Garvin Bushell's career went back to the beginning of recorded jazz, yet in the 1960s he appeared on records with
John Coltrane (at the Village Vanguard in 1961) and
Miles Davis (as part of
the Gil Evans Orchestra). He started playing piano when he was six, switching to clarinet at age 13.
Bushell, who was always a technically skilled player and in a more enlightened era would probably have become a classical musician, studied at Wilberforce University and played for shows and in vaudeville. He moved to New York in 1919, toured and recorded with Mamie Smith's Jazz Hounds, and worked with
Ethel Waters. He was with Sam Wooding's Orchestra, visiting Europe during 1925-1927, and also worked with the Keep Shufflin' revue and
Johnny Dunn. As part of the Louisiana Sugar Babies (a quartet with
Jabbo Smith,
Fats Waller, and
James P. Johnson),
Bushell took some of the first recorded jazz solos on bassoon in 1928; he was also a fine oboist and flutist. Later on he was with
Otto Hardwick (1931),
Fess Williams (1933),
Fletcher Henderson (1935-1936),
Cab Calloway (1936-1937), and
Chick Webb. In the 1940s
Bushell worked with
Eddie Mallory and
Edgar Hayes, led his own bands, and recorded with
Bunk Johnson (in 1947). He became a music teacher (one of his students was
King Curtis), played bassoon with the Chicago Civic Orchestra, was part of
the Fletcher Henderson Reunion Band in 1958, and worked with
Wilbur DeParis' New New Orleans Jazz Band (as the replacement for the late
Omer Simeon) during 1959-1964. In the 1960s he spent time living in Puerto Rico before permanently settling in Las Vegas, staying active as a teacher into the 1980s. Although he recorded in a wide variety of settings,
Garvin Bushell only led one record date in his career, which resulted in four titles in 1944. ~ Scott Yanow