Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Ed Bickert: Canada's Secret

Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com

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Canadian jazz artists don't get enough respect. American fans swoon over Belgians (Bobby Jaspar), French (Martial Solal), British (Tubby Hayes) and even Argentines (Gato Barbieri). But when it comes to Canada, many jazz fans yawn, viewing them as doppelgängers at best, or bland comparisons to U.S. jazz musicians.
The problem has always been that Canadian jazz never really developed passionate champions in the States. Unlike the others mentioned above, there's nothing exotic about most Canadian artists. No funny accents, little in the way of heart-wrenching personal drug-and-drink stories that capture the imagination, and barely any foreign inflection in the music. In other words, they look and sound like us, so why bother?
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As a result, American fans miss out on a large number of exceptional Canadian players. One of these is guitarist Ed Bickert. Retired now, Bickert grew up in Manitoba, the child of musical parents who earned their living by farming and orchard harvesting. His parents played dances in the 1940s, and it wasn't long before Bickert joined them. By the early 1950s, Bickert was playing jazz in Toronto. In the 1960s, Bickert was a studio musician and a member of Rob McConnell's Boss Brass.
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Deeply influenced by guitarist Jim Hall, Bickert grew friendly with Jim, and in the 1970s, Bickert played often with bassist Don Thompson and drummer Terry Clark. He also played and recorded with Paul Desmond when the alto saxophonist toured in Canada. Bickert can be found on several Paul Desmond albums, including Pure Desmond (1974), on CTI, and  Live: The Paul Desmond Quartet(1975), on A&M.
Bickert recorded 18 albums as a leader, starting with the Ed Bickert Trio in 1975 and ending with Portraits in Jazz: A Tribute to Wes Montgomery in 1998.
JazzWax tracks: You'll find many of Ed Bickert's albums at Amazon and ITunes. Here's Come Rain or Come Shine from his first leadership album in 1975...
JazzWax clips: Here's Easy to Love in the 1980s (Don Thompson is a trip on bass!)...
Here's You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To, with Rick Wilkins on tenor sax...
Here's Lollipops and Roses...
Here's Jim Hall on Ed Bickert...
A special thanks to David Langner and John Lawrence Reynolds.
Used with permission by Marc Myers

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