San Francisco Chronicle

Heartbeat stylist revolution­ized jazz drumming

- By Giovanni Russonello Giovanni Russonello is a New York Times writer.

By the time Milford Graves took up the jazz drum kit, in his early 20s, he had spent years playing timbales in AfroLatin groups. But on the kit he was confronted with the new challenge of using foot pedals as well as his hands. Rather than learn the standard jazz technique, he drew from what he already knew.

In the Latin ensembles, “we’d be doing dance movements while we were playing,” he remembered in a 2018 profile in The New York Times. “So I said: ‘That’s all I’ll do. I’m going to start dancing down below.’ I started dancing on the highhat.”

The resulting style became unlike anything heard before in jazz.

Graves mixed polyrhythm­s

constantly, sometimes carrying a different cadence in each limb; the rhythms would diverge, then vaporize. He removed the bottom skins from his drums, deepening and dilating their sound. Often he

used his elbows to dampen the head of a drum as he struck it, making its pitch malleable and introducin­g a new range of possibilit­ies.

But he wasn’t a drummer exclusivel­y, or even first.

Graves, who died at 79 on Feb. 12 at his home in South Jamaica, Queens, New York, was also a botanist, acupunctur­ist, martial artist, impresario, college professor, visual artist and student of the human heartbeat. And in almost every arena, he was an inventor.

“In the cosmos, everything — planets — they’re all in motion,” Graves said in “Milford Graves Full Mantis,” a 2018 documentar­y film directed by his longtime student Jake Meginsky.

“We’ve got so much cosmic energy going through us, and the drumming is supposed to be very related to the intake of this cosmic energy,” he added. “That’s the loop that we have with the cosmos.”

His life had taken one last poetic turn. In 2018, seemingly at the start of a career renais

sance, Graves learned he had a rare heart disease, amyloid cardiomyop­athy. He was given six months to live. But since the 1960s he had been studying the human heart, focusing on the power of rhythm and sound to address its pathologie­s. So he became his own patient, using remedies and insights that he had developed over decades. He lived more than two more years.

His daughter Renita Graves said his death was attributed to congestive heart failure brought on by amyloid cardiomyop­athy.

Graves said of his diagnosis: “It’s like some higher power saying, ‘OK, buddy, you wanted to study this, here you go.’ Now the challenge is inside of me.”

Milford Robert Graves was born on Aug. 20, 1941, in Queens and raised there in the South Jamaica Houses, a publichous­ing developmen­t.

 ?? Ruby Washington / New York Times 2013 ?? Milford Graves, who sometimes carried a different cadence in each limb, performs at the Vision Festival in New York in 2013.
Ruby Washington / New York Times 2013 Milford Graves, who sometimes carried a different cadence in each limb, performs at the Vision Festival in New York in 2013.

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