Table of Contents
Remembering Coleman Hawkins (1904-1969)
Coleman Randolph Hawkins (November 21, 1904 – May 19, 1969), nicknamed “Hawk” and sometimes “Bean”, was an American jazz tenor saxophonist.
One of the first prominent jazz musicians on his instrument, as Joachim E. Berendt explained: “there were some tenor players before him, but the instrument was not an acknowledged jazz horn”.
Coleman Hawkins biographer John Chilton described the prevalent styles of tenor saxophone solos prior to Hawkins as “mooing” and “rubbery belches”.
Best Sheet Music download from our Library.
Coleman Hawkins denied being first and noted his contemporaries Happy Caldwell, Stump Evans, and Prince Robinson, although he was the first to tailor his method of improvisation to the saxophone rather than imitate the techniques of the clarinet. Hawkins’ virtuosic, arpeggiated approach to improvisation, with his characteristic rich, emotional, and vibrato-laden tonal style, was the main influence on a generation of tenor players that included Chu Berry, Charlie Barnet, Tex Beneke, Ben Webster, Vido Musso, Herschel Evans, Buddy Tate, and Don Byas, and through them the later tenormen, Arnett Cobb, Illinois Jacquet, Flip Phillips, Ike Quebec, Al Sears, Paul Gonsalves, and Lucky Thompson. While Hawkins became known with swing music during the big band era, he had a role in the development of bebop in the 1940s.
Please, subscribe to our Library.
If you are already a subscriber, please, check our NEW SCORES’ page every month for new sheet music. THANK YOU!
Fellow saxophonist Lester Young, known as the “President of the Tenor Saxophone”, commented, in a 1959 interview with The Jazz Review: “As far as I’m concerned, I think Coleman Hawkins was the president, first, right? As far as myself, I think I’m the second one.” Miles Davis once said: “When I heard Hawk, I learned to play ballads.”
The first and most fundamental chapters in the history of the tenor saxophone in jazz were written by Coleman Hawkins (San Jose, Missouri, November 21, 1904 – New York, May 19, 1969). This was the result of a long and painstaking evolution of an instrument that was perfectly adapted to the musical language of jazz. His family was from a wealthy class and he began studying piano as a child.
At the age of seven he studied the cello and at the age of nine he began to learn to play the tenor sax, an instrument that was not used in jazz at the time and that in commercial orchestras was played with a technique that was too reminiscent of that of circus musicians. At that time he began studying classical music at Washburn College in Kansas City, which he completed in Chicago, the city to which he moved with his family in 1919 and where he had the opportunity to hear jazz for the first time.
He made his professional debut in 1920 in an orchestra in the Kansas City region, and the following year he was hired by the famous blues singer, Mamie Smith, who used to have in her group musicians of the highest quality such as Buster Bailey, Sydney Bechet, or Bubber Miley. . With it he will arrive in New York and record his first album and begins to become known in the jazz circles of the Big Apple. In 1923, he joined Fletcher Henderson’s orchestra, which with him in its ranks and the incorporation the following year of a very young man, Louis Armstrong, would become the first big band in history and in which Hawkins would remain for eleven long and magnificent years until making that orchestra the best of its time.
In 1934, Coleman Hawkins left Henderson’s band and went to Europe and in England signed a juicy contract with Jack Hylton’s orchestra. He was expelled from Nazi Germany because of the color of his skin and confined himself first to Holland and then to France, recording albums in Paris with local musicians and coinciding with his friend Benny Carter, who had also traveled to old Europe. In 1939 he returned to the United States where he found that his old disciples were making a big splash in the jazz scene and where he met for the first time a saxophonist from Kansas who began to overshadow him. His name was Lester Young and he stood out among other saxophonists, for putting into practice a style different from his own for the first time in twenty years. Hawkins put together his own orchestra and recorded the historic song: “Body and Soul”, one of the great jazz standards since then and which will mean his definitive consecration as one of the great creators of jazz. From that moment on, he began to be known as the “father of the tenor saxophone.”
