Mickey Roker
The Voltan of Ortlieb's Jazzhaus
by
Mike DelVecchia
"I have practiced hard to be able to play with greats like
Mickey Roker," said trumpet player John Swana.
In 1932, Granville 'Mickey' Roker was born in Miami, Florida. His
mother Willie Mae Roker shared a small house in a poor section of the
city with her son and brother Walter James Bowe. Mr. Roker's father,
Granville Roker Sr., never lived with them.
"We came up so poor back then that it must've been God that got
us by," said Mr. Roker.
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"I've
had so many good experiences that it's a pleasure just going to
work at night," said Mr. Roker. photo, Downbeat Magazine |
In 1942, Mr. Roker's mother passed away. Mr. Roker's grandmother
brought her fifteen year-old son and Mr. Roker to Philadelphia to live
with relatives.
"My Uncle Walter took care of me. He had to be the man and so he
went to work at fifteen," said Mr. Roker.
Mr. Bowe shared a love of jazz with his nephew. A long-gone
Philadelphia radio had their ears.
"Uncle Walter wanted to play himself, but he was so busy
working," said Mr. Roker.
A vicarious Mr. Bowe purchased the ten-year-old his first jazz
records. A few months later, Mr. Bowe purchased a drum kit for the
child. An early denizen of the clubs, the teenage Mr. Roker idolized
Philly Joe Jones. The young man witnessed jazz in a Philadelphia that no
longer exists.
"People like Miles always used to come down to the
Showboat," he continued. "And J.J. Johnson used to come down
to Peps. And Clifford Brown and Dizzy used to come to the Music City
clubs," remembers Mr. Roker.
"Mickey's musical hero is Philly Joe Jones," said Ortlieb's
Jazzhaus owner, Pete Souders. "But note the evolution. Where
sensitivity and dynamics are concerned, Mickey has taken Philly Joe's
example to an even higher level."
In 1956, Mr. Roker married his wife Priscilla. They had two children,
Ronald and Debra.
"She was so beautiful, man. We came up together, me in west
Philly, Priscilla in north Philly," said Mr. Roker.
In 1957, Mr. Roker played a six-night engagement at the Peps Star Bar
with Gloria Lynne and Jimmy Heath. He easily gained the attention of Lee
Morgan, Clifford Brown and others.
Bob Cranshaw met Mr. Roker in 1957. The drummer had been working in
the Ray Bryant Band in Chicago. One night Arthur Harper, the bass player
overslept. Mr. Cranshaw, ever watchful for an opening, presented
himself.
"Any time I came to Chicago, I would watch the gigs. If somebody
were late, I was ready to play," said Mr. Cranshaw, a native of
Evanston, Illinois.
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| Bob
Cranshaw receives a birthday cake at Smoke. photo, Gordon
Polatnick |
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The first thing which Mr. Cranshaw said he discovered about Mr. Roker
was his sense of humor.
"He kept me laughing," said Mr. Cranshaw, who sometimes
used to crack up on stage, stimulated by a mere glance by Mr. Roker.
In the 1961, the two played in the G.G. Gryce band in Chicago. Later
that year, when Mr. Roker was playing in Mary Lou William's band at the
Hickory House (around the corner from Birdland) in New York, Ms.
Williams fired her bassist, Larry Gales. Again, Mr. Cranshaw came to
bat.
"Mickey is my best friend and we went wherever the other
went," said Mr. Cranshaw.
This time, Mr. Cranshaw was motivated to play with Mr. Roker as much
as to follow any bandleader's star.
"Mickey is tasty. He has a very good feel, understands dynamics
and can build a tune," added Mr. Cranshaw.
The pair had freelanced together in New York and Chicago since 1957.
They were becoming an item.
"Once we locked in, it was a love affair," said Mr. Roker.
"We had an apartment together for two years in New York back in
the sixties, and we were like a musical couple," said Mr. Cranshaw.
