Eric Dolphy






















Eric Dolphy
Eric Dolphy.jpg
Background information
Birth nameEric Allan Dolphy, Jr.
Born
(1928-06-20)June 20, 1928
Los Angeles, California, United States
DiedJune 29, 1964(1964-06-29) (aged 36)
Berlin, Germany
Genres

  • Jazz

  • avant-garde jazz

  • post-bop

  • third stream

  • free jazz

Occupation(s)

  • Bandleader

  • saxophonist

  • flutist

  • bass clarinetist

  • composer

  • sideman

Instruments

  • Alto saxophone

  • bass clarinet

  • flute

  • soprano clarinet

  • baritone saxophone

  • piccolo

Years active1949–1964
Labels

  • Impulse!

  • Prestige

  • Transatlantic

  • Blue Note

  • Mercury

Associated acts

  • Charles Mingus

  • John Coltrane

  • Booker Little

  • Chico Hamilton

  • Mal Waldron

  • Ron Carter

  • Oliver Nelson

  • Ornette Coleman

  • Max Roach

  • John Lewis

  • Freddie Hubbard

  • George Russell

  • Ted Curson

  • Abbey Lincoln

  • Ken McIntyre

  • Andrew Hill

  • Benny Golson

Websiteadale.org/EDIntro.html

Eric Allan Dolphy, Jr. (June 20, 1928 – June 29, 1964) was an American jazz alto saxophonist, bass clarinetist and flautist. On a few occasions, he also played the clarinet and piccolo. Dolphy was one of several multi-instrumentalists to gain prominence around the time that he was active. His use of the bass clarinet helped to establish the instrument within jazz. Dolphy extended the vocabulary and boundaries of the alto saxophone, and was among the earliest significant jazz flute soloists.


His improvisational style was characterized by the use of wide intervals, in addition to using an array of extended techniques to emulate the sounds of human voices and animals. Although Dolphy's work is sometimes classified as free jazz, his compositions and solos were often rooted in conventional (if highly abstracted) tonal bebop harmony and melodic lines that suggest the influences of modern classical composers such as Béla Bartók and Igor Stravinsky.




Contents





  • 1 Biography

    • 1.1 Early life


    • 1.2 Partnerships

      • 1.2.1 Charles Mingus


      • 1.2.2 John Coltrane


      • 1.2.3 Booker Little


      • 1.2.4 Others



    • 1.3 As a leader


    • 1.4 Final months



  • 2 Influence


  • 3 Awards and honors


  • 4 Discography

    • 4.1 Lifetime releases


    • 4.2 Posthumous releases


    • 4.3 As sideman



  • 5 References


  • 6 Further reading


  • 7 External links




Biography



Early life


Dolphy was born in Los Angeles to Eric Allan Dolphy, Sr. and Sadie Dolphy, who immigrated to the United States from Panama. He picked up the clarinet at the age of six, and in less than a month was playing in the school's orchestra. He also learned the oboe in junior high school, though he never recorded on the instrument. Hearing Fats Waller, Duke Ellington and Coleman Hawkins led him toward jazz, and he picked up the saxophone and flute while in high school.


He performed locally for several years, as a member of bebop big bands led by Roy Porter and Gerald Wilson. He was educated at Los Angeles City College and also directed its orchestra. On early recordings, he occasionally played baritone saxophone, as well as alto saxophone, flute and soprano clarinet. His father built a studio for Eric in their backyard, and Eric often had friends come by to jam; recordings with Clifford Brown from this studio document this early period.


Dolphy finally had his big break as a member of Chico Hamilton's quintet. With the group he became known to a wider audience and was able to tour extensively through 1958-1959, when he parted ways with Hamilton and moved to New York City. Dolphy appears with Hamilton's band in the film Jazz on a Summer's Day playing flute during the Newport Jazz Festival of 1958.



