Cape Times

Lee Morgan: a tale of talent and tragedy

- Pat Padua

JUST as Lee Morgan seemed poised to break the cycle of drug addiction that had plagued him for years, the 33-year-old jazz trumpeter died in 1972, the victim not of an overdose, as so many similar stories have ended, but a bullet.

The documentar­y I Called Him Morgan, which charts his brief life and career, offers classic tunes and a vivid history of the New York jazz scene, while never quite managing to sell the drama inherent to its tale.

Morgan’s musical career, which included a stint with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, is recounted by such colleagues as tenor saxophonis­t Wayne Shorter. But it is Lee’s personal life that takes centre

stage, as the bulk of the film is built around an audio recording of a 1996 interview with Helen Morgan, his common-law wife and the woman who shot him.

I Called Him Morgan itself has a jazzlike approach to storytelli­ng, offering variations on its theme of lost promise in interviews, archival performanc­e footage and misty re-creations of the snowy Manhattan night Morgan died.

Film-maker Kasper Collin – who directed My Name is Albert Ayler, another documentar­y about a jazz figure who died young – hasn’t quite found the sweet spot here between true crime and musical biography, but the story that plays out in Morgan is still an intriguing one. – The Washington Post

It charts his brief life and career, offering classic tunes and a vivid history of the New York jazz scene

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