He dissolved his big band in 1941 and worked with smaller groups. In the second half of the 1940s, he would be one of the stars of “Jazz at the Philharmonic”, the musical organization created by Norman Granz, which would be in charge of bringing jazz to all corners of the world. Among his records, the collaboration with Roy Eldridge and Oscar Peterson stands out in the fifties and he recorded some extraordinary albums such as those titled:
“The Genius of Coleman Hawkins” (Verve 1957) or the splendid “High and Mighty Hawk” also for Verve in 1958. In 1962 he recorded a memorable album with Duke Ellington”: “Duke Ellington meets Coleman Hawkins” (Impulse!) and in 1966, He recorded the last album of his life “Sirius” (Pablo) because from that date his health began to play tricks on him and he died three years later, a victim of pneumonia, on May 19, 1969 at the Wickersham Hospital in New York.
With him disappeared the man who was to the tenor saxophone, what Louis Armstrong was to the trumpet: the inventor of the first and, therefore, most important musical-instrumental rules, which would determine the configuration, concept and language of the tenor saxophone in the jazz of all times.
Coleman Hawkins – Body & Soul
“Body and Soul”, by Coleman Hawkins.
Coleman Hawkins was the first great tenor saxophonist in the history of jazz. Considered the “father” of the tenor saxophone in jazz, his stay in Fletcher Henderson’s orchestra, between 1924 and 1925, and above all the influence of his most prominent soloist, the trumpeter, Louis Armstrong, turned him into a prodigious soloist. capable of developing phrasings on his instrument with an agility and fluidity that seemed, in years before his appearance, a pure chimera.
The selection of recordings collected on this album cover twenty years of his career (1939-1959), those that are considered fundamental in the life of this jazz master. Before, he had already established himself as a professor with his solos in Fletcher’s orchestra, maturing his style, polishing and perfecting an unusual and unique way of playing the tenor saxophone, gradually gaining cleanliness, sonority, power and a unique timbre. “Body and Soul” therefore begins in the historic session of October 11, 1939, when he recorded what is considered his masterpiece and without a doubt, one of the jewels in the history of jazz: “Body and Soul”
Coleman Hawkins recorded “Body and Soul” a few months after his return to the United States after his traveling tour of Europe. In three minutes – the three most glorious minutes in the history of jazz, according to some critics – and during two choruses directly improvised in mid-tempo on the original melody, Hawkins, overflowing with lyricism and with a more contained sonority, literally reinvents it with some variations that can only be described as brilliant for their coherence and sense of meter. “Body and Soul” is the best sense of the word, a perfect tenor sax solo that revolutionized at that time, and in that era, the concept and language of the instrument. Since then, there are few saxophonists who have not learned it by heart.
The rest of the album are several recording sessions until 1959. In them, Coleman Hawkins definitively reached his maturity and allowed him to confront the new times of jazz and the new sounds of bebop with complete guarantee. He even went further, hiring into his groups some musicians who over time would become the main figures of modern jazz.
THE MUSICIANS | THE INSTRUMENTS | TECHNICAL SHEET |
Navarro facts | trumpet | Record label: RCA-BLUEBIRD |
Benny Carter | alto sax | Serial number: RCA-4178 |
Milt Hinton | Double bass | Recording date: 1939-1956 |
Jay Jay Johnson | Trombon | Recording location: New York |
Zoot Sims | tenor sax | Rating: 5* out of 5 |
Hank Jones | Piano | |
Max Roach | Battery | |
Coleman Hawkins | Tenor sax and leader |
Browse in the Library:
Artist or Composer / Score name | Cover | List of Contents |
---|---|---|
Barber – Agnus Dei Op. 11 (full score transcribed for mixed Chorus with Organ or Piano Accompaniment) | ||
Barber – Samuel Barber The Composer And His Music (1992) by Barbara B. Heyman (Biography) | ||
Barber Violin Concerto (Violin and Piano sheet music) | ||
