San Francisco Chronicle

Arthur Blythe — jazz alto saxophonis­t left mark on N.Y. scene

- By Giovanni Russonello Giovanni Russonello writes for the New York Times.

Arthur Blythe, whose brawny alto saxophone sound and independen­t spirit made him a standard-bearer of the New York jazz avant-garde in the late 1970s, died Monday at a retirement home in Lancaster (Los Angeles County). He was 76.

The cause was complicati­ons of Parkinson’s disease, said his wife, Queen Bey Blythe.

When Mr. Blythe arrived in New York from California in the mid-1970s, he was already well into his 30s, with a trenchant, vibrato-thickened saxophone style and a reputation that preceded him.

“It was pretty much undisputed that Arthur Blythe was the best alto saxophonis­t out there on the West Coast,” tenor saxophonis­t David Murray said in a phone interview.

Mr. Blythe quickly became a leader of the newly ascendant loft jazz scene, centered on musician-run venues in Lower Manhattan. Within three years, he had a deal with Columbia Records, making him a spokesman for jazz’s Afrocentri­c vanguard at a moment when the music’s future was far from certain.

His first two albums with the label, both released in 1979, bespoke the breadth of his vision. On “In the Tradition,” he performed compositio­ns by Duke Ellington, Fats Waller and John Coltrane accompanie­d by a standard rhythm section of piano, string bass and drums. “Lenox Avenue Breakdown” featured tuba, electric bass, flute and assorted percussion and consisted of four giddy, hotfooting originals that opened up into extended improvisat­ions.

In 1982, critic Francis Davis wrote that Mr. Blythe “may well prove to be the magic figure of reconcilia­tion, the force for consensus, that modern jazz has been looking for in vain since the death of John Coltrane in 1967.”

That was not to be. Within a few years, a young crop of neo-traditiona­l musicians had seized what spotlight remained for jazz. Mr. Blythe left New York at the end of the 1990s, and his playing career tapered off.

“I would love for everyone to accept my music, and I would love to make money, but only by keeping my music on the cutting edge,” he said in a 2000 interview with the San Diego UnionTribu­ne.

Arthur Murray Blythe was born on July 5, 1940, in Los Angeles, the middle child of three sons. A fourth brother died as an infant. His father was a mechanic, his mother a homemaker and parttime seamstress.

His parents soon divorced, and when he was 4 he moved with his mother to San Diego. At 9, inspired by the rhythm-and-blues and swing records she often played, he asked her for a trombone. She gave him an alto saxophone instead.

He studied with Kirkland Bradford, who had played with the Jimmie Lunceford big band, and developed a trilling style reminiscen­t of postwar saxophone stars such as Earl Bostic.

Mr. Blythe worked in R&B bands throughout his teens, learning to cut through the volume of electric guitars while maintainin­g a romantic lyricism. That mixture of sultry and strident came to define his style.

When he was 19, he moved back to Los Angeles, where he met pianist and bandleader Horace Tapscott and became affiliated with the Union of God’s Musicians and Artists Ascension, Tapscott’s PanAfrican alliance of innovators.

In 1974, frustrated with the Los Angeles jazz scene’s limitation­s, Mr. Blythe left for New York, determined to make his mark.

He arrived with a nickname that reflected his self-affirmatio­n and his uncompromi­sing spirit: Black Arthur. He was known in Los Angeles for his racial pride and his willingnes­s to speak boldly on behalf of other black people, despite an otherwise understate­d demeanor. Murray recalled him standing up fearlessly to police officers who had hassled him.

Mr. Blythe embraced the nickname, even calling himself Black Arthur Blythe on the cover of a 1978 album, “Bush Baby.”

Soon after arriving in New York, he began assembling bands with unusual instrument­ation. When not playing with a straight-ahead quartet, he favored chunky, percussive backdrops that offset his tuneful improvisin­g.

In 1977, New York Times critic Robert Palmer praised Mr. Blythe, writing, “He is sly; he teases the beat, toys with polyrhythm­s and leaves gaping holes in the fabric of the music, only to come roaring back in with plangent held tones or crisp, punching riffs.”

Even after signing with Columbia, Mr. Blythe insisted on creative autonomy, releasing nine albums across a range of styles. He continued to record and perform regularly, often with tuba player Bob Stewart and drummer Cecil Brooks III, after Columbia declined to renew his contract in 1987.

He moved back to California in 1998 to take care of his children after his second marriage ended. He performed less frequently but released a handful of albums on the Savant label in the early 2000s before failing health eventually forced him to stop performing.

In addition to his wife, Mr. Blythe is survived by his daughter, Odessa Blythe, and sons, Chalee and Arthur Jr., all from his second marriage; half brothers, Bernard Blythe and Adrich Neal; and half sister, Daisy Neal. His first two marriages ended in divorce.

“The music that I deal with has elements of bebop to ballad, swing to sweet, blues to boogie, and pop to rock,” Mr. Blythe told musician and oral historian Ben Sidran in 1986. “If I have the ability to do that, I should be able to do whatever I want to do in those areas — because I am dealing with the tradition, and my culture, and my heritage.”

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