A product of one of jazz's most illustrious families,
Percy Heath and his sublime, swinging bass served as the cornerstone of
the Modern Jazz Quartet for over four decades.
Heath was born in Wilmington, NC, on April 23, 1930. The second of four children, he was raised in Philadelphia, receiving his first instrument, a violin, at the age of eight. He was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1944, and assigned to fly P-4s and P-47s as a member of the Tuskegee Airmen.
Heath managed to avoid combat, and after World War II ended, he purchased a standup bass and enrolled in Philadelphia's Granoff School of Music. After a stint behind pianist
Red Garland, he signed on with the house band at the local Down Beat Club. There he met bebop trumpeter
Howard McGhee, and by 1947,
Heath and his saxophonist brother
Jimmy were touring as members of
McGhee's sextet, appearing the following year at the premiere Festival International de Jazz in Paris. The Heath brothers relocated to New York City in 1949, and there
Percy collaborated with a who's who of postwar jazz icons including
Charlie Parker,
Thelonious Monk,
Miles Davis, and
Sonny Rollins. From 1950 to 1952, he and
Jimmy reunited as members of
Dizzy Gillespie's sextet.
The roots of
the Modern Jazz Quartet lie in
Gillespie's sextet as well. Pianist
John Lewis, vibraphonist
Milt Jackson, bassist
Ray Brown, and drummer
Kenny Clarke met in 1946 as members of
Gillespie's then-current lineup, and in 1951 formed
the MJQ, originally dubbed the Milt Jackson Quartet in an effort to appease bookers in search of a formidable headliner. When
Brown --
Heath's primary influence -- left the group in 1952,
Heath was invited to take his place, with
Jackson's top billing shelved in favor of
the Modern Jazz Quartet. Honing a subtle, sophisticated bop aesthetic shaped by the structure and formalism of classical composition,
the MJQ's music proved so intricate and demanding that shortly after joining the group,
Heath was forced to study under bass titan
Charles Mingus to improve his intonation. The MJQ first found favor in Europe, and when
Clarke settled there permanently in 1955, drummer
Connie Kay was named his replacement, cementing a lineup that would remain unchanged for close to two decades. Whenever the group was temporarily inactive,
Heath returned to his busy session schedule, by his own count playing on more than 300 LPs over the course of his career. In contrast to the elegant restraint that typified his
MJQ playing, his freelance work captured the bassist at his most dynamic and propulsive.
Financial considerations forced
the Modern Jazz Quartet to dissolve in 1974, at which time
Heath teamed with brother
Jimmy and their youngest sibling, drummer
Albert, in
the Heath Brothers. Boasting a more freewheeling, mainstream sound than
the MJQ, the vehicle also allowed
Percy to explore the cello, which he retuned to bass intervals. The Heath Brothers recorded and toured intermittently over the next two decades, their work interrupted in 1983 when
the MJQ re-formed to accept a lucrative offer to tour Japan. The group reconvened often in the years to follow, with
Albert Heath assuming the drummer's seat following
Kay's 1994 death. In 1997
Percy announced his intention to retire from the grind of touring, and
the MJQ quietly dissolved.
Jackson died in 1999,
Lewis two years later. Although
Heath occasionally performed with his brothers, his twilight years were largely spent fishing in and around his home on Long Island. In 2004, the small Daddy Jazz label released
A Love Song, the 81-year-old
Heath's first and last recording as a bandleader. He died following a struggle with bone cancer on April 28, 2005. ~ Jason Ankeny