"I think Mickey and Bob have a deep connection from years of
playing together," said Mr. Swana.
The pals bottomed Junior Mance's Trio in 1963, behind singer Joe
Williams, playing Peps and Showboat routinely. Soon, they would
collaborate on countless Blue Notes recordings.
"The union of those two guys is unbeatable and unique and there
has never been anything like it ever before or since," said pianist
Mike LeDonne, a frequent collaborator with the duo.
"They work together better than anybody and there are only a few
who have ever reached a level like Bob and Mickey," said Mr.
LeDonne, a Juilliard professor.
Endless studio dates with Stanley Turrentine and others proved the
greatness of the duo. Each player gave the other the foundational rhythm
to prove he was master who avoided diverting cross rhythms and flashy
broken time. Just straightforward jazz all over the thermometer.
Mr. Roker and Mr. Cranshaw explain the simple recipe for this
greatness.
"We play swinging, bluesy phrases inside the melody. We've
always avoided the avant-garde and kept to the mainstream," said
Mr. Roker.
"My thing is the feel. I am a swing bass player who plays time.
There are melodic players and soloing bass players. I play the roots of
the chord and set up the feel and round out the pocket," Mr.
Cranshaw said.
A collector searching for jazz tradition by going through racks of
old albums may come across the 1962 album "Junior's Blues" by
the Junior Mance Trio, totally dig the funky "Gravy Waltz,"
and then become thrilled that Mr. Cranshaw and Mr. Roker, both
seventy-one are still playing together.
"We might step outside a little bit but we don't really go out
that far, because we want people to understand and enjoy," said Mr.
Roker.
Like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, the Roker-Cranshaw machine
became recognized as adroitly embodying the root of swing and the attack
of bebop.
"We just took simplicity and made it artistic," said Mr.
Roker.
A shining example of the convergence of these men and their friends,
occurred in 1966 when they recorded, saxophonist Stanley Turrentine's
"Rough 'n' Tumble," whose tunes were arranged by Mr. Pearson.
It is a jazz-soul work, where you can hear the rhythm ignite especially
on "Feeling Good."
"I had a ball playing with Duke Pearson, who died young. I also
had a ball playing with Stanley Turrentine who just left us," said
Mr. Roker.
His phone never stopped ringing. Dates with Mr. Morgan, Mr. Rollins,
Bags, Shirley Scott followed. Although he does not believe that he is
famous, he played with the best.
He continued, "There were times when the groove was just so hard
that on the second night before the first tune was played, I'd be
smiling."
Patrons of the Manhattan club Smoke witnessed Mr. Cranshaw and Mr.
Roker play again in December, 2002 at the bassist's 70th birthday party,
during which the duo played several tunes with pianist Harold Mabern. A
semi-annual tribute to vibraphonist Milt Jackson still takes place at
Ortlieb's.
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Mickey
Roker and Harold Mabern arrive at Smoke for Bob Cranshaw's
birthday party. photo, Gordon Polatnick |
"I've had so many good experiences that it's a pleasure just
going to work at night," said Mr. Roker.
Mr. Roker first went to New York in 1961. He had been selected to
back up an alto sax player at the Village Vanguard and was supposed to
play several engagements. After playing the first night, he arrived the
next evening but found that a different drum kit was occupying the
stage.
"Man, why didn't somebody call me?" Mr. Roker remembers
complaining. "I mean I came up here on a train full of people
thinking I'm going to work and the least you could do was tell me about
the switch."
Max Gordon, the club's owner informed Mr. Roker that the alto sax
player did not like how Mr. Roker had played.
"But I didn't call them for the gig. They called me for the
gig," Mr. Roker recalls, then laughs. He says he can't remember the
name of the alto saxophonist.
Mr. Roker was introduced to Blue Note Records through A&R Studios
by head arranger Mr. Pearson, who had been rehearsing with Mr. Cranshaw
and the percussionist at the latter's home.
