Pat Smythe (pianist)
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Patrick Mungo Smythe (born in Edinburgh, Scotland in May 1923 - died in London, England in 1983) was a jazz pianist who rose to prominence as a member of the Joe Harriott Quintet during the 1960s.
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[edit] Early life
The son of an Edinburgh solicitor, he was educated at Winchester College and went on to study law at Oxford University . The Second World War interrupted his studies, as he enlisted with the Royal Air Force, serving for five years as a night-fighter pilot. After the war, he resumed his legal studies, this time at Edinburgh University where he also became recognised as a talented classical and jazz pianist. After graduating, he spent several years in his father's law firm, before leaving Edinburgh for London in the late 1950s in search of a professional career in music.
[edit] Joe Harriott
After working briefly with the Jamaican trumpeter Dizzy Reece, in May 1960 he joined the quintet led by another Jamaican, alto saxophonist Joe Harriott. Harriott was in the process of reshaping his band in order to begin playing his revolutionary brand of free jazz, and recruited Smythe specifically for his willingness and ability to play this music, which was unheard of in Europe at the time. Smythe’s graceful, lyrical phrases were the perfect complement to Harriott's increasingly abstract playing, and also to the explosive trumpet and flügelhorn of Shake Keane. Smythe, bassist Coleridge Goode and drummers Phil Seamen and (later) Bobby Orr combined effortlessly to bring full realisation to Harriott’s conception of complete ensemble interaction at the expense of traditional roles of soloist and accompanist. Indeed, Smythe’s pivotal role highlighted one of the principal differences between Harriott and his American counterpart Ornette Coleman, who viewed the harmonic qualities of the piano as incompatible with his own brand of free improvisation.
The Harriott quintet stayed together until 1965, recording three ground-breaking albums (Free Form, Abstract and Movement) while also holding a long-term residency at the Marquee Club in Soho. Smythe stayed with Harriott after the dissolution of the quintet, becoming a key member of the group Indo-Jazz Fusions, co-led by Harriott and the Indian composer and violinist John Mayer. This double quintet of five Indian and five jazz musicians aimed to fuse Indian raga structures with jazz improvisation, performing and recording extensively until Harriott’s departure ended the project in 1969. With his knowledge of Indian ragas, Smythe was considered by Mayer to be the bridge between the two camps.
[edit] Later Career and Legacy
In a diverse career he worked and recorded with many other great names in jazz when they passed through Britain, including Stan Getz, Paul Gonsalves, Ben Webster, Eddie Lockjaw Davis, Zoot Sims and Bob Brookmeyer. He worked mainly as an accompanist in the London clubs throughout the 1970s, helping bring Scottish jazz vocalist Carol Kidd to prominence. After a long illness, he died in 1983 in London. The Pat Smythe Memorial Trust was established two years later, as a registered charity to provide financial awards to young jazz musicians of outstanding talent. It was funded entirely from benefit concerts and gave awards to such musicians as Julian Arguelles and Jason Rebello. The trust is now defunct.
[edit] Further reading
- Robertson, Alan (2003). Joe Harriott: Fire in his Soul. Northway Books. ISBN 0-9537040-3-3.
- Goode, Coleridge and Cotterrell, Roger (2002). Bass Lines: A Life in Jazz. Northway Books. ISBN 0-9537040-2-5.