The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Legendary columnist Nat Hentoff dead at 91

- By Hillel Italie

NEWYORK>> NatHentoff, an eclectic columnist, critic, novelist and agitator dedicated to music, free expression and defying the party line, died Saturday at age 91.

His son, Tom Hentoff, said his father died from natural causes at his Manhattan apartment.

Schooled in the classics and the stories he heard from Duke Ellington and other jazz greats, Nat Hentoff enjoyed a diverse and iconoclast­ic career, basking in “the freedom to be infuriatin­g on a myriad of subjects.”

He was a bearded, scholarly figure, a kind of secular rabbi, as likely to write a column about fiddler Bob Wills as a dissection of the Patriot Act, to have his name appear in the liberal Village Voice as the farright WorldNetDa­ily.com, where his column last appeared in August 2016.

Ellington, Charl ie Parker, Malcolm X and I.F. Stone were among his friends and acquaintan­ces. He wrote liner notes for records by Aretha Franklin, Max Roach and Ray Charles and was the first non-musician named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment of the Arts. He also received honors from the American Bar Associatio­n, the National Press Foundation, and, because of his opposition to abortion, the Human Life Foundation.

Hentoff’s steadiest job was with the Voice, where he worked for 50 years and wrote a popular column. He wrote for years about jazz for DownBeat and had a music column for the Wall Street Journal. Hismore than 25 books included works on jazz and the First Amendment, the novels “Call the Keeper” and “Blues for Charles Darwin” and the memoirs “Boston Boy” and “Speaking Freely.”

The documentar­y “The Pleasures of Being Out of Step: Notes on the Life of Nat Hentoff” was released in 2014.

Jazz was his first love, but Hentoff was an early admirer of Bob Dylan, first hearing the then-unknown singer at a Greenwich Village club in 1961 and getting on well enough with him to write liner notes two years later for Dylan’s landmark second album, “The Freewheeli­n’ Bob Dylan.”

“The irrepressi­ble reality of Bob Dylan is a compound of spontaneit­y, candor, slicing wit and an uncommonly perceptive eye and ear for the way many of us constrict our capacity for living while a few of us don’t,” Hentoff wrote.

At a time when the media alternatel­y treated Dylan like a prophet or the latest teen fad, Hentoff asked well-informed questions that were (usually) answered in kind by the cryptic star. Hentoff also was willing to be Dylan’s partner in improvisat­ion. A 1966 Playboy interview, he later revealed, had been made up from scratch after Dylan rejected the first conversati­on that was supposed to be published by the magazine.

As a columnist, Hentoff focused tirelessly on the Constituti­on and what he saw as a bipartisan mission to undermine it. He tallied the crimes of RichardNix­on and labeled President Clinton’s anti-terrorism legislatio­n “an allout assault on the Bill of Rights.” He even parted from other First Amendment advocates, quitting the American Civil Liber- ties Union because of the ACLU’s support for speech codes in schools and workplaces.

Left-wing enough to merit an FBI file, an activist from age 15 when he organized a union at a Boston candy chain, Hentoff was deeply opposed to abortion, angering many of his colleagues at the Village Voice and elsewhere. In 2008, he turned against the campaign of Barack Obama over what he regarded as the candidate’s extreme views, including rejection of legislatio­n that would have banned partial birth abortions.

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 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jazz legends pose for a group portrait of National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters of the past and present, in New York. At foreground right is writer Nat Hentoff. His son, TomHentoff, said his father died on Saturday from natural causes at his...
BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jazz legends pose for a group portrait of National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters of the past and present, in New York. At foreground right is writer Nat Hentoff. His son, TomHentoff, said his father died on Saturday from natural causes at his...

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