A fiery and often intense tenor saxophonist,
Odean Pope emerged from the great Philadelphia jazz tradition that birthed players from
Khan Jamal and
Jimmy Heath to
Archie Shepp,
Rufus Harley, and
Byard Lancaster -- not to mention
John Coltrane (whom he replaced in
Jimmy Smith's band at the great saxophonist's suggestion, when
Trane joined the
Miles Davis quintet).
Pope is also a composer, arranger, and musical theorist. His trademark sound integrates the gospel of the Southern Baptist Church he was reared in, bop, modal, and free jazz, and fourth-system harmonics.
Pope, in addition to recording as a headliner beginning with '80s Out for a Walk, also founded both the funky jazz band
Catalyst in the '70s and the oft-celebrated the Saxophone Choir, whose 1985 debut
The Saxophone Shop has proven influential among larger reed-based jazz groups across the globe. With his other bands he has recorded for more than half-a-dozen labels associated with the avant-garde including Soul Note, CIMP, Porter, and Moers Music. While 1982's Almost Like Me brought him to the attention of jazz fans who had first heard him as an integral part of
Max Roach's quartet, later records under his own name, such as 1990's Epitome and 2011's Universal Sounds (with
Marshall Allen), have afforded him renown as a consistent innovator.
Though
Pope was born in South Carolina, he grew up in Philadelphia. He took early and highly influential music lessons with Ron Rubin, the principal woodwind player in the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. Later, he studied at The Paris Conservatory for Music under drummer/composer
Kenny Clarke, where he received his degree certification in orchestration, modern harmony, African rhythms, bop, and arranging. After returning to the States, he studied with pianist
Ray Bryant before playing with organist
Jimmy McGriff and
Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers.
Pope first began teaming up with
Roach in the late '60s, though it would be another decade before he became a regular part of the group where he remained until 1995.
Pope also led
Catalyst, a jazz-funk outfit that released acclaimed records for Warner before splitting in 1974. He assembled the Saxophone Choir in 1977, an occasional group that issued four albums between 1986 and 2006. Falling into the post-bop genre, the band consisted of nine saxophones and a rhythm section.
While most of his peers followed the muse to the more fertile playing grounds of New York in order to make a living,
Pope remained in Philly, developing his own sound and working wherever and whenever he could, with regular gigs in N.Y.C. and more occasional festival and club performances in Europe and Japan.
Pope's sound is built from such diverse elements that its only constant is a muscular yet emotionally resonant tone and innate musicality that remains accessible to almost any listener, no matter which end of the jazz spectrum he engages. The development of that sound, with its historical weight and depth, appears on recordings such as 1982's avant Almost Like Me, 1995's intimate Changes & Chances with pianist
Dave Burrell, 2008's modal Serenity, and 2012's swinging Odean's Three with drummer
Billy Hart and bassist
Lee Smith.
Pope and his quartet -- that includes
Smith, drummer Craig McIver, and pianist Bobby Zankel -- issued Fresh Breeze on CIMP in 2017. ~ Scott Yanow