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Ed Summerlin
Ed Summerlin
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Edgar Eugene Summerlin (September 1, 1928 – October 10, 2006) was an American jazz saxophonist, composer, and educator known for pioneering Liturgical jazz, avant-garde jazz, and free jazz.

Early life and career

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Born on September 1, 1928 in Marianna, Florida,[1] and raised primarily in Missouri (in the towns of Gasconade, Brunswick, and Lexington, respectively[2][3]), Summerlin was the second of four children born to Velma and William Edgar Summerlin.[4][3][5] In 1940, he began attending Lexington Junior-Senior High School, and was promptly elected president of the 7th grade.[6] Summerlin graduated from Central Missouri State University in 1951 with a Bachelor of Music Education (alongside his then wife, Virginia, receiving her bachelor of science);[7] the following year, he earned a Master of Music from the Eastman School. He subsequently free-lanced for approximately half a decade, including stints with bandleaders Sonny Dunham, Ted Weems, and Tony Pastor.[1] In 1958, after learning about the University of North Texas College of Music while performing with the Johnny Long Band, Summerlin enrolled as a graduate student and became a member of Lab Band and also assisted Gene Hall in teaching jazz composition, theory, and saxophone.[8]

Liturgical works

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On January 27, 1959, while a graduate student at the University of North Texas College of Music, Summerlin, along with his then wife, Mary Elizabeth, suffered the horribly untimely, but evidently not unforeseen passing of their less-than-10-month-old daughter, attributed by attending physician Thomas V. Patterson to "congestive heart failure due to congenital heart disease."[9] Shortly thereafter, acting on the suggestion of Bill Slack, Jr., Assistant Pastor of the First Methodist Church of Denton (who had been a great comfort to the Summerlins in the weeks leading up to their daughter's death), Summerlin composed Requiem for Mary Jo,[10] which has long been regarded as one of the first significant uses of jazz in a liturgical service.[11][12][13][14][15]

He performed Requiem for Mary Jo May 20, 1959, during a service in the chapel at the Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University.[16][17] Dr. Roger Ellwood Ortmayer (1916–1984), then of the Perkins School, had commissioned the work.[18]

That same year, still studying and teaching at North Texas, Summerlin recorded his debut LP, Liturgical Jazz, on which "Requiem for Mary Jo," was the heartbreaking centerpiece.

Saturday night, February 13, 1960, NBC's World Wide 60 (hosted by Chet Huntley) visited Denton to air the story of Ed Summerlin's liturgical jazz (national broadcast, NBC, Friday, February 19, 1960).[19]

Summerlin's grieving and spiritual creativity inspired him to compose other liturgical jazz pieces, including

  • Episcopal Evensong
  • Jazz Vespers Service[20]
  • Liturgy of the Holy Spirit[1]

TV and film work

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At the same time, his well-publicized prime time television debut was followed by several Sunday morning appearances throughout the 1960s on the long-running CBS series, Look Up and Live,[20][21][22][23] collaborating with musicians such as Freddie Hubbard,[24] Eric Dolphy, Don Ellis, Slide Hampton, and Ron Carter,[20] as well as choreographer Anna Sokolow.[23] During this decade, Summerlin also scored two feature films, the little-known 1963 Bay of Pigs-inspired drama, We Shall Return (which, coincidentally, featured the first and only original screenplay by oft-adapted novelist Pat Frank) and the even lesser known 1967 film Ciao (written and directed by the earlier film's editor, David Tucker),[25][26] which, after becoming the only U.S. feature film to be entered in that year's Venice Film Festival,[25][27] failed to find a distributor and quickly disappeared from view.

New York

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Summerlin relocated to New York in the early 1960s, where he gradually established himself as an avant-garde tenor saxophonist, composer and arranger, freelancing with Eric Dolphy, Pete LaRoca, Don Ellis, and Sheila Jordan. He also composed and arranged for Ron Carter, Kuhn, Freddie Hubbard, Dave Liebman, Toshiko Akiyoshi, and Lee Konitz. In 1966, he worked with Jackson Mac Low, Max Neuhaus, James Tenney, David Behrman, Philip Corner, Jeanne Lee, Emmett Williams, David Antin, and others. In 1969, collaborated with saxophonist and journalist Don Heckman to co-lead the Improvisational Jazz Workshop.

