King of the Trap dies at 79
Story provided by Alex Pithie
Top-of-the-heap be-bop jazz drummer Stan Levey, who kept time for such musical greats as Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Ella Fitzgerald, and the Stan Kenton orchestra, died at age 79 April 19.
The self-taught Levey was just a 16-year-old upstart without his own drum kit when he first played with Gillespie in 1942 at a hometown Philadelphia club, where he talked his way into sitting in with the famed trumpeter’s band.
After moving to New York, Levey fell in with the group of musicians — among them Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Coleman Hawkins and Dexter Gordon — who founded the be-bop sound that revolutionized jazz.
Levey soon joined the Gillespie-Parker quintet, a mid-’40s ensemble that Los Angeles Times jazz critic Leonard Feather called “the first genuine all-be-bop group to play on 52nd Street.”
Levey’s pioneering be-bop work behind the drums prompted Gillespie to dub him “the original original.” As Parker’s roommate during those years, Levey had a front-row seat to the saxophonist’s creative process. One of his favorite stories, according to Pritz, was seeing “Bird” wake up from a sound sleep one night to compose and play his seminal work “Confirmation,” then go back to bed.
Levey also played big-band stints with such legends as Woody Herman and Benny Goodman before gaining wide prominence with a two-year gig as drummer for the Stan Kenton orchestra.
Besides his collaboration with most of the leading jazz instrumentalists of his era, Levey worked with such vocal giants as Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra and Barbra Streisand.
Settling in Los Angeles in the mid-1950s, Levey spent five years as a regular at the Lighthouse nightclub in Hermosa Beach, where he played with Howard Rumsey’s Lighthouse All-Stars. It was there that he became a major influence in the “West Coast,” or “cool school” movement of modern jazz.
Levey appeared on more than 2,000 recordings during his career — his drum work can be heard on such hits as Bobby Darin’s “Mack the Knife” and Peggy Lee’s “Fever.” And he played for numerous TV shows during the 1960s, including “Batman,” “Mission: Impossible” and “The Munsters.”
Featured prominently in Ken Burns’ documentary “Jazz,” Levey also recounts his career in a newly released documentary he produced with Pritz, “Stan Levy: ‘The Original Original.”‘