Master of vocalese and ‘poet laureate of jazz’
Block News Alliance
Famed singer-lyricist Jon Hendricks, the widely recognized “Father of Vocalese,” whose freewheeling, improvisational-rich style helped influence the development of jazz, died Wednesday in New York. He was 96.
Born John Carl Hendricks on Sept. 16, 1921, in Newark, Ohio, he and his 14 brothers and sisters moved to Toledo when he was a child after his father — the Rev. Alexander Hendricks, an African Methodist Episcopal minister — became pastor of Warren AME Church there. Jon Hendricks sang spirituals with his mother in his father’s church beginning at age 7.
Mr. Hendricks got one of his biggest boosts as a teenager when legendary artist Art Tatum accompanied him on piano. Although he had been singing in clubs since age 10 and claimed to have received an offer from Fats Waller to sing with him at age 12, Mr. Hendricks established himself in 1935 as a 14-year-old singer with Mr. Tatum on piano at what was then a hoppin’ Toledo saloon called the Waiters and Bellmen’s Club.
“I learned everything from him,” Mr. Hendricks said of Mr. Tatum in a 1986 interview.
Toledo at the time was a “very hip, entertainmentconscious town,” Mr. Hendricks said.
“It was a centrally located area, and the gangsters who ran the roadhouses — and who earlier on used to run illegal whisky — would all come to Toledo to relax. The town was wide open,” he said.
Known almost as much for his whimsical charm and his outspoken views of life, Mr. Hendricks endeared himself to people worldwide because he never came off as a celebrity wrapped up in ego or guided by corporate image-crafting.
“You didn’t feel like you had to be in awe of him. You could just sit down and talk with him,” Toledo jazz singer Ramona Collins said. “I think it’s great that so many people in Toledo got to experience him.”
Kay Elliott, executive director of the Art Tatum Jazz Society, said Mr. Hendricks’ affable demeanor was one of his most important virtues.
“He would talk for an eternity,” Ms. Elliott said. “He never, never turned anyone away and never failed to give them valuable information. He exposed the world to broader music. He invited everyone in. Music was his lifeline and he wanted everyone else to be part of his lifeline.”
Vocalese is defined as the art of setting lyrics to recorded jazz instrumental standards, such as big band arrangements of Duke Ellington and Count Basie, then having people sing the parts of instruments notefor-note. It requires extreme gyrations and mastery of vocal chords, an ability to harmonize beyond traditional singing, and a heaping dose of improvisation.
Mr. Hendricks exploded on the jazz scene in the late 1950s with fellow singers Dave Lambert and Annie Ross as a member of the groundbreaking vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, a group that inspired many others, such as Manhattan Transfer. Solo artists inspired by him include Bobby McFerrin and Al Jarreau.
Mr. Hendricks wrote the lyrics for Manhattan Transfer’s 1985 album, “Vocalese,” which won multiple Grammy awards, including one for “Another Night in Tunisia” sung by Mr. Hendricks and Mr. McFerrin.
He earned multiple lifetime achievement awards, including one in 1992 in which he was named an American Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.
Mr. Hendricks taught at the University of Toledo, the University of California Berkeley, and California State University Sonoma.
He at one time was the San Francisco Chronicle’s jazz critic and was a “prolific writer” who, unbeknownst to many people, also was a playwright. He wrote the stage show “Evolution of the Blues,” which traced the history of African-American music in song and verse. It had a fiveyear run at San Francisco’s Broadway Theater starting in 1974 said Bob Lubell, the owner of a Sylvania, Ohiobased photography business and jazz aficionado.
Mr. Hendricks was a “hidden gem for hundreds of songs he lyricized,” said Mr. Lubbell, who followed Mr. Hendricks’ career and saw him give his final performance at his 95th birthday celebration in New York.
Mr. Hendricks originally planned to study law when he enrolled at the University of Toledo after World War II. But a one-night concert at Toledo’s Civic Auditorium in 1950 by bebop coinventor Charlie “Bird” Parker changed that.
“I had been scatting around Toledo for years,” Mr. Hendricks said in a 1986 interview, adding that his wife at the time, the former Connie Moore, “asked Bird if I could scat with him” because he was too shy to do that himself.
Mr. Parker agreed. After his performance, Mr. Parker grabbed Mr. Hendricks by the coattail, told Mr. Hendricks to sit down, and encouraged him to focus on jazz.
“You’re not [a] lawyer. You’re a jazz singer,” the legendary saxophonist told him. He told him to meet him in New York to continue developing his singing career.
Mr. Hendricks’ first marriage eventually ended in divorce. His second wife, the former Judith Dickstein, a one-time waitress-turned-singer who briefly sang with him, stayed with him until her death in 2015.
Mr. Hendricks is the only person many jazz greats allowed to set lyrics to their music. One such jazz great was pianist Thelonious Monk. Their friendship was so valued by Mr. Hendricks that in 2014 he sang a tribute concert to Mr. Monk featuring songs the two of them collaborated on. It would turn out to be Mr. Hendricks’ final shows in Toledo, yet one of his most memorable.
Even well into his 90s, Mr. Hendricks encouraged local vocalists by taking the stage with them in Toledo and other parts of the world.
Grammy-winning vocalist Dianne Reeves, described by New York Times critic Stephen Holden in 2015 as the “most admired jazz diva since the heyday of Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, and Billie Holiday,” paid tribute to Mr. Hendricks and the great Ella Fitzgerald during her show at the Valentine Theatre in Toledo last February. She told The Blade she did so “because I love Jon Hendricks.”
“He’s so free and so open, and he’s someone who paid tribute, through wonderful lyric writing, to the great jazz instrumental solos, as well as setting the bar very high for vocal jazz,” Ms. Reeves said.
One of several established jazz singers in the Toledo area who were close to Mr. Hendricks, Lori Lefevre Johnson, who sang with him in Paris and many times in New York, wants Toledo to erect a statue or other type of memorial in his honor.
She called him a “warm and generous soul and such an amazing talent, truly a genius in the world of jazz.”
“He’s made a huge impact with the music we still sing,” Ms. Lefevre Johnson said, adding he taught her and others to use their vocal chords like instruments. “He was so easy to talk to it was easy to forget he was part of this world of true greats. He was a funny guy. He was a philosopher. He had a lot to say about everything.”
Jeff Jaffe, Toledo Jazz Society/Art Tatum Jazz Heritage Society president, said Mr. Hendricks “traveled everywhere, but he always had Toledo in his heart.”
Block News Alliance consists of the Pittsburgh PostGazette and The Blade of Toledo, Ohio. Tom Henry is a reporter for The Blade.