In 1971, Summerlin founded the jazz program at City College of New York, which he was director until 1989.[1]

Personal life and death

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Summerlin was married three times. On August 29, 1948, three days before his 20th birthday, Summerlin and his Central Missouri State classmate Virginia Lee Allen were married at the First Presbyterian Church in Independence;[28][29] their son, Sean Eugene, was born the following year on October 29.[30][16][31] In September 1954, Mrs. Summerlin filed for divorce;[32] it was granted in 1955.[33] In September 1955, Summerlin married Mary Elizabeth Bouknight.[34] Their son Jeffrey was born in 1960, but not before the former Mary Bouknight gave birth to her husband's most famously unlucky child in April 1958.[35][9] Exactly when, why and/or how this marriage ended is not clear, but they appear to have been together at least as late as February 1968.[36][37][a]

In December 1974, in a ceremony conducted at Ornette Coleman's Artist House in Manhattan's Soho, Manhattan neighborhood (and officiated by, among others, Summerlin's old friend, Roger Ortmayer), Summerlin married Dayton, Ohio native and Ohio University graduate, Karen Louise Jones,[38][39] then employed as director of communication services for public schools in Hyde Park, New York.[38]

Summerlin died on October 10, 2006 in Rhinebeck, NY after a long battle with cancer,[1] survived by his wife Karen and sons Sean and Jeffrey from the previous two marriages.[16]

Selected discography

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As leader

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Recorded at Make Believe Ballroom in West Shokan, New York, Ed Summerlin - Bob Norden Quartet, December 27 & 28, 1993, released 1998
Ed Summerlin (tenor sax), Bob Norden (trombone), Charlie Kniceley (bass), Chris Starpoli (percussion)
Recorded at Make Believe Ballroom in West Shokan, New York, released February, 1998
Ed Summerlin (tenor sax), Bruce Ahren (trumpet), Joe Chambers (drums), Ron Finck (alto sax), Tony Marino (bass)
Recorded at Make Believe Ballroom in West Shokan, New York, December 14 & 15, 1998; released 1999
Ed Summerlin (tenor sax), Bruce Ahrens (trumpet), Bob Norden (trombone), Ron Finck (alto sax), Tony Marino (bass), Adam Nussbaum (drums)

As arranger / composer

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With Freddie Hubbard

With Steve Kuhn and Toshiko Akiyoshi

With Caedmon Records

  • Winnie the Pooh: Told and Sung (Caedmon, TC 1408; 1972) – words and music by A. A. Milne, Fraser-Simson and Julian Slade, read and sung by Carol Channing; additional music, arrangements and conducting by Ed Summerlin.[40]
  • Many Moons (Caedmon, TC-1410; 1972) – James Thurber story read by Peter Ustinov; background music composed and conducted by Edgar Summerlin.[41]
  • The Great Quillow (Caedmon, TC 1411; 1972) – James Thurber story read by Peter Ustinov; background music composed and conducted by Ed Summerlin.[42]
  • 'Curious George,' and other stories about Curious George (Caedmon, TC 1420; 1973) – read by Julie Harris; background music composed and conducted by Ed Summerlin.[43]
  • 'Curious George Reads the Alphabet,' and other stories about Curious George (Caedmon, TC 1421; 1973) – read by Julie Harris; music composed and conducted by Ed Summerlin.[44]
  • Whoever heard of a Fird? (Caedmon, TC 1735; 1984) – Othello Bach story performed by Joel Grey; arranged and conducted by Ed Summerlin.[45]

With The Rock Generation

  • Saturday in the Park and Other Songs Made Famous by Chicago (RCA Camden, 1973)[46][47]

