The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Jazz singer, lyricist known for ‘vocalese’

- By JOHN SEEWER

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Jon Hendricks, the pioneering jazz singer and lyricist who with the trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross popularize­d the “vocalese” singing style in which words were added to instrument­al songs, has died. He was 96.

His daughter, Aria Hendricks, confirmed his death to the New York Times. She said he died Wednesday at a New York City hospital.

Hendricks found fame in the 1950s and `60s teaming with Dave Lambert and Annie Ross. Their interracia­l trio became one of the most celebrated jazz vocal groups ever, and among the latterday stars they influenced were Joni Mitchell and Manhattan Transfer.

The trio's first album, “Sing a Song of Basie,” won acclaim for its use of vocalese, in which the voices mimic the instrument­al parts.Hendricks wrote the lyrics to existing Basie songs, and the three recorded their own voices in layers instead of using backup singers.

Others experiment­ed with vocalese before Hendricks, but he is widely regarded as the father of the spirited singing style for popularizi­ng it. In the 1980s, he collaborat­ed with Manhattan Transfer on an album called “Vocalese” that won three Grammys, one for Hendricks himself.

He first teamed up with Lambert, a be-bop singer he admired, in the mid-1950s; the duo had a hit with “Four Brothers” and “Cloudburst.” The two became a trio with the addition of Ross in 1957. The English-born Ross was already known for her own vocalese lyrics to Wardell Gray's music in the classic “Twisted.”

Hendricks won a Grammy in 1986 for best male jazz vocal performanc­e of 1985 for his work with Bobby McFerrin on “Another Night in Tunisia,” a cut on Manhattan Transfer's “Vocalese.” Hendricks wrote all the lyrics for the album, to music by Ray Charles, Quincy Jones and others. It was nominated for a near-record 12 Grammys and won three.

In 1997, he was three featured singers to perform Wynton Marsalis' “Blood on the Fields” on a CD and on tour in the United States and Europe. That same year the three-hour work, which tells the history of blacks in America, won the Pulitzer Prize for music.

 ?? TONY DEJAK / Associated Press ?? Jazz singer Jon Hendricks talks about his career in jazz at his home in Toledo, Ohio, in 2004.
TONY DEJAK / Associated Press Jazz singer Jon Hendricks talks about his career in jazz at his home in Toledo, Ohio, in 2004.

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