He’s been called the grand master of jazz guitar by Dizzy Gillespie and the greatest guitarist in the world by B.B. King. He was Duke Ellington’s favorite. And in the latter half of his 50-year career as a leading performer, he’s also been called “Professor” by innumerable UCLA students.
The man is Kenny Burrell, the founder and director of the UCLA Jazz Studies program and the jazz icon who has shared stages and studios with the likes of John Coltrane and Frank Sinatra.
This Saturday, Burrell will reaffirm his position as perhaps the most-recorded guitarist in jazz history by recording his 100th album: an all-star live performance at Royce Hall celebrating his 75th birthday.
Burrell was born on July 31, 1931 in Detroit, Mich., making this weekend’s festivities belated but no less deserved.
The UCLA Live event will include Pat Metheny and Russell Malone, but it won’t be the first time Burrell plays with some of the giants of jazz – or of any genre.
“One night I was on stage with Frank Sinatra and Lena Horne in the same concert. And Nelson Riddle, a very important man who was a conductor and arranger, he was there,” Burrell said. “There are so many wonderful experiences and some of them you just do and you don’t realize how important it is when you do it.”
One of those experiences came in 1958, when he made an album with Coltrane, a legendary saxophonist.
“When I recorded with John Coltrane, we were just making the music happen and didn’t know that it was going to be that significant,” Burrell said.
But Burrell’s life and music have been defined by significance. He did his first recordings with Dizzy Gillespie in 1951, setting the tone for what was to be star-studded career.
His life as a professional jazz player began in earnest in 1956, when he moved from Detroit to New York after graduating from Wayne State University. The guitarist was soon an in-demand studio musician who was called upon to play jazz – or anything else, even recording with Aretha Franklin.
“I do love all kinds of music, and I wanted to learn to play it and investigate and just dug into it,” Burrell said. “When I went to New York I got the reputation of having that kind of versatility. Particularly when it comes to recording, people wanted that.”
In addition to playing on other artists’ recordings, Burrell led many projects under his own name during those early days, kicking off a prolific recording career that has found him averaging two albums a year over the last half-century.
But the guitarist, whose cool bop and blues-oriented style has graced hundreds of albums, almost never picked up the instrument.
“My older brother Billy played the guitar. ... It didn’t look like much of a challenge. I was thinking about being a saxophone player,” Burrell said. “But this was during World War II and we were very poor. My father had died and so we didn’t have any money to buy a saxophone ... but guitars were very cheap because that was just prior to the fact that they became electrified. I decided well, I wanted to play some music so I’d just settle for the guitar.”
He picked up his first guitar for $10 in a Detroit pawn shop.
Soon after, he heard the playing of Charlie Christian, an electric guitarist in Benny Goodman’s band, who demonstrated the soloing possibilities of the instrument. This influence, along with what he described as the “beautiful chords” of Oscar Moore, Nat King Cole’s guitarist, convinced him to stick with the instrument.
Another influence was Duke Ellington, the composer and band leader considered by many to be one of the greatest American musicians of the 20th century. Burrell was inspired by Ellington’s success as well as his musical innovation.
“When I was in college ... I started thinking about my heroes and they were wonderful musicians but they were not doing too well business-wise,” Burrell said. “I started reading about Duke Ellington and I said, wait a minute, he’s got something else he’s doing here that makes a difference. I started reading more about him and learning about how he was able to deal with society, with business and with culture, and that’s one of the reasons I was very attracted to him because I wanted to be a success. I wanted to succeed not only in music but in business.“
But Burrell wasn’t the only one being impressed – Ellington would later refer to him as his favorite guitarist.
There’s a famous story that Burrell was set to record with Ellington, but when Burrell couldn’t make a recording date, Ellington pulled the solo from the score.
“That was one of my highest honors,” Burrell said. “That’s the way he was – when he wrote music, he wrote it for a particular person to play,”
Burrell has recorded dozens of Ellington’s songs, including a pair of “Ellington Forever” tribute albums in the 1970s.
“When Ellington died, all the musicians that I knew were very saddened by his death because he was such a hero to us. I felt I couldn’t really express my feelings with words, so I decided to do something musically speaking,” he said.
It was this impulse to keep the music alive that led Burrell to UCLA, where he created the “Ellingtonia” class. It was the first college course devoted to the composer in the United States. Burrell remained at UCLA, and in 1996, he was named director of the new jazz studies program.
Over the last 10 years, the program has acquired one of the best jazz faculties in the country and had students go on to professional careers and win prestigious awards; still, Burrell continues to look to the future.
“I’d like to see more support for the program so that we can bring in more guest artists for workshops and seminars. I’d like to add more courses to our curriculum – courses on composition, courses on the music business, and I’d like to also be able to get the support to have our students enter more competitions,” he said. “And last but not least, I’d like to see more scholarship support for our jazz students.”
To that end, Burrell is the executive director of Friends of Jazz at UCLA, an organization that helps provide that necessary support.
The guitarist remains full of energy and excitement, even after all these years. One would think 100 albums might be a nice stopping point, but he still has plenty of music in him. On recent albums, Burrell even started recording his own vocals.
“The wonderful thing about jazz is, every time you play it, you know it’s going to be different, so it’s almost like the first time,” he said.