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Gary McFarland
(b. October 23, 1933) was one of the more significant contributors to
orchestral jazz during the 1960s. He had an unfortunately short
career. But he was surprisingly productive in the brief decade he was
captured on record (1960-70). An "adult prodigy," as Gene Lees once
noted, McFarland was an ingenious composer whose music revealed shades
of complex emotional subtlety and clever childlike simplicity. While in
the army, he became interested in jazz and attempted to play trumpet,
trombone and piano. In 1955 he took up playing the vibes. Displaying a
quick ability for interesting writing, he obtained a scholarship to the
Berklee School of Music. He spent one semester there in 1959 and with
the encouragement of pianist John Lewis, concentrated on large-band
arrangements of his own compositions. He attained early notoriety and
success through top-drawer affiliations (Anita O'Day, Bob Brookmeyer),
outstanding melodic compositions (for Gerry Mulligan and Johnny
Hodges), unique arrangements (his own interpretation of Frank Loesser's
Broadway musical "How to Succeed in Business...") and an early devotion
and sympathetic understanding of the bossa nova (Stan Getz, Bob
Brookmeyer). McFarland began devoting more attention to his own career
and in 1963 released what is often regarded as his most significant
recording - The Gary McFarland Orchestra/Special Guest Soloist: Bill
Evans - a sublime, evocative score that revels in its simplicity. He
also started recording in small-group settings which began to feature
his own vibes playing (Point of Departure). In 1964, shortly after
staging his own ballet, Reflections in the Park, McFarland issued Soft
Samba, a set of pop-rock covers featuring some of the earliest jazz
covers of popular Beatles tunes. The controversial album featured
pleasant samba-like rhythms enhanced by wordless vocals and whistling
and minimal improvising. While Soft Samba attracted a sizable and
appreciative audience, the jazz press and McFarland's early admirers
were harshly dismissive. But McFarland experienced his first real hit
and a taste of considerable popularity.
The success of Soft Samba allowed McFarland to form his first
performing group. Featuring fellow Berklee alum Gabor Szabo on guitar
as well as recent Berklee graduate Sadao Watanabe, young bassist Eddie
Gomez and drummer Joe Cocuzzo. The band toured clubs across America
during the summer of 1965 and recorded an album similar - but
superior - to Soft Samba, called The In Sound. Here, McFarland mixed
his brand of pop vocalese with the substantial improvisational talents
of unique accompanists, most notably Gabor Szabo. The following year
found McFarland devoting his talents to the large-scale orchestras
which provided his initial notoriety. A February 6, 1966, performance
at New York's Lincoln Center yielded the record Profiles, which
collected New York's finest jazz musicians and soloists -- notably,
Clark Terry, Bob Brookmeyer, Zoot Sims, Phil Woods, Gabor Szabo and
Richard Davis. McFarland went on that year to record an album of
blatant, Beatlesque pop with Gabor Szabo (Simpatico), a soundtrack for
a David Niven film (13, eventually titled Eye of the Devil upon
release) and wrote and arranged the highly regarded The October Suite
for pianist Steve Kuhn, an outstanding set of lyrical and moody tone
poems in a chamber jazz setting. He also recorded Zoot Sims in an
orchestral ("sax with strings") setting for the lovely Impulse album
Waiting Game. McFarland then teamed with guitarist Gabor Szabo and
vibist Cal Tjader in 1968 to form the Skye Recordings label under the
direction of their mutual manager Norman Schwartz. McFarland recorded
several titles of his own for the label; a few overtly pop-jazz
endeavors (Does The Sun Really Shine on The Moon, Today), a soundtrack
(Slaves) and his critically acclaimed orchestral work, America the
Beautiful.
McFarland acted as "artists and repertoire" man for each Skye
recording. Whether performing, arranging and/or producing, McFarland,
unlike the other principals of Skye, participated in each of Skye's
20-something recordings (also including Szabo, Tjader, percussionist
Armando Peraza, vocalist Grady Tate and blues singer Ruth Brown). The
Skye label lasted less than two years and McFarland, Tjader and Szabo
went their separate ways - never to work together again. McFarland went
on to compose another film score (Who Killed Mary What's 'Er Name),
record a folk-pop record with cartoonist Peter Smith (Butterscotch
Rum), arrange a Steve Kuhn pop album and supervise the Broadway
musical To Live Another Summer/To Pass Another Winter. By late 1971,
McFarland was working hard toward making a name for himself in Broadway
and film, two areas he'd hoped to explore in greater depth. But on the
afternoon of November 2, while with a friend in a New York City bar, he
ingested a drink into which liquid methadone had been poured. He
suffered a fatal heart attack and died instantly. He was declared dead
at New York City's St. Vincent Hospital that day.
Today, more than three decades later, there is - sadly - not enough evidence of Gary McFarland's musical gifts available for listeners to hear. McFarland is unfairly dismissed or ignored by many critics and lack of sales prevents record companies - especially Universal Music, which owns the majority of McFarland's recordings - from returning this work into musical circulation. Several McFarland classics, however, are available on CD and each is well worth hearing: Stan Getz's Big Band Bossa Nova, Anita O'Day's All The Sad Young Men, McFarland's own America the Beautiful and The Jazz Version of 'How to Succeed To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying, and the recent compilation of McFarland's Verve pop-jazz classics, Latin Lounge, on the German Motor label. In response to his critics, this writer would argue that Gary McFarland's "commercial" music deserves to be heard as seriously as his orchestral jazz. If, for whatever reason, one chooses to distinguish between the two, clearly substantial similarities exist. McFarland's clever, playful phrasing is relevant to both. He has a gift of a childlike wit and a knack for memorable music as well as an ability to share a deep, emotional sadness and longing.
McFarland's was a music of moods - a happy, life-affirming joy mixed
with a deep childlike sensitivity and wonder. In a culture that
requires the application (and adherence to the constriction) of
definitions, Gary McFarland wasn't defined by merely one way of hearing
the world nor by how he expressed himself. Before doubting or denying
his talents or abilities, one must review the caliber of jazz
luminaries that associated themselves with McFarland and his music. If
nothing else keeps Gary McFarland's music alive, perhaps such highly
regarded heroes as Stan Getz, John Lewis, Gerry Mulligan, Antonio
Carlos Jobim and Zoot Sims will help the McFarland legacy survive. As
one of Gary's friends once told me, anyone who ever knew or heard him
could never forget Gary McFarland.
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