The Daily Telegraph

Al Jarreau

Versatile jazz singer who was known as ‘The Acrobat of Scat’

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AL JARREAU, the singer, who has died aged 76, was perhaps best known in Britain for his rendition in 1985 of the theme tune to Moonlighti­ng, the off-beat television detective series; among his peers and by critics, however, he was regarded as having the best jazz voice of his generation, leading him to be known as “The Acrobat of Scat.”

Moonlighti­ng starred Cybill Shepherd and Bruce Willis, cast against type in a star-making turn as a cocky private eye, but while the theme (to which Jarreau also wrote the lyrics) was appropriat­ely smooth, it gave little idea of his vocal potential. Indeed, his very versatilit­y probably hindered him from having wider commercial success.

Although well viewed within the industry – despite his low profile in pop, he featured on the US Band Aid record, We Are The World – he had few real hits. Instead he was arguably best appreciate­d in concert, where he was able to showcase his remarkable range, technical ability and improvisat­ional verve. “He doesn’t so much sing as play his voice,” observed one journalist.

Some critics felt that Jarreau lacked emotion, but in a career that began comparativ­ely late he neverthele­ss won seven Grammy awards and was nominated for a dozen more. He remains the only singer to have won in all three jazz, pop and R&B categories.

Alwin Lopez Jarreau was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on March 12 1940. The fifth of six children, he was the son of a Seventh Day Adventist minister. Both his parents were musical, his father singing and his mother playing piano in church, where he too gave his earliest performanc­es.

At school, he was a talented basketball player. He then studied psychology at the University of Iowa and, after taking a master’s degree, trained in vocational rehabilita­tion, aiding those with mental difficulti­es and disabiliti­es to find work.

During the 1960s, he was a counsellor in San Francisco. Yet he began to find his caseload overwhelmi­ng and eventually committed himself to music.

For some years, he had appeared with a jazz trio led by George Duke and, after moving to Los Angeles, started to gain attention as a vocalist in his own right.

He appeared on television shows hosted by Johnny Carson and David Frost and, on Valentine’s Day 1976, on one of the first episodes of the satirical programme Saturday Night Live.

That same year, already aged 36, he released his first LP, We Got By. It received good reviews and he steadily consolidat­ed his appeal, culminatin­g in the album Breakin’ Away (1981).

As well as revealing his stylistic reach, it yielded his only major pop hit, We’re in This Love Together. It made the Top 15 on the US Billboard chart and won a Grammy for Best Pop Vocal.

He went on to record another 20 LPs, experiment­ing with genres from rock to reggae. L is for Lover (1986), for instance, was produced by the pharaoh of disco-funk, Nile Rodgers.

Jarreau himself cited his many influences as including not only jazz singers but also R&B performers such as James Brown and Sly Stone, as well as Jimi Hendrix.

During the 1990s, Jarreau took an extended break from the studio, appearing on Broadway in a production of Grease. He also maintained a heavy touring schedule into old age, and in recent years had twice been hospitalis­ed while on the road.

Having been diagnosed as suffering from exhaustion, he announced his retirement just two days before his death.

He was married first, from 1964 to 1968, to Phyllis Hall. After their divorce, he married, in 1977, Susan Player. She survives him with their son Ryan. Al Jarreau, born March 12 1940, died February 12 2017

 ??  ?? He trained as a psychologi­st
He trained as a psychologi­st

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