Al Haig

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Alan Warren Haig (19 July 192416 November 1982) was an American jazz pianist, best known as one of the pioneers of bebop.

Haig was born in Newark, New Jersey. He started playing with Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker in 1944, and performed and recorded under Gillespie from 1944 to 1946, as a member of Eddie Davis and His Beboppers in 1946 (also featuring Fats Navarro), and the Eddie Davis Quintet in 1947, under Parker from 1948 to 1950, and under Stan Getz from 1949 to 1951. He was part of the celebrated nonet on the first session of Miles Davis' Birth of the Cool. Although Haig became known for his distinctive and pioneering bebop style, he in fact spent much of his career playing in non-jazz contexts. His work was the subject of a revival in the 1970s.

In 1969 Haig was acquitted of a murder charge. He had been accused of strangling his third wife, Bonnie, at their home in Clifton, New Jersey on 9 October 1968. He had said in evidence that his wife had been drunk, and had died in a fall down a flight of stairs.[1] Grange Rutan, Haig's second wife, has challenged Haig's account in her recent book, Death of a Bebop Wife.[2] Rutan's book is partly autobiographical, partly based on interviews with friends and family members. She describes Bonnie's story in detail, describing an underside to Haig that included a history of serial domestic abuse. Rutan notes that several family members sounded alarm bells regarding Haig's violent personality that went unheeded. Importantly, she quotes bassist Hal Gaylor, who was talking with Haig before a performance at the Edison Hotel lounge in the early seventies, when Haig admitted to him he had caused Bonnie's death.

[edit] Discography (as leader)

  • 1949: Highlights in Modern Jazz: Al Haig
  • 1954: Al Haig Trio (Esoteric Records)
  • 1954: Al Haig Trio
  • 1954: Al Haig Quartet
  • 1965: Al Haig Today!
  • 1974: Invitation
  • 1977: Ornithology
  • 1982: Bebop Live

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Downbeat August 7, 1969.
  2. ^ Death of a Bebop Wife. Redwood, NY:Cadence Jazz Books, 2007

[edit] External links