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Malcolm Griffiths: A Man For All Seasons


Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988

Johnny Hodges
saxophone, alto1907 - 1970

Lester Young
saxophone1909 - 1959
Yet stop and think about what made those records special and made you go back time and again to hear some of their most perfect moments. How many of those came from a
Lawrence Brown
tromboneb.1907

Bubber Miley
trumpet1903 - 1932

Harry "Sweets" Edison
trumpet1915 - 1999
This is a story about one of those guysthe British trombonist

Malcolm Griffiths
tromboneb.1941

J.J. Johnson
trombone1924 - 2001

Mike Westbrook
composer / conductorb.1936

Graham Collier
composer / conductor1937 - 2011

Stan Tracey
piano1926 - 2013

Buddy Rich
drums1917 - 1987
Sadly, Griff's mighty voice is silent now. Health problems with diabetes forced him to give up music some years ago but that cannot detract from the fondness in which he is held by British jazz musicians and fans. I interviewed Griff recently for a biography of Graham Collier and it was an opportunity to talk about and celebrate his career in jazz. As with so many musicians who came up in those years, Griffiths' introduction to jazz began in his teens at school.
"This is going to sound odd but I used to belong to a jazz club at East Barnet Grammar School," he tells me. "I had started doing a bit of playing around the area and got a call one day from someone who used to go to the local club. He was teaching art at another local school and he was instrumental in getting me to play with a band that one of his sixth formers ran. They had a gig at the Café des Artistes. I went along and they invited me to join the band."
It was at one of these gigs that Griff met a musician who would have a major impact upon his future direction in life, as he explains,
"One day, the baritone player couldn't make it and they had sent along this young chap who had come up from Plymouth. It was

John Surman
saxophoneb.1944
For several years, Griffiths pursued a dual careerjazz musician by night and at weekends and university lecturer by day. It was another chance occurrence that finally made him jump ship and plump for jazz over academia.
"One of the early gigs I did was with Buddy Rich," he tells me. "Buddy had come over with his band and, as was his wont, he had had a row with his lead trombone player. Dankworth's agency was given a call and I got invited to go down and play with him at

Ronnie Scott
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1996
Buddy Rich stories are the stuff of jazz legend. However, Griff enjoyed his time with the orchestra. "I liked Buddy, I thought he was a very nice man," he says and continues, "He did seem to take quite a lot from me. There was an issue about coming in after a drum solo. We had to have somebody giving us a count, otherwise we didn't know when to come in. We had a meeting in the band to talk about this problem but I didn't realise that Buddy's daughter was in the room listening. That night I got a drum stick up my arse with Buddy saying, 'Is that alright, Malcolm?'"
Griff was on so many of those great British jazz albums of the late sixties continuing on into the nineties. He was in at the start of the
Brotherhood of Breath
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1969
Harry Miller
bassb.1941
John Warren
composer / conductorb.1938
"When I joined Graham's band he had a wonderful tenor player in

Art Themen
saxophoneb.1939

Henry Lowther
trumpetb.1941
Asked how that experience compared with his other musical experiences, Griffiths waxes lyrical about his work with Stan Tracey and Mike Westbrook, "It was a joy for me to play all those years with Stan and, similarly with Westy, too. In fact, the last album I'm on with Mike, The Cortège, is a truly wonderful record with some truly wonderful pieces of music on there. I think the playing of the musicians...it's difficult music and they just play it marvellously. With Stan Tracey, I guess it was his determination to have a damn good rhythm section. If you imagine a cross between

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Don Weller
b.1940Reluctantly, he admits that he was not as keen on Collier's work, "I think that's fair enough. I don't know if this is going to tar me in some way but I just thought their music was better. What I will say about Graham was that he was a very good arranger. He knew his business where that was concerned but I preferred playing Stan's music or Mike Westbrook's."
Griffiths singles out the track "Erme Estuary" from Westbrook's The Cortège as one of his favourite musical moments. It is, in truth, a simply magnificent piece, beautifully structured and arranged, as it shifts through a series of movements.
Phil Todd
saxophoneb.1956
I ask about his time with Stan Tracey but the trombonist just wants to extol Stan's virtues and those of his fellow band members. Again, there many high-spots to pick from. One that should be at the top of the list, however, would have to be Griff's solo on Tracey's "Mainframe" from the Blue Note album, Portraits Plus. The trombonist stops the action with a cadenza that shifts into a duet with

Dave Green
bass, acousticb.1942
When it comes to his influences, however, Griffiths is one hundred percent clearit's Duke and his trombonist
Lawrence Brown
tromboneb.1907
That leaves John Surman, the friend who really got him started. Griff shared a flat with Surman and John Warren in the sixties and the saxophonist included him in many of his groups. It is something for which he remains grateful. "Obviously, a lot of people appreciated John Surman's work and that gave the rest of us an 'in' and a chance to work," he says with typical modesty. "There's a record I did with John that just got reissued. Morning Gloryit sounds a bloody sight better now than it did at the time. The work of

John Marshall
drumsb.1952

Chris Laurence
bass, acousticb.1949
The track Griffiths refers to is "Iron Man" and he's right, Surman is straight out of the blocks. But this is a band album. The backing from

Terje Rypdal
guitarb.1947

John Taylor
piano1942 - 2015
Realising that the interview may have been quite demanding for him, I start to bring things to a close and return to Lawrence Brown. I suggest that Griff shares with his influence that fine combination of lyricism and attack. There is an embarrassed silence before he responds.
"That's kind of you to say so," and he pauses. "I suppose that is how I approach music."
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