American Decades
Parker, Charlie 1920-1955
JAZZ ALTO SAXOPHONIST
Reputation.
It is the consensus of jazz critics that no modern jazz musician played with the brilliance of alto saxophonist Charlie Parker. His professional career lasted half his life—some seventeen years—and he left as his legacy about one hundred records made during his last decade. They preserve examples of the melodic bursts and rhythmic innovations that earned him his nickname, "Bird" or "Yardbird," because his inspiration and the purity of his music was considered birdlike. According to Dizzy Gillespie, Parker invented bebop, the jazz sound of the postwar period. He was so highly regarded that in 1949, when he was twenty-nine years old, a jazz club on Broadway in Manhattan was renamed Birdland in his honor.
Drugs and Despair.
Charlie Parker was a legend Before his death at the age of thirty-five. A man of huge appetites, he overindulged frequently. He was a neurotic,...
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1950's The Arts
- Overview
- Topics in the News
-
Headline Makers
- Bernstein, Leonard 1918-1990
- Brando, Marlon 1924-
- Dean, James 1931-1955
- De Kooning, Willem 1904
- Faulkner, William 1897-1962
- Hemingway, Ernest 1899-1961
- Kerouac, Jack 1922-1969
- Monroe, Marilyn 1926-1962
- Parker, Charlie 1920-1955
- Pollock, Jackson 1912-1956
- Presley, Elvis 1935-1977
- Salinger, J. D. 1919-
- Williams, Hank 1924-1953
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Arts, 1950–1959