Partnerships



Charles Mingus


Charles Mingus had known Dolphy from growing up in Los Angeles, and the younger man joined Mingus' group shortly after arriving in New York. He took part in Mingus' big band recording Pre-Bird, and is featured on "Bemoanable Lady". Later he joined Mingus' working band which also included Ted Curson at this time. They worked at the Showplace during 1960 and recorded two albums together, Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus and Mingus at Antibes (the latter features Booker Ervin on almost all tracks and Bud Powell guesting on "I'll Remember April"). Dolphy, Mingus said, "was a complete musician. He could fit anywhere. He was a fine lead alto in a big band. He could make it in a classical group. And, of course, he was entirely his own man when he soloed.... He had mastered jazz. And he had mastered all the instruments he played. In fact, he knew more than was supposed to be possible to do on them."[1]


During this time, Dolphy participated in other recording sessions with Mingus for the Candid label and took part in the Newport Rebels session. In 1961, Dolphy left Mingus' band and went to Europe for a few months, where he was recorded in Scandinavia and Berlin. He was later among the musicians who worked on Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus in 1963, and is featured on "Hora Decubitus".


In early 1964, he joined Mingus' working band again, along with Jaki Byard, Johnny Coles, and Clifford Jordan. This sextet worked at the Five Spot before playing at Cornell University and Town Hall in New York (both were recorded) and subsequently touring Europe. The tour, although short, is well-documented.



John Coltrane


Dolphy and John Coltrane knew each other long before they formally played together, having met when Coltrane was in Los Angeles with Miles Davis. They would often exchange ideas and learn from each other, and eventually, after many nights sitting in with Coltrane's band, Dolphy was asked to become a full member. Coltrane had gained an audience and critical notice with Miles Davis's quintet, but alienated some jazz critics when he began to move away from hard bop. Although Coltrane's quintets with Dolphy (including the Village Vanguard and Africa/Brass sessions) are now well regarded, they originally provoked Down Beat magazine to brand Coltrane and Dolphy's music as 'anti-jazz'. Coltrane later said of this criticism: "they made it appear that we didn't even know the first thing about music (...) it hurt me to see [Dolphy] get hurt in this thing."[2]


The initial release of Coltrane's residency at the Vanguard selected three tracks, only one of which featured Dolphy. After being issued haphazardly over the next 30 years, a comprehensive box set featuring all of the recorded music from the Vanguard was released on Impulse! in 1997, called The Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings. The set features Dolphy heavily on both alto saxophone and bass clarinet, with Eric the featured soloist on their renditions of "Naima". A Pablo box set drawing on recordings of Coltrane's performances from his European tours of the early 1960s feature tunes absent from releases of the 1961 Village Vanguard material, such as "My Favorite Things", which Dolphy performs on flute.



Booker Little


Before trumpeter Booker Little died at the age of 23, he and Dolphy had a short-lived musical partnership. Little's leader date for Candid, Out Front, featured Dolphy mainly on alto, though he played bass clarinet and flute on some ensemble passages. In addition, Dolphy's album Far Cry recorded for Prestige features Little on five tunes (one of which, "Serene", was not included on the original LP release).


Dolphy and Little also co-led a quintet at the Five Spot during 1961. The rhythm section consisted of Richard Davis, Mal Waldron and Ed Blackwell. One night was documented and has been released on three volumes of At the Five Spot as well as the compilation Here and There. In addition, both Dolphy and Little backed Abbey Lincoln on her album Straight Ahead and played on Max Roach's Percussion Bitter Sweet.



Others


During this period, Dolphy also performed in key recordings by George Russell, Oliver Nelson, and Ornette Coleman. He also worked with Gunther Schuller, multi-instrumentalist Ken McIntyre and bassist Ron Carter.



As a leader


Dolphy's recording career as a leader began with Prestige. His association with the label spanned 13 albums recorded from April 1960 to September 1961, though he was not the leader for all of the sessions. Fantasy released a 9-CD box set in 1995 containing all of Dolphy's recorded output for Prestige.