"Back in those days, there were a lot of soloists, but they
didn't always come with a rhythm section," said Mr. Roker.
At Blue Note in the 1960's, "stock rhythm" meant bassists
and drummers such as Ron Carter, Joe Chambers and Billy Higgins. Mr.
Roker was a shoe-in.
"Herbie Hancock and Hank Jones were probably the first big names
to call me," said Mr. Roker.
For anybody familiar with the career of Dizzy Gillespie, there is
hardly a 1970's live album or concert footage which does not feature Mr.
Roker behind the kit. While Mr. Cranshaw was forging a career-long
collaboration with Mr. Rollins, Mr. Roker gave Mr. Gillespie his live
rhythmic legs.
"Dizzy was such a great musician that it was like going to
school," said Mr. Roker.
He recalls gigs such as the Montreaux Jazz Festival in 1975.
"Dizzy would give you something to handle but you didn't hear
it. You wouldn't even realize what was going on until two or three years
later when you heard the recording," said Mr. Roker.
Listening to the recordings, you hear the drummer following
everything with precision, putting his beat squarely in the middle of
every change.
"If Mickey is challenged, it's just amazing what comes
out," said Mr. Souders.
Mr. Roker mentioned that he once caught wind of a compliment that Mr.
Gillespie paid him.
"While you are playing with Mickey, you can go to China and come
back and the time will still be the same as when you left," said
Mr. Roker, paraphrasing Mr. Gillespie's compliment.
If you visit Ortliebs, you witness that the players are always
cracking up between songs. Mr. Souders can be caught steeling a glance
at Mr. Roker, watching for his reaction and expecting a humorous
comment. These men don't take life very seriously. The listener feels
lucky.
"Out of everybody I know--- musicians or not, Mickey is one of
the greatest gentlemen," said Mr. Souders.
For instance, the club owner explained that his business office of
Ortlieb's is a tiny cubbyhole containing his computer and two feet of
walking space. Mr. Roker, he says, has never once asked to leave his
musical instruments in there since joining the club in 1987.
"Mickey is a completely giving person," continues Mr.
Souders. "He supports every situation on and off the bandstand,
more than one hundred percent."
Players insist that Mr. Roker's uplifting attitude is the humble
power behind the music. When it comes to initiating a song's changes, it
is evident that Mr. Roker takes his role as an accompanist very
seriously.
"I'm still trying to learn how to play," he says.
During a Frederick Lowe tune, the band lays out, except for Mr. Roker
who varies the roll on his snare and ignites his toms. It is combustible
material that has been longing to explode. A solo erupts. Mr. Souders
shrugs that his famous employee doesn't believe in himself as a soloist.
"But when he takes his solo, Mickey is better than anybody I
know," swears Mr. Souders.
"Man, musical talent is a gift from God," starts Mr. Roker,
"Of, course, you got to swing, because that's spiritual."
He explains that belief in God is the root of the tree of music.
Without the root, the tree falls over.
"It's like going to school," Mr. Souders remembers pianist
Uri Caine telling him, "I got to play with Mickey Roker every
night."
Technically, Mr. Roker is an employee of Mr. Souders. It is hard to
listen to their music without wondering why there is no admission
charged during weeknights. Is Mr. Roker doing so well on album residuals
that Mr. Souders is running away with a great deal?
"Before man played for money, he made better bands, because man
put God before everything else," said Mr. Roker.
Portraying the perfect example of a place where the music comes
first, Ortlieb's has a very narrow interior and a tiny stage. The
building, whose façade resembles a tool shed, is surrounded by
construction projects busily converting the ruins of the Ortlieb's and
Schmidt's breweries into commercial real estate.
"Although Mickey now goes to church a lot, he used to say that
Ortliebs was his church," laughs Mr. Souders.
Mr. Souders, a saxophonist, admits starting the club because he
wanted a place to play.
"When the club first opened in 1987, Pete had a couple of other
musicians working there. But I was still playing on the road,"
remembers Mr. Roker.