Barber Violin Concerto (Violin part sheet music) | ||
Barber_Violin_Concerto.mscz.mscz | ||
Barber, Samuel Cello Concerto (Cello Part) | ||
Barber, Samuel Sonata For Piano, Op.26 | ||
Barber, Samuel – Sure On This Shining Night for Piano and SATB | ||
Barber, Samuel – Adagio for Strings Op. 11 Agnus Dei (solo piano arr.) | ||
Barber, Samuel – Four Songs – Nocturne | ||
Barber, Samuel – Four Songs – A Nun takes the Veil | ||
Barber, Samuel – Four Songs The Secrets of the Old | ||
Barber, Samuel – Summer Music | ||
Barber, Samuel Adagio for Strings full score | Samuel Barber-Adagio for Strings full score | |
Barber, Samuel Adagio For Strings Samuel Barber (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Barber, Samuel Agnus Dei Adagio for strings op. 11 for mixed chorus | ||
Barber, Samuel Nocturne Op. 33 | ||
Barber, Samuel Op 26 Piano Sonata | ||
Barbra Streisand The way we were (piano) | Barbra Streisand The way we were piano | |
Barbra Streisand – Not While Im Around | ||
Barbra Streisand – Evergreen | ||
Barbra Streisand – Send In The Clowns | ||
Barbra Streisand – The Broadway album (Piano and voice) | Streisand, Barbra – The Broadway album (Piano and voice) | |
Barbra Streisand – The Way We Were | ||
Barbra Streisand Collection | Book Barbra Streisand Collection | |
Barbra Streisand Evergreen | Barbra Streisand Evergreen | |
Barbra Streisand Guilty – songbook | Barbra Streisand Guilty – songbook | |
Barbra Streisand Memories Songbook | Barbra Streisand Memories Songbook | |
Barbra Streisand My Name Is Barbra (Barbra Streisand) (Book) | ||
Barbra Streisand Somewhere From West Side Story | Barbra Streisand Somewhere From West Side Story | |
Barcarolle (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (14 original Guitar Solos) | Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (14 original Guitar Solos) | |
Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (Vol. 2 original Guitar Solos) | Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (Vol. 2 original Guitar Solos) | |
Barney Kessel Danny Boy Guitar with Tablature | ||
Barney Kessel Minor Mode | ||
Baroque Expressions Martha Mier from Bravo Book One (Piano Solos).mscz | ||
Baroque Guitar Sheet Music arr. by Frederick Noad Guitar Anthology,The Classical Guitar | Baroque Guitar Sheet Music arr. by Frederick Noad Guitar Anthology,The Classical Guitar | |
Baroque Keyboard Anthology Book 1 24 Works For Piano Or Keyboard by Robin Bigwood | Baroque Keyboard Anthology Book 1 24 Works For Piano Or Keyboard by Robin Bigwood | |
Barrelhouse And Boogie Piano by Eric Kriss | Barrelhouse And Boogie Piano by Eric Kriss | |
Barry Hanks – Rhythm Changes Solo Transcription | Barry Hanks – Rhythm Changes Solo Transcription | |
Barry Harris Approach to improvised lines & harmony | ||
Barry Harris Basics Summary Of Class Exploring the Diminished | ||
Barry Harris Donna Lee sheet music transcription | ||
Barry Harris Harmonic Method For Guitar, The | ||
Barry Harris Jazz Workshop Part 1 | ||
Barry Harris Jazz Workshop Part 2 | ||
Barry Harris Method Método IMPROVISACIÓN (Español-Spanish) | ||
Barry Harris On Green Dolphin Street sheet music transcription | ||
Barry Harris’ solo on “Woody n’You | Barry Harris Woody n’You | |
Barry Manilow – Can’t Smile Without You | ||
Barry Manilow – Copacabana (At the Copa) | ||
Barry Manilow – Copacabana | ||
Barry Manilow – Mandy | ||
Barry Manilow – Sheet Music Anthology | Barry Manilow – Sheet Music Anthology | |
BARRY WHITE – (THE COLLECTION) | BARRY WHITE – (THE COLLECTION) | |
Barry White – Loves Theme | ||
Bart Howard – Fly Me To The Moon Guitar and TABs (Jazz Standard) | Bart Howard – Fly Me To The Moon Guitar and TABs (Jazz Standard) | |
Bartok – For Children, Sz. 42 Complete 1 to 43 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Improvisations op 20 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Mikrokosmos (Books 1 to 6) Bela Bartok | Bartok – Mikrokosmos (1-6) sheet music | |
Bartok – Mikrokosmos Vol. 2 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Mikrokosmos Vol. 4 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Mikrokosmos Vol.1 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Sonate For Piano Solo Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok 6 Danses populaires roumaines Bela Bartok | Bartok.-.6.Danses.populaires.roumaines | |
