Jazz Pianist Dr. Billy Taylor Passes Away….Dec. 28th, 2010

Billy Taylor – July 24, 1921 – December 28, 2010

Billy Taylor Performing At Highlights In Jazz May 13, 2010 Photo by Jim Eigo

 
Dr.
Billy Taylor, a Jazz pianist, composer, educator and broadcaster who
encompassed that rare combination of creativity, intelligence, vision,
commitment and leadership, qualities that made him one of our most
cherished national treasures, died in New York on December 28, 2010.  He
was 89 and lived in Riverdale, New York.
 
The cause was heart failure, according to his daughter, Kim Taylor-Thompson.
 
The distinguished ambassador of the jazz community to the
world-at-large, Dr. Billy Taylor’s recording career spanned over six
decades. He also composed over three hundred and fifty songs, as well as
works for theatre, dance and symphony orchestras. 
 
Among his
most notable works is “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free”,
achieving great popularity with Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and
1960s. Nina Simone covered the song in her 1967 album Silk and Soul, and the song continues to be recorded by many artists worldwide, most recently by Levon Helm.
 
Playing the piano professionally since 1944, he got his start with Ben
Webster’s Quartet on New York’s famed 52nd Street. He then served as the
house pianist at Birdland, the legendary jazz club where he performed
with such celebrated masters as Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and
Miles Davis. Starting in the 1950s, Billy Taylor ked his own Trio, as
well as performed with the most influential jazz musicians of the
twentieth century.
 
After many years of recording for leading
record labels, in 1989, Taylor started his own “Taylor Made” record
label to document his own music, releasing four albums, and in the late
90s, “Soundpost Records,” releasing his two final recordings. 
 
Dr.
Taylor was not only been an influential musician, but a highly regarded
teacher as well, receiving his Masters and Doctorate in Music Education
from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and serving as a Duke
Ellington Fellow at Yale University.
 
He also hosted and
programmed such radio stations WLIB and WNEW in New York, and several 
award winning series for National Public Radio. In the early 1980s,
Taylor became the arts correspondent for CBS Sunday Morning.
 
Dr. Billy Taylor was one of only three jazz musicians appointed to the
National Council of the Arts, and also served as the Artistic Advisor
for Jazz to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, where he
developed one acclaimed concert series after another including the Louis
Armstrong Legacy series, and the annual Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz
Festival.
 
With over twenty three honorary doctoral degrees,
Dr. Billy Taylor was also the recipient of two Peabody Awards, an Emmy, a
Grammy and a host of prestigious and highly coveted prizes, such as the
National Medal of Arts, the Tiffany Award, a Lifetime achievement Award
from Downbeat Magazine, and, election to the Hall of Fame for the
International Association for Jazz Education.
 
Dr. Taylor’s survivors include his wife, Theodora and his daughter, Kim Taylor-Thompson.  A son, Duane, passed away in 1988.
 
http://www.billytaylorjazz.com