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| Ortlieb's
Jazzhaus, 847 North 3rd St. |
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Shirley Scott came to Ortlieb's with drummer Bobbie Durham to
inaugurate the opening. In November, Mr. Durham, who had been playing
continuously with Oscar Peterson, joined Mr. Peterson and Ella
Fitzgerald for additional road gigs. Ms. Scott, telephoned Mr. Roker,
who was still on the road. Mr. Roker had met Ms. Scott years before in
New York. The two native Philadelphians remained friendly. Mr. Roker had
wrapped up the seventies by recording with Count Basie and Ms.
Fitzgerald on, "A Perfect Match." He had spent worked the
eighties both on the road and the studios with the Modern Jazz Quartet
and the bands of such stars as Mr. Peterson, Ray Bryant, Jackson Brown,
Ray Brown and Zoot Sims. While Mr. Roker cleared space on his plate for
Ortlieb's, drummer Al Jackson kept the skins warm. Benny Nelson covered
the bass position until Arthur Harper solidified Ms. Scott's organ trio.
"The Ortlieb's thing just clicked and we took off," said
Mr. Roker.
The format forged by the trio quickly brought fame to the club, whose
legacy was further ennobled because the building was becoming a public
curiosity. Ortlieb's Brewery had run the bar as an adjunct to its
operation since 1905. Along with the brewery building, Poor Henry's
Brewpub--- Ortlieb's old bottling plant next door, was razed. The
twelve-acre Schmidt's plant around the corner on Poplar Street was also
demolished. The buildings were denied landmark status. There grew a
metaphor which Ortlieb's alone could claim, having to do with the demise
of jazz clubs and Philadelphia industry alike: while history died in
Philly, Ortlieb's survived. People fell in love with the club and
bragged that they had been there.
"I once drove Duane Eubanks to a gig at Ortlieb's,"
remembers New York saxophonist John Gordon, winner of the 1996 Thelonius
Monk Award for saxophone-playing.
The Philadelphia musicians swooned that Mr. Roker was back home. They
met a generous master who was interested in playing with them.
"Man, at first, I didn't think Mickey was going to give me the
time," remembers a glad Bootsie Barnes.
Just before Mr. Barnes met Mr. Roker, the former had recently been
playing many Philly gigs with a slew of different drummers. One day
during the late-eighties, Richard "Buzzy" Wilson, the late
promoter of Zanzibar Blue, decided to pair Mr. Barnes and Mr. Roker on a
gig at the Second Office on Juniper Street--- a tiny club so-named
because it was a visited by Center City office workers after
five-thirty.
"Buzzy, man, he ain't gonna make no gig with me," Mr.
Barnes said he told Mr. Wilson.
"Yeah, he'll make a gig with you," replied a confident Mr.
Wilson, according to Mr. Barnes.
When Mr. Barnes arrived at the Second Office, Mr. Roker was already
there with his drums assembled.
"Mickey was on the gig before I got there with the drums all set
up. Real professional," said Mr. Barnes.
The sixty-five year-old Mr. Barnes was born in the University of
Pennsylvania Hospital. His family originally lived in South Philly and
then moved to the Richard Allen projects, in the north part of the city.
His first gig was at Max's Bar on Girard Avenue as a drummer at
thirteen. The managers gave him a Coke and allowed him to play as long
as he stayed away from the bar. Dubbed the "Philadelphia Prime
Minister of the Tenor Saxophone," by his friends, Mr. Barnes
performed in episode 41 of "The Cosby Show" with associates
Art Blakey, Jimmy Heath, Tommy Flannagan, Joseph B. Wilder, Percy Heath,
Jimmy "Badman" Oliver, Tito Puente, Carlos "Patato"
Valdias and Eric Gale. Bill Cosby grew up in the Northern Liberties
neighborhood in which Ortlieb's is located. Mr. Barnes remembers that
his childhood friend Mr. Cosby had tried to get a busy Mr. Roker to
perform on the episode.