Dolphy's first two albums as leader were Outward Bound and Out There; both featured cover artwork by Richard "Prophet" Jennings. The first, sounding closer to hard bop than some later releases, was recorded at Rudy Van Gelder's studio in New Jersey with trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, who shared rooms with Dolphy for a time when they both first arrived in New York. The album features three Dolphy compositions: "G.W.", dedicated to Gerald Wilson, and the blues "Les" and "245". Out There is closer to third stream music which would also form part of Dolphy's work, and features Ron Carter on cello. Charles Mingus' "Eclipse" from this album is one of the rare instances where Dolphy solos on soprano clarinet (others being "Warm Canto" from Mal Waldron's The Quest, "Densities" from the compilation Vintage Dolphy, and "Song For The Ram's Horn" from an unreleased recording from a 1962 Town Hall concert).


Dolphy occasionally recorded unaccompanied saxophone solos; his only predecessors were the tenor players Coleman Hawkins and Sonny Rollins, making Dolphy the first to do so on alto. The album Far Cry contains his performance of the Gross-Lawrence standard "Tenderly" on alto saxophone, and, on his subsequent tour of Europe, Billie Holiday's "God Bless the Child" (the earliest known version was recorded at the Five Spot during his residency with Booker Little) was featured in his sets. Numerous recordings were made of live performances by Dolphy on this tour, in Copenhagen, Uppsala and other cities, and these have been issued. He also recorded two takes of a short solo rendition of "Love Me" in 1963, released on Conversations and Muses.


Twentieth-century classical music was also part of Dolphy's musical career. He performed Edgard Varèse's Density 21.5 for solo flute at the Ojai Music Festival in 1962[3] and participated in Gunther Schuller's and John Lewis' Third Stream efforts of the 1960s.


Around 1962–63, one of Dolphy's working bands included the pianist Herbie Hancock, who can be heard on The Illinois Concert and Gaslight 1962 and the unissued Town Hall concert with poet Ree Dragonette.


In July 1963, producer Alan Douglas arranged recording sessions for which Dolphy's sidemen were emerging musicians of the day, and the results produced the albums Iron Man and Conversations, as well as the Muses album released in Japan in late 2013. These sessions marked the first time Dolphy played with Bobby Hutcherson, whom he knew from Los Angeles. The sessions are perhaps most famous for the three duets Dolphy performs with Richard Davis on "Alone Together", "Ode To Charlie Parker", and "Come Sunday"; the aforementioned release Muses adds another take of "Alone Together" and an original composition for duet from which the album takes its name.


In 1964, Dolphy signed with Blue Note and recorded Out to Lunch! with Freddie Hubbard, Bobby Hutcherson, Richard Davis and Tony Williams. This album features Dolphy's fully developed avant-garde yet structured compositional style rooted in tradition. It is often considered his magnum opus.[4]



Final months


After Out to Lunch! and an appearance on pianist/composer Andrew Hill's Blue Note album Point of Departure, Dolphy left for Europe with Charles Mingus' sextet in early 1964. Before a concert in Oslo, he informed Mingus that he planned to stay in Europe after their tour was finished, partly because he had become disillusioned with the United States' reception to musicians who were trying something new. Mingus then named the blues they had been performing "So Long Eric". Dolphy intended to settle in Europe with his fiancée Joyce Mordecai, who was working in the ballet scene in Paris. After leaving Mingus, he performed and recorded a few sides with various European bands, and American musicians living in Paris, such as Donald Byrd and Nathan Davis. Last Date, originally a radio broadcast of a concert in Hilversum in the Netherlands, features Misha Mengelberg and Han Bennink, although it was not Dolphy's last public performance. Dolphy was also preparing to join Albert Ayler for a recording and spoke of his strong desire to play with Cecil Taylor. He also planned to form a band with Woody Shaw and Billy Higgins, and was writing a string quartet entitled "Love Suite".


