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Sonny Buxton: Strayhorn’s Last Drummer, A Radio Master Class Mid-Day Saturdays

The story of jazz leads, not follows, the story of integration in this country.
Sonny Buxton
At age 81, with a still-strong crisp baritone voice, he's like a garrulous and enthusiastic great-uncle, spinning classic songs with stories that he has to tell, and to which one must listen, because (1) they are so darn interesting; (2) they are all true; and (3) he knows all this first hand in the first place. It could be overwhelming, but one changes the dial at risk of missing something important.
As a teenager, he was chased off stage by alto saxophonist

Sonny Criss
saxophone, alto1927 - 1977

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
As life progressed, he played football for the early Oakland Raiders; worked in radio and television news, integrating these fields against great racial entry barriers; did concert promotion; opened, ran, and closed a pair of landmark San Francisco San Francisco clubs, Jazz at Pearl's for 13 years and Milestones for five years before that, along with three clubs in Seattle; pursuing the many things that interested him but also running hard to keep up. When he talks about

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Lionel Hampton
vibraphone1908 - 2002

Carmen McRae
vocals1920 - 1994

Clifford Brown
trumpetb.1930

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Quincy Jones
arranger1933 - 2024

Billy Strayhorn
piano1915 - 1967

Teddy Wilson
piano1912 - 1986

Lionel Hampton
vibraphone1908 - 2002

Benny Goodman
clarinet1909 - 1986
Buxton's task has often been to explain jazz, and the African-American musical experience, to those who don't understand it. He sees a need, and takes on the role to advocate and inform. For those who report that they have never stopped to listen to the music, he asks "Why not?" He lectures at the Stanford University Jazz Workshop and the Fromm Institute at the University of San Francisco, and has presented before the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco. He feels responsible for enlightening individuals based upon his experiences. "Jazz matters," he has said, "it matters quite a bit."
When Buxton operated Pearl's, he introduced bands by first asking the audience to "please not talk." Listening to the music, he instructed, was "the most important thing."
"We try to present this with all the dignity that we can possibly muster up...and the whole thing works that way," made as a statement more than a request. Teacher as disciplinarian. Class was in session, even in a nightclub setting, cover charge paid, drinks on the table.
The Course of an Afternoon
Over a course of given Saturday afternoons, Buxton's playlist seems to have some preferences for certain performers, but often through their less familiar works:
Sarah Vaughan
vocals1924 - 1990

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

Harold Land
saxophone, tenor1928 - 2001

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

Ella Fitzgerald
vocals1917 - 1996

Dinah Washington
vocals1924 - 1963

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
He'll play a particularly delicate rendition of "In a Sentimental Mood" from the 1965 album Lucky Strikes by saxophonist

Lucky Thompson
saxophone1924 - 2005

Hank Jones
piano1918 - 2010

Richard Davis
bass, acoustic1930 - 2023

Connie Kay
drums1927 - 1994
Lucky Thompson got another play a few weeks later in a pairing with bassist

Oscar Pettiford
bass1922 - 1960
After that earlier Thompson play Buxton would be off spinning the next of a series which on that day ranged from Australian saxophonist

Andrew Speight
saxophone, alto1964 - 2022

Roy Haynes
drums1926 - 2024

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Arthur Prysock
vocals1929 - 1997

Pepper Adams
saxophone, baritone1930 - 1986

Zoot Sims
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1985

Tommy Flanagan
piano1930 - 2001

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
Another Saturday will yield Flanagan and Elvin Jones together again, in a trio setting. Elvin is best known of course for his dynamic work with John Coltrane, but settles in with Flanagan in much more sedate presentations. They had recorded numerous ballad-type sides together; Buxton knows that Flanagan had been the pianist on the initial recording of Coltrane's "Giant Steps," and later was Ella Fitzgerald's music director and accompanist.
Reviewing different combinations is the signature texture of Buxton's programming. He would follow that Flanagan selection with saxophonist

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982

Oscar Peterson
piano1925 - 2007

Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Bob Cranshaw
bass1932 - 2016

Philly Joe Jones
drums1923 - 1985

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990
Playlist as Syllabus
Through Buxton, the unknown becomes merely esoteric. He calls up another orchestra, from 1959 under the leadership of pianist, arranger, and music theorist
George Russell
composer / conductor1923 - 2009

Art Farmer
flugelhorn1928 - 1999

Milt Hinton
bass, acoustic1910 - 2000

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015

Bob Brookmeyer
trombone1929 - 2011

Doc Severinsen
trumpetb.1927
Still another Saturday will include

Ray Charles
piano and vocals1930 - 2004

Frank Foster
saxophone1928 - 2011

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940
So, week to week, the playlist becomes a syllabus, by which the developments, pairings, and even passings of musicians can be traced. There are often scholarly insights into the work of Billy Strayhorn for Ellington, and performances of Strayhorn compositions by a variety of musicians, and individual efforts by various Ellington staffers with others: Ellington's Jazz Violin Session has