As sideman or combo member

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  • The Contemporary Jazz Ensemble: New Sounds From Rochester, Prestige Records (PRLP 163) (1953) OCLC 56923930
Bob Norden (trombone), Bob Silberstein (alto sax), Ed Summerlin (tenor sax), Jim Straney (piano), Neil Courtney (bass), Bill Porter (drums)
Recorded in Rochester, New York, June 1953
  1. All the Things You Are
  2. Fantasia and Fugue on Poinciana
  3. Prelude : Go Forth
  4. Prelude and Jazz
  5. Variation

See also

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ed Summerlin is an American jazz tenor saxophonist, composer, and educator known for pioneering the fusion of jazz with liturgical music, creating some of the earliest compositions to integrate jazz improvisation into Christian worship services. His groundbreaking 1959 work Requiem for Mary Jo, written following the death of his infant daughter, is widely regarded as one of the first examples of jazz used in a liturgical context, and he went on to compose additional pieces such as Episcopal Evensong and Liturgy of the Holy Spirit. Born Edgar Eugene Summerlin on September 1, 1928, in Marianna, Florida, he earned a degree from the Eastman School of Music in 1952 and later studied composition with Gunther Schuller and Hall Overton. In the late 1950s, he taught jazz composition, theory, and saxophone at the University of North Texas, where he released his debut album Liturgical Jazz in 1959. After relocating to New York City in the early 1960s, Summerlin became a prominent figure in the avant-garde jazz scene, performing with musicians including Eric Dolphy, Don Ellis, Sheila Jordan, and others, while also composing and arranging for artists such as Freddie Hubbard, Dave Liebman, and Lee Konitz. In 1969, he co-led the Improvisational Jazz Workshop with Don Heckman, producing a notable recording for the Ictus label. From 1971 to 1989, Summerlin served on the faculty of the City College of New York, continuing to influence jazz education while maintaining his performance and compositional career. He remained active into his later years, releasing albums such as Sum Of The Parts and Eye On The Future. Ed Summerlin died on October 10, 2006, in Rhinebeck, New York, after a battle with cancer.

Biography

Early life and education

Ed Summerlin was born Edgar Eugene Summerlin on September 1, 1928, in Marianna, Florida, the second of four children to Eunice Velma Thompson and William Edgar Summerlin. He spent his childhood primarily in Missouri, living in the towns of Gasconade, Brunswick, and Lexington, and attended high school in Lexington. Summerlin earned a Bachelor of Music Education from Central Missouri State University in 1951. He then received a Master of Music from the Eastman School of Music in 1952. Following his master's degree, he pursued post-graduate studies in composition with Gunther Schuller and Hall Overton.

Personal life

Ed Summerlin was married three times. His first marriage, to Virginia Lee Allen, began in 1948 and ended in divorce in 1955; the couple had one son, Sean Eugene, born in 1949. His second marriage was to Mary Elizabeth Bouknight in 1955, with whom he had a daughter, Mary Jo, born in 1958, who died in infancy on January 27, 1959, due to congenital heart disease, and a son, Jeffrey, born in 1960. The tragic loss of his daughter Mary Jo profoundly affected Summerlin and inspired his composition "Requiem for Mary Jo," written as an outpouring of grief over her death. He later married Karen Louise Jones on December 15, 1974, remaining with her until his death. In his later years, Summerlin resided in Rhinebeck, New York. He was survived by his wife, Karen Jones Summerlin, his son Jeff, and two granddaughters, Meghan and Erica.

Death

Edgar Summerlin died on October 10, 2006, in Rhinebeck, New York, at the age of 78. He had been hospitalized for several weeks due to complications from cancer treatment. The cause of death was pneumonia associated with cancer treatments. Summerlin lived in Staatsburg, New York, at the time of his death. He is survived by his wife, Karen; sons Jeff Summerlin and Sean Wright; two grandchildren; brothers William and Lee; sister Johnnie Peek; and former wife Mary Summerlin.