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Bootsie
Barnes, like nobody's business! photo, Harvest Records |
"No, don't get me Mickey Roker, he's gonna steal my drums,"
Mr. Barnes remembers Mr. Cosby saying. Mr. Roker-- therein joked Mr.
Cosby, would pilfer the star's spotlight; Mr. Cosby, born in Germantown,
was a drummer back in the day.
After 1990, Ortlieb's held onto its star line-up for as long as it
could. In the early 1990's, Ms. Scott's teaching job at Cheney
University knocked Tuesday out of her schedule.
"So, we turned Tuesdays into a jam session and worked only four
nights," said Mr. Roker
Mr. Roker's schedule then subtracted Wednesday nights.
"It was getting too much for me to play live constantly after
ten years," explains Mr. Roker.
Mr. Souders and Mr. Roker decided to fill up the schedule with
younger players. Mr. Barnes would cover Wednesday nights with his organ
trio. Sundays would be filled with Roger Prieto's Quartet.
"What keeps the music alive is the young guys," said Mr.
Roker.
"One of my first Philadelphia gigs was at Ortlieb's in the early
nineties, playing with vocalist Shirley Scott, bassist Arthur Harper and
Mr. Roker," said Eric Alexander, "and when you are playing
with Mickey, you are playing with jazz history and the very best."
Mr. Roker bottomed every act visiting the stage, smoothly backing the
traditional bob-swing of Larry McKenna and the avant-garde slant of
Archie Shepp.
"If a real hot shot comes in, like Eric Alexander, Ralph
Bowen--- or earlier on, Al Gray, showing off their advanced Coltrane
changes or motifs from some distant jazz subcategory, Mickey plays right
to that," said Mr. Souders.
Several musicians have mentioned that Mr. Roker purposely bumps into
a player at Ortlieb's bar while he's walking by, just to disarm. Mr.
McKenna says that Mickey goes out of his way to make people feel
special.
"He'll say he's so glad that it's me playing at Ortlieb's
tonight," said Mr. McKenna. "When I hear Mickey say that, it
makes me want to play."
"To me he¹s family. He¹s funny as hell and he's got an inner
warmth that makes everyone around him feel better. I'm glad he's
here," said pianist LeDonne.
"There is also a lot a humor in his playing," said Mr.
McKenna about the transcendent style of Mr. Roker.
"When we're having fun, we just play the melodies from a lot of
standards and vary them like Bird and Dizzy, which means taking almost
nothing and making something out of it," said Mr. Roker.
On a Thursday in February, Mr. Roker joined Mr. Souders in a lexicon
of Cole Porter, Gershwin and Lowe, Rodgers, Hart and Hammerstein
numbers. The diners at the club became relaxed, watching the stage
intensely. They looked at one another smiling every time a familiar
melody jumped out of the arrangement.
Chris' Jazz Café regular, Jimmy Bruno says, "Mickey is one of
the last of the great jazz drummers in the tradition that people now
date as 'classical' or 'traditional bebop-swing'."
During the second set, a tenor saxophone player--- easily four
decades Mr. Roker's junior, was allowed to replace Mr. Souders on the
stage. The young man seemed nervous to start, his fingers aiming and
brushing his keys. Mr. Roker, before the music began, beckoned the
younger man to lean toward the drums. Rare to witness these days, Mr.
Roker's informing the youth of the tune's changes produced radiance in
the player visibly similar to the joy a child experiences when she
wonders if she is creating the sound coming from a pianola.
"It's a sad thing that one day, young people, denied Mickey's
roots or talent, won't be able to hear the real thing, said Mr. Bruno.
Mr. Roker cites Mr. Morgan as an example of a young player making it
big in Philadelphia. At age 15, Mr. Morgan was leading his own
professional band.