Stephane Grappelli
violin1908 - 1997

Svend Asmussen
violin1916 - 2017

Ray Nance
cornet1913 - 1976

Rudy Van Gelder
various1924 - 2016

Billy Eckstine
vocals1914 - 1993

Nat King Cole
piano and vocals1919 - 1965
Birthdays and deaths may occasion a retrospective, as might a presentation of past and current works of artists appearing in and around San Francisco that week. Buxton honored the November passing of

Roy Hargrove
trumpet1969 - 2018

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943

Nancy Wilson
vocals1937 - 2018

Cannonball Adderley
saxophone1928 - 1975

Kenny Burrell
guitar, electricb.1931
Buxton's selections do greatly reference the past, but therein yields the deep education, particularly when he cues up gems with some historical reference points attached. He favors orchestral swing, highlights small groups, and will focus on the role of individual players within groups. His playlist does include the contemporary, but less so the very newest releases, and seldom ventures to the avant-garde.
There are some performers who he initially did not get:

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Cedar Walton
piano1934 - 2013

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993
A Matter of presentation
He doesn't program that which he doesn't like or wouldn't listen to at home himself. A program has to flow; he says it is unfair to jar an audience with Louis Armstrong followed by John Coltrane: "both master musicians, but too different from each other. I'm not here to experiment." The show is shaped not only by Buxton's tastes, but its mid-day time slot."Who is my audience at 10 a.m.? What are they doing at that point in their day? Maybe they're just waking up. And what are they doing as the day proceeds towards 2 in the afternoon? So maybe I'll play more singers as we get into the day and people are up and about. "
He has opinions, which he is not shy to share. He plays lots of

Jackie McLean
saxophone, alto1932 - 2006

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
With all the pedigrees of his experience, Buxton is not above sharing embarrassing moments. He had a personal fantasy that if he could only meet

Lena Horne
vocals1917 - 2010
Similarly awestruck, he spoke with Duke Ellington for a radio retrospective on the 45th anniversary of Ellington's orchestra. Buxton was just a young man of 30 then. Ellington was so eloquent, so articulate, and so a master of words that Buxton realized only later in reviewing the tape that Ellington had dazzled the interviewer without revealing anything of note.
Buxton remembers Ellington as having been a unique combination of hip, savvy, down-to-earth; dignified approaching grandiose, with a different line of greeting "for every woman from 17 to 70. He was the Duke!"
Strayhorn, often characterized as Ellington's silent partner, was a lyricist, and a descriptive everyday wordsmith. Touring Europe in the last months of Strayhorn's life, Buxton recalled, Strayhorn was always taking photographs, accompanied by "marvelous descriptive powers that would make you see things." Although Strayhorn was already suffering from the esophageal cancer that would be fatal, Buxton recalls he remained "a sophisticate, with a wonderful personality, well-liked by all, still smoking and enjoying cocktails." Buxton remarks it was one of life's chance happenings that he was hired, out of New York where there were likely many dozens of available highly-skilled drummers, to accompany Strayhorn. "I've always been a dilettante, but I was a good timekeeper, and our personalities just clicked."
Buxton has a dapper personal style, modeled after the performers he saw growing up, and those he met along the way, but he says that by now he is not conscious of making the effort: it's just a part of him. His suits are well-tailored, his shirts showing a perfect measure of cuff. As a child, musicians who had toured in Europe came through his family's home, wearing suits complete with silk pocket squares, and Buxton early on decided he wanted to be like that.
It's a smartness similar to that of Ellington; the mid-century stylishness of Miles Davis; or pianist

John Lewis
piano1920 - 2001

Modern Jazz Quartet
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1952

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
"Jazz is American classical music, and the importance of the music requires a certain kind of presentation. It's also show business, and in show business presentation means a lot. You wouldn't go to the symphony and expect the conductor and musicians to be in tennis shoes, jeans, and with their shirts hanging out." Again, to Buxton, it all matters quite a bit, and he does not like it to be otherwise.
The result of Buxton's tutelage is sometimes previewed on KCSM in the selections played by fellow, but younger, deejay Keith Hines in the earlier 6-10 a.m. "Morning Cup of Jazz" program. One Saturday Hines dug out Cue for Saxophone, a 1959 recording by the Billy Strayhorn Septet, which featured altoist

Johnny Hodges
saxophone, alto1907 - 1970
In December, Hines played

Curtis Fuller
trombone1934 - 2021
Sonny Red
saxophone, altob.1932

Louis Hayes
drumsb.1937

Doug Watkins
bass1934 - 1962
Photo credit: Forrest Dylan Bryant
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