Career

Liturgical jazz

Ed Summerlin was one of the first composers to integrate jazz into Christian liturgical services during the late 1950s, helping to establish liturgical jazz as a distinct subgenre. Following the death of his infant daughter Mary Jo, he composed "Requiem for Mary Jo" in 1959 as a personal outpouring of grief. Commissioned by Roger Ortmayer, the work premiered on May 20, 1959, at Perkins Chapel on the Southern Methodist University campus during a groundbreaking service that incorporated jazz elements into worship. Summerlin's debut LP, Liturgical Jazz, appeared on Ecclesia Records in 1959 and featured "Requiem for Mary Jo" as its centerpiece. He continued composing in this vein with additional works such as "Episcopal Evensong", "Jazz Vespers Service", and "Liturgy of the Holy Spirit". His contributions received national exposure through a February 20, 1960, episode of NBC's "World Wide '60" television program, which highlighted "Requiem for Mary Jo". These efforts marked significant early steps in blending jazz improvisation and harmony with traditional liturgical structures, influencing subsequent developments in sacred music.

Avant-garde jazz career

Ed Summerlin relocated to New York City at the beginning of the 1960s, where he became an active participant in the avant-garde jazz scene. He performed with notable figures such as Eric Dolphy, Don Ellis, Sheila Jordan, and others, engaging in the experimental and free jazz developments of the era. He also composed and arranged works for prominent musicians including Freddie Hubbard, Ron Carter, Dave Liebman, Steve Kuhn, Toshiko Akiyoshi, and Lee Konitz. In 1966, Summerlin collaborated in experimental contexts, notably improvising a saxophone duet with Don Heckman across Central Park's Children's Pond during the 4th Annual New York Avant Garde Festival organized by Charlotte Moorman, an event featuring multidisciplinary avant-garde performances. In 1969, Summerlin co-led the Improvisational Jazz Workshop with Don Heckman, a group focused on exploratory jazz, and they recorded an LP released on the Ictus label. This project exemplified his involvement in the avant-garde movement's emphasis on improvisation and innovation during that period.

Teaching career

Summerlin began his teaching career in the late 1950s at the University of North Texas, where he taught jazz composition, theory, and saxophone. In 1971, he founded the jazz program at the City College of New York and served as its director until 1989. During this period, he built the foundation of the program and brought in notable jazz educators and performers to expand its offerings.

Film and television contributions

Ed Summerlin's contributions to film and television were limited compared to his extensive work in jazz performance, composition, and liturgical music. His involvement primarily occurred during the 1960s and centered on select television series and independent films that incorporated jazz elements. He worked extensively in the music department of the CBS television series Look Up and Live, serving as conductor and contributing music for 10 episodes between 1960 and 1967. The series, a non-denominational Sunday morning religious program, occasionally featured jazz-oriented segments under his musical direction. In film, Summerlin composed and conducted the score for the 1963 drama We Shall Return. He also served as composer for the 1967 independent feature Ciao, directed by David Tucker, which was selected as an entry at the Venice Film Festival that year. Additionally, Summerlin appeared as himself on the television program World Wide '60 in 1960. These media credits represent the entirety of his verified work in film and television, reflecting a brief but distinctive intersection of his jazz background with broadcast and cinematic formats.

Works

Selected discography

Ed Summerlin produced a modest but influential discography as a leader, primarily on small independent labels, reflecting his explorations in liturgical and avant-garde jazz across several decades. His recordings as leader include Liturgical Jazz (Ecclesia, 1959), The Don Heckman–Ed Summerlin Improvisational Jazz Workshop (Ictus, 1967) (co-led), Ring Out Joy (Avant-Garde, 1968), Still At It (Ictus, 1994) (with the Ed Summerlin • Bob Norden Quartet), Sum of the Parts (Ictus, 1998), and Eye on the Future (Ictus, 1999). Notable contributions as a sideman or arranger encompass his early appearance on New Sounds From Rochester (1953), arrangements on Freddie Hubbard's Hub Cap (1961), and music for a series of children's recordings issued by Caedmon beginning in 1972 (e.g., Many Moons).

References

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