"All the young trumpet players in Philly love Lee Morgan,"
said Mr. Roker, who explained that Mr. Morgan was the protégé of
Clifford Brown.
"People like Lee Morgan and Clifford Brown give the young cats
somewhere to come from," said Mr. Roker.
The Wilmington, Delaware native Mr. Morgan had made Philadelphia his
launch base. He had named Philadelphian Clifford Brown as his greatest
influence.
"If you know the influences, the albums and the history, you
know why Mickey Roker is great," said trumpeter John Swana, a
Norristown native.
"The Philadelphia offspring of these cats," explains Mr.
Roker, "are people like John Swana."
By eighteen, Mr. Morgan had worked with Miles Davis, Mr. Gillespie
and Clifford Brown at the Tuesday night workshops at the Music City
clubs which had existed on Chestnut Street, Castor Avenue in Northeast
Philadelphia and Marlton Avenue in Cherry Hill. While Mr. Roker was busy
touring, all of the clubs of his youth folded. Mr. Roker became a relic
connecting us with the past. He is recognized as a cultural treasure.
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| "Man,
back in Bag's day, two guys from everywhere used to come down to
Philly because there were so many clubs," said Mr. Roker.
photo, George Manney |
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"There is nobody who can play an up-tempo tune as fast as it
needs to be played, like Bobby Durham, Duck Scott, Billy James and
Mickey," said Mr. Bruno, "without it becoming so loud that
nobody can hear it."
Mr. Bruno's opinion is validated by the recent CD-release by Blue
Note of "The 27th Man," where Mr. Cranshaw and Mr. Roker are
led by pianist Horace Silver in a work where the dynamics and changes
are echoed in the signature sound of Steely Dan.
"When it comes to playing a ballad, using brushes, capturing the
mood of the piece, it's a lost art that isn't lost to Mickey," said
Mr. Bruno.
If you are lucky enough to catch younger musicians successfully
coaxing Mr. Roker into covering a Rollins track from "All the
Things you Are," you realize how special Ortlieb's is. Here you can
hear the 1968 drums from Herbie Hancock's "Speak Like Child,"
and the 1982 swinging bottom on "Mostly Duke" by Milt Jackson
for yourself. It's like visiting the Oracle at Delphi. It really does
exist.
"When these guys are gone, their art is going to go with
them," said Mr. Bruno.
The Ortlieb's sound is unmistakable. Mr. McKenna, the veteran
Philadelphia tenor saxophonist (who has played with everybody from Frank
Sinatra to Tony Bennett), was at Chris' last month when talent manager
Al McMahon started a Bootsie Barnes CD. After two notes, he identified
the performer.
"Players like Bootsie, Mickey and Bob (Cranshaw) have their own
sound, almost like the human voice," explained Mr. McKenna.
During his Wednesday night slot in early February, Mr. Barnes was
greeted by trumpeter Nicolas Payton and saxophonist Tim Warfield, who
had just finished playing with Dee Dee Bridgewater at the Kimmel Center.
Mr. Payton had left his trumpet in his hotel, so decided to play the
drums. With the energy of a pick-up band from heaven, they created swing
that caused the lights to dim.
In 1991, during the Mellon Jazz Fest, Mr. Roker was greeted by the
mayor, who presented him with a key to the city. In the front lines were
Mr. Jackson, Mr. Gillespie, Cecil Payne and longtime pianist for Mr.
Jackson, Mr. LeDonne, who recalled the occasion.
"This was a huge thrill not only because of the line up, but
because Mickey and Dizzy go way back. So it was as much fun listening to
them talk as it was playing the concert," said Mr. LeDonne.
While the event was covered by all of the Philadelphia newspapers,
Mr. Roker realized that his road life was over and that he was getting
the kind of homecoming he had long deserved. People who watched him that
day recalled that he had a smile wider than the steps of the big museum.
"Mickey is simple, straightforward and pure, kind of like a
child. Everything about him is natural and down-to-earth," said Mr.