Bartok For Children Book 1 Based On Hungarian Folk Tunes Piano Solo | ||
Bartok For Children Book 2 after Slovakian Folk Tunes Piano Solo | Bartok For Children Book 2 after Slovakian Folk Tunes Piano Solo | |
Bartok Improvisations op. 20 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok Piano Sonata Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok Ten Easy Pieces | ||
Basic Piano Library Piano Recital Book Level 1B | Basic Piano Library Piano Recital Book Level 1B | |
Bass Guitar For Dummies (eBook) | ||
Bass Standards (Classic Jazz Masters) Note for note transcriptions of jazz Bass classic performances | Bass Standards (Classic Jazz Masters) Note for note transcriptions of jazz Bass classic performances | |
Bastien – Piano Basics Level 1 Piano | ||
Bastien Piano Basics – Piano for the Young Beginner Primer A | ||
Bastien Piano Basics – Piano for the Young Beginner Primer B | ||
Bastien Piano Basics – Theory Level 2 | Bastien Piano Basics – Theory Level 2 | |
Bastien Piano Basics Level 3 | ||
Bastien Piano Basics Technic Primer Level for children | ||
Batman – Flowers Of The Past – Danny Elfman | Batman-Flowers-Of-The-Past-Danny-Elfman 1st page | |
Batman – Sonata In Darkness Michael Giacchino | Batman – Sonata In Darkness Michael Giacchino | |
Batman Begins – Hans Zimmer James Newton Howard Ramin Djawadi – Molossus | ||
Batman Returns – Birth Of A Penguin – Danny Elfman | Batman Returns – Birth Of A Penguin – Danny Elfman | |
Battlefield 1 – Homing Pigeon | Battlefield 1 – Homing Pigeon | |
Baywatch – Main Theme | ||
Be My Love (Nicholas Brodszky & Sammy Cahn) Jazz Piano Solo arr. sheet music | ||
Beach Boys Good Vibrations sheet music | ||
Beach Boys The Best Of Book | ||
Beach Boys, The – Guitar Anthology Series | Beach Boys, The – Guitar Anthology Series | |
Beato Book 4.0, The – A Creative Approach to Music Theory and Improvisation for Guitar and Other Instruments | ||
Beautiful (Christina Aguilera) | ||
Beautiful rain Soredemo Sekay | Beautiful rain Soredemo Sekay | |
Beauty And The Beast – Alan Menken from 1991 Disney film Piano Solo | ||
Beauty And The Beast – Main Theme – Alan Menken | ||
Beauty And The Beast (Disney) Piano Score | Beauty And The Beast (Disney) Piano Score | |
Bebo Valdes – El Manisero – Piano solo | El Manisero – Bebo Valdes | |
BEBOP – The Music and its Players (Thomas Owens) Book | ||
Bebop Exercise.mscz | ||
BeBop Jazz Piano – John Valerio – Book + MP3 audio tracks | Bebop piano sheet music book | |
Bebop Piano Legends Artist Transciptions For Piano | Bebop Piano Legends Artist Transciptions For Piano | |
Bebop Third Ear The Essential Listening Companion (Scott Yanow) Book | ||
Because – The Beatles (For String Quartet) (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beck – Everybodys gotta learn sometime – with lyrics | ||
Bee Gees It’s Easy To Play Bee Gees | Bee Gees It’s Easy To Play Bee Gees | |
Bee Gees – How Deep Is Your Love | ||
Bee Gees – Stayin Alive | ||
Bee Gees Anthology – complete songbook | The Bee Gees Guitar Songbook | |
Beegie Adair Fly Me To The Moon Jazz Standard Piano Solo | ||
Beegie Adair It Never Entered My Mind (Jazz Standard Transcription) | ||
Beethoven Ode To Joy (Jazz Version) | ||
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 1st Movement Arr. For 2 Pianos | ||
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 3rd Movement Arr. For 2 Pianos | ||
Beethoven Variations In E Flat Major Eroica Op. 35 Piano Solo arr. | ||
Beethoven L.V. – Piano Sonata 15 | ||
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 In E-Flat Major Emperor Op. 73 – Piano Solo (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beethoven – 6 Sonatinas | ||
Beethoven – A First Book of Beethoven Easy Piano arr. favorite pieces by David Dutkanicz | Beethoven – A First Book of Beethoven Easy Piano arr. favorite pieces by David Dutkanicz | |
Beethoven – Choral Fantasy For Piano Choir And Orchestra Op. 80 (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beethoven – Fantasia In G Minor. Op.77 (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beethoven – Fur Elise | Beethoven – Fur Elise |