group
of artists was one of the first integrated jazz groups that
performed openly in society.
Lionel recorded with several groups while still with Benny
Goodman, but in 1940 he left to create his own big band.
Lionel's orchestra was a hit in the '40s and 50's. "Flying
Home" featured a Illinois Jacquet solo that began a new style
of music, R&B. The song was so popular that he did another
version called "Flying Home, Number Two", with Arnett Cobb.
Lionel's music was a mixture of jazz music and R&B during
this time. Some great jazz musicians that worked with him
during this time were Johnny Griffin, Dinah Washington, Charles
Mingus and Dizzy Gillespie.
As time went on, in the 1960's and after, his success lessened.
He was still performing hits from the 1930's-1950's. In the
1970's he recorded with the Who's Who Record label, but still
did not do as well as he could have.
Going the college route seemed to help a bit. His band played
at University of Idaho's jazz concert regularly. In 1985, the
named it the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival. Two years later,
they named the music school the Lionel Hampton School of Music.
It was the only music school at a university that was named
after a jazz musician. Lionel kept playing until he had a
stroke in 1991 in Paris. Even though he had to stop performing
as much, he did a performance at the Smithsonian National
Museum of American History in 2001, not long before he died.
This jazz music legend will never be forgotten.

April 20, 1908 – August 31,
2002
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