Eric Dolphy died accidentally in Berlin on June 29, 1964. Certain details of his death are still disputed, but it is accepted that he died of a coma brought on by an undiagnosed diabetic condition. The liner notes to the Complete Prestige Recordings box set say that Dolphy "collapsed in his hotel room in Berlin and when brought to the hospital he was diagnosed as being in a diabetic coma. After being administered a shot of insulin he lapsed into insulin shock and died". A later documentary and liner note dispute this, saying Dolphy collapsed on stage in Berlin and was brought to a hospital. The attending hospital physicians had no idea that Dolphy was a diabetic and decided on a stereotypical view of jazz musicians related to substance abuse, that he had overdosed on drugs. He was left in a hospital bed for the drugs to run their course.[5]


Ted Curson remembers, "That really broke me up. When Eric got sick on that date [in Berlin], and him being black and a jazz musician, they thought he was a junkie. Eric didn't use any drugs. He was a diabetic – all they had to do was take a blood test and they would have found that out. So he died for nothing. They gave him some detox stuff and he died, and nobody ever went into that club in Berlin again. That was the end of that club".[6]


Charles Mingus said, "Usually, when a man dies, you remember—or you say you remember—only the good things about him. With Eric, that's all you could remember. I don't remember any drags he did to anybody. The man was absolutely without a need to hurt."[1]


Dolphy was engaged to marry Joyce Mordecai, a classically trained dancer. Before he left for Europe in 1964, Dolphy left papers and other effects with his friends Hale and Juanita Smith. Eventually much of this material was passed on to the musician James Newton. It was announced in May 2014 that five boxes of music papers had been donated to the Library of Congress.[7]



Influence


Dolphy's musical presence was influential to many young jazz musicians who would later become prominent. Dolphy worked intermittently with Ron Carter and Freddie Hubbard throughout his career, and in later years he hired Herbie Hancock, Bobby Hutcherson and Woody Shaw to work in his live and studio bands. Out to Lunch! featured yet another young performer, drummer Tony Williams, and Dolphy's participation on the Point of Departure session brought him into contact with the tenor player Joe Henderson.


Carter, Hancock and Williams would go on to become one of the quintessential rhythm sections of the decade, both together on their own albums and as the backbone of Miles Davis's second great quintet. This aspect of the second great quintet is an ironic footnote for Davis, who was antithetical of Dolphy's music: in a 1964 Down Beat "Blindfold Test", Miles quipped: "The next time I see [Dolphy] I'm going to step on his foot."[8] However, Davis new quintet's rhythm section had all worked under Dolphy, thus creating a band whose brand of "out" was strongly influenced by Dolphy.


Dolphy's virtuoso instrumental abilities and unique style of jazz, deeply emotional and free but strongly rooted in tradition and structured composition, heavily influenced such musicians as Anthony Braxton, members of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Oliver Lake, Julius Hemphill, Arthur Blythe, Aki Takase, Rudi Mahall, and Don Byron



Awards and honors


Dolphy was posthumously inducted into the Down Beat magazine Hall of Fame in 1964. John Coltrane paid tribute to Dolphy in an interview: "Whatever I'd say would be an understatement. I can only say my life was made much better by knowing him. He was one of the greatest people I've ever known, as a man, a friend, and a musician."[9]


In 2014, marking 50 years since Dolphy's death, Berlin-based pianists Alexander von Schlippenbach and Aki Takase led a project titled So Long, Eric!, celebrating Dolphy's music and featuring musicians such as Han Bennink, Karl Berger, Rudi Mahall, Axel Dörner and Tobias Delius.


In 1997, the Vienna Art Orchestra released Powerful Ways: Nine Immortal Non-evergreens for Eric Dolphy as part of its 20th anniversary box set.


Dolphy's compositions are the inspiration for many tribute albums, such as Oliver Lake's Prophet and Dedicated to Dolphy, Jerome Harris' Hidden In Plain View, Otomo Yoshihide's re-imagining of Out to Lunch!, Silke Eberhard's Potsa Lotsa: The Complete Works of Eric Dolphy, and Aki Takase and Rudi Mahall's duo album Duet For Eric Dolphy.



Discography


Authorized releases are ones issued with Dolphy's input and approval, with all but the Blue Note LP appearing in Dolphy's lifetime. Dates for posthumous releases and sideman sessions by year of recording. Some releases with Dolphy as a sideman were issued much later than the date of the recording sessions.