LeDonne.
In 1988, Mr. LeDonne met the drummer during his first night playing
with Milt Jackson at a long-gone Philadelphia club called Jewels.
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He continued,
"There were times when the groove was just so hard that on
the second night before the first tune was played, I'd be
smiling." photo, Bernhard Castiglioni |
"Mike is a great, young player," praises Mr. Roker.
"Mike loves Cedar Walton and that's what made Bags like him."
According to Mr. Swana, Mr. Roker is known for giving players,
"Mickey Roker talk." Mr. Roker has often taken aside hard-luck
players and told them the importance of developing a positive attitude.
"He is very much into positive thinking, God, his church and he
generously imparts his wisdom and kindness to other people," Mr.
Souders said.
Recently, Mr. Roker, a Baptist, had to practice what he preached. In
October, 2001, his wife died of lung cancer.
"Priscilla just wouldn't stop smoking," her husband said.
During the winter of that year, Mrs. Roker was diagnosed with
late-stage cancer. The doctors would not operate. Mr. Roker remembers
keeping watch while she slept.
"During the last six months, this beautiful woman whom I loved
so much--- it was like she had shriveled up to nothing."
During the last night of his wife's life, Mr. Roker administered
medicine to Mrs. Roker, who could no longer swallow. He waited for her
to fall asleep. He stepped into another room of their home.
"I couldn't stay awake no more and I had to lie down," he
recalls.
A short while later, Mr. Roker heard a bump. He rushed to his wife,
who had fallen to the floor. Mrs. Roker's eyes were open and she was
still breathing. Mr. Roker telephoned his son, imploring that he come. A
short while later, Mrs. Roker passed away.
"She died at home with her family and I am so thankful that she
is no longer suffering but is now with Jesus Christ," said Mr.
Roker.
Mr. Swana remembers witnessing the drummer imploring another musician
to engage the art of laughing things off.
"Mickey had recently told his son that his mother was in a
better place and to think more positively. So what Mickey was doing in
speaking to that player was in effect, speaking to his own son."
Ms. Scott was living in West Chester when she died in 2002. The Eddie
"Lockjaw" Davis keyboard player was once married to Mr.
Turrentine. She had gigged in her hometown with John Coltrane in the
fifties. She was musical director of Mr. Cosby's short-lived 1992 show
"You Bet Your Life." In February 2000, Ms. Scott had won an $8
million settlement against American Home Products, manufacturers of the
now-banned diet drug fen-phen, and the doctor who had prescribed it to
her. Ms. Scott had started taking the drug "cocktail" in 1995
and by 1997 had developed primary pulmonary hypertension. During the
last four years of her life, she was connected to an oxygen tank
twenty-four hours a day.
The 'Milt Jackson Tribute Band' will next play at the Bahamas Jazz
Festival on April 24th. Mr. Cranshaw, Mr. LeDonne, vibes player Steve
Nelson and Mr. Roker last paid tribute to their old vibraphonist boss in
January.
"It is the most wonderful, uplifting experience playing whenever
we team up again at Ortlieb's," said Mr. Cranshaw.
The Paradise Island concert has been faithfully organized by Mr.
Cranshaw, into whose hands the job fell after Stanley Turrentine died.
The 'Milt Jackson' spot has been featured at the Nassau festival since
the latter's death. This time, "hot shot" Mr. Alexander will
take Mr. Turrentine's place on the tenor blow.
Mr. Turrentine passed away one night before completing a week-long
engagement at the Blue Note in 2000.
"Mr. Turrentine had caringly organized the concert which is now
a revue," said Mr. Cranshaw. "So, I'm carrying it on for
him."
"I think it is important to play with like-minded people with
whom I share the same musical aesthetic," said Mr. Alexander.
Mr. Roker's kit is by Slingerland. Twenty years ago when Milt Jackson
went to get his Deagan vibraphone overhauled at a Slingerland dealer,
Mr. Roker came along.
