HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BENT PERSSON!

November 2014, Bent Persson (right) and a humble admirer at the Whitley Bay Jazz Party. Photo by Andrew Wittenborn.

BENT PERSSON is a true hero of mine, and I know I have company around the world. I think of his friendly kind enthusiasm in person — he is ready to laugh at the world’s absurdities — and the soaring trumpet player, at once exact and passionate, who makes Louis and his world come alive in the brightest ways.

I first met Bent in the way that we used to find our heroes in the pre-internet era, sonically. In the middle Seventies, I was passionately collecting records. That meant that I would spend the day in New York City visiting record stores, coming home when I had used up my money. I prowled through Happy Tunes One and Two, Dayton’s, and J&R Records near City Hall, where I spotted a record on a label I hadn’t heard of before (“Kenneth Records”) featuring Bent Persson (someone new) playing his orchestral versions of the Louis Armstrong 50 Hot Choruses book published in Chicago, 1927. Perhaps it was $6.99, the price of two DJ copies or cutouts, but I took the risk. It was electrifying, joyous, and hot beyond my wildest expectations. Here’s what it sounded like.

HIGH SOCIETY, in duet with pianist Ulf Johansson Werre (1977):

I kept on buying every record (then CD) on which he appeared, and he visited the US now and again — although I wasn’t at liberty to meet him — to make sublime hot music, some of it captured in videos from the Manassas Jazz Festival.

CHINATOWN, with Kenny Davern, Jim Dapogny, Tomas Ornberg, and Steve Jordan (1988):

and duets with Jim Dapogny, CHICAGO BREAKDOWN and BLACK BOTTOM STOMP (1985):

At some point, I had acquired a computer and an email account, and was writing for THE MISSISSIPPI RAG, so I remember starting a correspondence with Bent — admiring and curious on my part, friendly and gracious on his. In the intervening years of record collecting, I understood that Bent was a Renaissance man of hot trumpet (and cornet): yes, Louis, but also Bix, Red, Cootie, and others, and no mere copyist, but a great understander and emulator, always himself while letting the light of his heroes shine through him. A great scholar as well, although that might be too obvious to write.

Finally the circumstances of my life changed so that I could fly — literally and figuratively — and in 2009 I made my way to the Whitley Bay Jazz Party, which I attended every year until 2016, video camera at the ready, approaching my heroes, shyly beaming love and gratitude at them. Bent knew me slightly from our correspondence, but I recall coming up to him, introducing myself, hugging him, and saying that he had been a hero of mine for decades. He took it all with good grace.

I created more than a hundred videos of Bent in that series of delightful parties, and I will share only four: you can find the rest on YouTube with a little earnest searching.

CLEMENTINE with Norman Field, Spats Langham, Frans Sjostrom (2009):

DUSK with Frans and Jacob Ullberger (2009):

LOOKIN’ GOOD BUT FEELIN’ BAD with the Red Hot Reedwarmers (2009):

and for an incendiary closer, DING DONG DADDY with Enrico Tomasso, Spats Langham, Kristoffer Kompen, and other luminaries (2015):

Please don’t let the apparent historical nature of these videos fool you into thinking that Bent has hung up his horns and dumped his valve oil into the trash.

He is still performing, and there were gigs with BENTS JAZZ COCKTAIL as recently as mid-August (what a well-dressed crew!) Visit Bent’s Facebook page for the most current news of his schedule.

This is the most fragmentary celebration of Bent, a man devoted to his art but also a first-rate human being who beams when he talks about the family he adores. If he is new to you, I hope you have been as uplifted and electrified by his music presented here as I have been for almost fifty years. If he is a shining light to you, here is another occasion to thank him for being and sustaining the glories of jazz.

It is, although across too many miles, another hug, so well-deserved.

May your happiness increase!

5 responses to “HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BENT PERSSON!

  1. David Parkinson

    Michael,  What a wonderful tribute to the marvellous Bent Persson As a teenage fan of classic jazz in the pre-internet world I found my jazz wherever I could, making for a disjointed and random eduction in jazz.   Our local W H Smith might have half a dozen jazz LPs in stock at any one time and my paper-round earnings yielded copies of Louis Chicago Concert, Volume 2 of the Hot Fives & Sevens and something by Acker Bilk…. My local library would lend LPs out and the jazz section was maybe 20 or 30 LPs. I borrowed (and taped !) one of Eddie Condon’s Town Hall concerts, something by Art Hodes and a fine LP by John Maddox Jazzmen. An Esquire concert LP yielded a scorching “Tin Roof Blues” by Leon Prima with the incomparable Faz on clarinet, still one of my favourite tracks forty years later… I borrowed an Art Tatum but I wasn’t quite ready for it so it wasn’t committed to one of my precious and rationed cassettes…. My other source of jazz was Humphrey Lyttleton’s Best of Jazz radio programme and Peter Clayton’s Jazz Record Requests. of course, 80% of what they played was too modern for my tastes at the time so I would sit hunched in front of the family “music centre” with my finger over the “Record” button as I hoped to anticipate by the name of the band (most of which were unfamiliar to me of course in the early days) whether it was likely to be hot and tape-worthy or modern and dull…! Fortunately I guessed correctly that “Eva Taylor with Maggie’s Blue Five” could be my kind of jazz so I happily committed “All the Wrongs You’ve Done to Me” to tape. I would listen to it over and over again, marvelling at how this  mysterious Bent Persson could sound exactly – exactly ! – like 1920s Louis Armstrong and I’ve never forgotten that sense of wonder. And Tomas Ornberg’s Bechet-like soprano was the icing on the cake.  I was in my 20s when I eventually stumbled on the 50 Hot Chorus LPs and in my 30s or when I tracked down the full LP from which “All the Wrongs” came.  I’ve never had the pleasure of hearing Bent Persson in person but I’ve had pleasure a-plenty from his recordings over the years so your missive struck a chord and I wanted to reach out and thank you on behalf of all Bent’s fans for giving him the shout-out he so richly deserves. Keep well my friend Best wishes David

  2. Lovely to know you are out there and to read this!

  3. Roy Oakshott

    From Roy Oakshott – Well, chaps – here’s another HUGE admirer of Bent and his artistry – a fine musician and a lovely bloke, too! Another of my dear friends, the (sadly late) Tom Pletcher had the great pleasure of playing with him more than once and I know he felt just the same. I produced a daft series of programmes on BBC Radio 2 called “Great Swing Battles” and, thanks to another dear chum who we’ve lost – Keith Nichols – we got Bent to represent the top soloists in the early Fletcher Henderson band (Tommy Ladnier, Joe Smith and, of course, young Louis Armstrong). Brilliant! I’m now hunting for a copy of a CD on the HERMAN label – HJCD 1045, I believe the number is. Can anyone help?!
    Cheers – Roy.

  4. Thank you, Roy! What’s the name of the Herman CD?

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