Lifetime releases


  • 1960: Outward Bound (New Jazz)

  • 1960: Out There (New Jazz)

  • 1960: Caribé (New Jazz) with The Latin Jazz Quintet

  • 1960: Far Cry (New Jazz, [1962])

  • 1961: At the Five Spot, Vol. 1 (New Jazz) (live)

  • 1961: At the Five Spot, Vol. 2 (Prestige, [1964]) (live)

  • 1961: Eric Dolphy in Europe, Vol. 1 (Prestige, [1964]) (live)

  • 1963: Conversations (FM, [1963]) also released as The Eric Dolphy Memorial Album (Vee Jay, [1969])


Posthumous releases


  • 1959: Hot & Cool Latin (Blue Moon)

  • 1960: Candid Dolphy (Candid)

  • 1960: Status (Prestige)

  • 1960: Dash One (Prestige)

  • 1960: Fire Waltz (Prestige)

  • 1960: Magic (Prestige) with Ron Carter

  • 1960: Other Aspects (Blue Note)

  • 1961: Here and There (Prestige)

  • 1961: Eric Dolphy in Europe, Vol. 2 (Prestige) (live)

  • 1961: Eric Dolphy in Europe, Vol. 3 (Prestige) (live) also released as Copenhagen Concert with Eric Dolphy in Europe, Vol. 1

  • 1961: The Complete Uppsala Concert (Jazz Door)

  • 1961: Stockholm Sessions (enja)

  • 1961: 1961 (Jazz Connoisseur) also released as Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise (Natasha Imports) (live)

  • 1961: Memorial Album: Recorded Live At the Five Spot (Prestige) (live)

  • 1962: Vintage Dolphy (GM Recordings/enja)

  • 1962: Eric Dolphy Quintet featuring Herbie Hancock: Complete Recordings also released as Live In New York (Stash) (live)

  • 1962: Berlin Concerts (enja) (live)

  • 1963: Iron Man (Douglas International) (both Conversations and Iron Man were released as a double LP titled Jitterbug Waltz and 3CD titled Musical Prophet: The Expanded 1963 New York Studio Sessions)

  • 1963: The Illinois Concert (Blue Note) (live)

  • 1964: Out to Lunch! (Blue Note) (Authorized release)

  • 1964: Last Date (Fontana/Limelight) (for radio program at Hilversum)

  • 1964: Naima (Jazzway/West Wind) (for ORTF radio program at Paris)

  • 1964: Unrealized Tapes (West Wind) (for ORTF radio program at Paris) also released as Last Recordings and The Complete Last Recordings In Hilversum & Paris 1964 (Domino) (unofficial compilation)


As sideman


With Clifford Brown



  • Clifford Brown + Eric Dolphy – Together: Recorded live at Dolphy's home, 1954 (Rare Live Records, 2005)

With Ron Carter



  • Where? (New Jazz, 1961)

With Ornette Coleman



  • Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (Atlantic, 1960)


  • Twins (Atlantic, 1961 [1971])

With John Coltrane



  • Olé Coltrane (Atlantic, 1961)


  • Africa/Brass (Impulse!, 1961)


  • Live! at the Village Vanguard (Impulse!, 1961)


  • Complete 1961 Copenhagen Concert (Gambit, 1961 [2009])


  • Impressions (Impulse!, 1963)

With Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis



  • Trane Whistle (Prestige, 1960)

With Sammy Davis Jr.