"While we were there, they made me a set of wooden drums,"
he said.
The kit has an eighteen inch bass, fifteen and twelve inch toms, high
hat, crash, a regular snare and a sock symbol. Mr. Roker regards it to
be a small set.
"There are countries where you are not allowed to play an
instrument unless you prove yourself religiously or culturally,"
said Mr. Roker.
Wedding musicians and store owners in Kabul City, Afghanistan are
continually being arrested for playing instruments. Moreover, the tanbur
has always been considered a sacred instrument stringently associated
with the Kurdish Sufi music of Western Iran. Up until the last fifty
years this instrument was used only during Sufi devotional or liturgic
ceremonies known as djamms. Playing the tanbur is still limited to the
Ahle-Haqq, the "people of truth."
"Keep a level head, man, and learn how to play logically and
simple and that way you'll end up playing interesting," advised Mr.
Roker.
Mr. LeDonne's latest CD, "Bags' Groove," a tribute to Mr.
Jackson, adds flutist Jim Snidero, alto saxophonist Steve Wilson,
trumpeter Jim Rotundi and trombonist Steve Davis to the tribute band,
but minuses Mr. Alexander. Mr. Roker and Mr. Cranshaw whip up tasty
rhythmic alchemy. This CD received four stars in "Downbeat
Magazine."
"That Bahamas show is my time away, but I still have to go to
New York sometimes, which is not too bad," said Mr. Roker
On March 8th, he will also do a recording session with saxophone
players James Moody and Benny Golson, bassist Richard Davis, trumpeter
Jimmy Owens and pianist Hank Jones.
"I'm tired of living out of that suitcase. I've had enough of
that," said Mr. Roker.
Mr. Barnes currently records on the Harvest label, a Philadelphia
"indie" company founded by Barbara Cooper former co-owner of
Slim Cooper's Lounge in Mount Airy. His quintet's latest contribution,
"Boppin 'Round the Center," ranges from hard bop to ballads.
It features Mr. Swana on trumpet.
Neither of Mr. Roker's children plays an instrument. LaToya, the
oldest child of his son and daughter-in-law Deborah, plays piano while
her brother Marcus watches impressed. Debra Roker's son is named
Michael. Mr. Bowe (Mr. Roker's uncle) lives in Georgia.
"Without Uncle Walter taking care of my mother and me, I'd never
have played drums," said Mr. Roker who has insisted that no story
should be published about his life without mentioning Mr. Bowe's
formative role.
"Outside of Ortlieb's, seeing my family and recording, I spend
the rest of my time going to church," said Mr. Roker.
Mr. Cranshaw is a pension representative for the American Federation
of Musicians Local 802, which runs a campaign called 'Justice for Jazz
Artists' in New York.
"New York musicians are not as lucky to have the union power of
Philadelphia musicians. My job is to ensure that musicians up here gain
health benefits and pensions," explained Mr. Cranshaw.
Mr. Cranshaw was the original bass player of "Saturday Night
Live." He is also the bass player of Sesame Street.
Mr. Barnes and Mr. Swana and their Smokin' Sextet played to an awed
crowed at Ortlieb's on March 5th and 6th. Mr. Barnes and his Organ Trio
can be caught at Ortliebs every Wednesday night. Mr. Roker and the
"hausband" can be caught there on Thursday nights. Mr. Bruno
and Mr. Swana are constantly appearing at Chris'.
After the first set on Thursday nights, musicians are allowed to sit
in with the Ortlieb's band.
"Mickey's played with everybody and everybody's played with
Mickey," said Mr. Swana.
"I aspire to be like him," said Mr. LeDonne.
Mr. LeDonne is now celebrating the birth of his daughter Mary
Margaret, who was born on Valentine's Day.
Ortlieb's Jazzhaus, located at 847 North 3rd Street, can be reached
at (215) 922-1035. Its website is www.ortliebsjazzhaus.com
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