  • I Gotta Right to Swing (Decca, 1960)

With Phil Diaz



  • The Latin Jazz Quintet (United Artists, 1961)

With Benny Golson



  • Pop + Jazz = Swing (Audio Fidelity, 1961)

With Chico Hamilton



  • The Original Ellington Suite (Pacific Jazz, 1958 [2000])


  • The Chico Hamilton Quintet with Strings Attached (Warner Bros., 1958)


  • Gongs East! (Warner Bros., 1958)


  • The Three Faces of Chico (Warner Bros., 1959)


  • That Hamilton Man (SESAC, 1959)

With Ted Curson



  • Plenty of Horn (Old Town, 1961)

With Gil Evans



  • The Individualism of Gil Evans (Verve, 1964)

With Andrew Hill



  • Point of Departure (Blue Note, 1964)

With Freddie Hubbard



  • The Body & the Soul (Impulse!, 1963)

With The Latin Jazz Quintet



  • Caribe (Prestige, 1960)

With John Lewis



  • The Wonderful World of Jazz (Atlantic, 1960)


  • Jazz Abstractions (Atlantic, 1960)


  • Essence (Atlantic, 1962)

With Abbey Lincoln



  • Straight Ahead (Candid, 1961)

With Booker Little



  • Out Front (Candid, 1961)

With Ken McIntyre



  • Looking Ahead (New Jazz, 1960)

With Charles Mingus



  • Mingus Revisited (aka Pre-Bird) (Mercury, 1960)


  • Mingus at Antibes (Atlantic, 1960 [1976])


  • Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus (Candid, 1960)


  • Mingus (Candid, 1960)


  • The Complete Town Hall Concert (Blue Note, 1962 [1994])


  • Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus (Impulse!, 1963)


  • Charles Mingus Sextet with Eric Dolphy: Cornell 1964 (Blue Note, 1964 [2007])


  • Town Hall Concert (Jazz Workshop, 1964)


  • Revenge! (Revenge, 1964 [1996])


  • The Great Concert of Charles Mingus (America, 1964)


  • Mingus in Europe Volume I (Enja, 1964 [1980])


  • Mingus in Europe Volume II (Enja, 1964 [1988])

With Oliver Nelson



  • Screamin' the Blues (New Jazz, 1960)


  • The Blues and the Abstract Truth (Impulse!, 1961)


  • Straight Ahead (New Jazz, 1961)

With Orchestra U.S.A.



  • Debut (Colpix, 1963)


  • Mack the Knife and Other Berlin Theatre Songs of Kurt Weill (RCA Victor, 1964)

With Pony Poindexter



  • Pony's Express (Epic, 1962)

With Max Roach



  • Percussion Bitter Sweet (Impulse!, 1961)

With George Russell



  • Ezz-thetics (Riverside, 1961)

With Gunther Schuller



  • Jazz Abstractions (Atlantic, 1960)

With Mal Waldron



  • The Quest (New Jazz, 1961)


References




  1. ^ ab Last Date liner notes (Limelight, 1964).


  2. ^ Interview with Frank Kofsky in Black Nationalism and the Revolution in Music p242


  3. ^ Barry Dean Kernfeld, New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, p. 632, 2002, Macmillan, .mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em
    ISBN 0-333-69189-X



  4. ^ Huey, Steve. "Out to Lunch". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 November 2018.


  5. ^ Hylkema, Hans and Bruneau, Thierry. Eric Dolphy: Last Date (video), Rhapsody Films, 1991.


  6. ^ Stop Smiling magazine, Jazz Issue


  7. ^ Ben Ratliff "Jazz Enigma of the ’60s Has an Encore: A New Focus on Eric Dolphy, in Washington and Montclair", The New York Times, 27 May 2014


  8. ^ Feather, Leonard. 3rd "Blindfold Test" Miles Davis. accessed 7 January 2010.


  9. ^ Coltrane On Coltrane




Further reading


  • Belhomme, Guillaume. Eric Dolphy. Le mot et le reste, Marseille, 2008.
    ISBN 978-2-915378-53-5

  • Horricks, Raymond. The Importance of Being Eric Dolphy. D. J. Costello Publishers, Great Britain, 1989.
    ISBN 0-7104-3048-5

  • Simosko, Vladimir and Tepperman, Barry. Eric Dolphy: A Musical Biography and Discography. Da Capo Press, New York, 1979.
    ISBN 0-306-80107-8


External links




  • A Dolphy website and instructions for mailing list

  • Session and discography at Jazz Disco









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