JazzTimes (February 2007)
New Film Documents Life and Times of Legendary Heath
Brothers
By Andrew Gilbert
Brotherly Jazz, the engaging and insightful 70-minute documentary
DVD exploring the lives and careers of remarkable siblings Tootie, Jimmy
and Percy Heath, almost collapsed before it ever got off the ground. Danny
Scher, who made a mint as vice president of Bill Graham Presents, wanted
to present the Heath Brothers in the backyard amphitheatre of his historic
Berkeley Hills home as part of a 2004 fundraiser for the Jazzschool, the
unique educational institution founded by pianist Susan Muscarella. While
drummer Tootie and saxophonist/arranger Jimmy quickly signed on for the
gig, bassist Percy wasn’t interested, though he hadn’t figured
on Scher’s persuasiveness. The impresario got him on the phone,
and each time Percy raised an objection about what it would cost to get
him from his Long Island home to Berkeley, Scher said he’d cover
the expense. Eventually, he realized that Scher was walking the walk,
and asked him why. “I said, ‘Listen Percy, my whole life I’ve
overpaid musicians, many of whom couldn’t play their instruments,
and most of whom haven’t paid their dues,” Scher says. “’The
least I can do is pay someone who has.’ And that was it. I called
Tootie and said, ‘He’s in.’”
Jazz fans everywhere should be grateful for Scher’s persistence,
because what started as a simple benefit concert evolved into an incisive
family portrait and loving valedictory for Percy, who died in 2005, two
days short of his 82nd birthday. The film is more of a character study
than a detailed account of the brothers’ careers. By sketching the
Philadelphia scene out of which they emerged and briefly highlighting
key moments in the Heaths’ lives, the film creates a vivid sense
of each brother’s personality, capturing Percy’s quiet self-confidence,
Jimmy’s sensitive pride, and Tootie’s affable humor.
“If we had gone in depth on our careers, it would have been twice
as long," says Jimmy Heath, whose autobiography I Walked With
the Giants is due out on Temple University Press later this year.
“I mean, I started in 1945 while Percy was in the service. It capsulizes
what we have contributed to the music world. We all played with the giants
in the music.”
While Scher has long been a passionate fan of the Heath Brothers’
music, ultimately it was the human dimension of their story that compelled
him to back the project. “I’m from a family of six boys, so
I understand the dynamics of brother(s) and I couldn’t imagine playing
with my brothers like that and liking it,” Scher said. “But
these three guys really like each other and they communicate on a level
that only brothers can. And they were getting older, and if we didn’t
do it, it would never be done.”
Among the film’s highlights, Percy talks about his experience as
a Tuskegee Airman in the segregated military of World War II, and how
he decided to become a bass player after mustering out of the service,
eventually landing his defining gig with the Modern Jazz Quartet. In the
film’s most moving passages, Jimmy talks about taking up heroin
to assuage his hurt over the breakup of a relationship, and how he returned
to the music scene in the mid-1950s after several years in prison. Tootie’s
illustrious career gets the shortest shrift, but he fires off the film’s
best line, noting “had it not been for my older brothers, I might
have gone astray and become a doctor or lawyer.”
Much like the Oscar-winning documentary A Great Day in Harlem,
the film captures the humor and quirky personalities of jazz musicians,
with affectionate commentary by colleagues such as Sonny Rollins, Herbie
Hancock and Christian McBride. In a surprise appearance, late legendary
ABC newsman Peter Jennings offers a spot-on characterization of Percy,
a close friend and neighbor. Binding the film together are the extended
musical interludes drawn from the Jazzschool benefit concert, expertly
produced by the documentary’s director Jesse Block, video director
of the Monterey Jazz Festival since 2003.
“I’m an old-fashioned director,” says Block, who spent
a decade as a director for Black Entertainment Television’s (BET)
jazz programming. “I actually come in with a whole video truck switcher
package like I do at Monterey, and cut the show live. But once we did
the concert, I told Danny we need to find a way to join the interviews
with the concert footage and make it compelling.”
Brotherly Jazz premiered at the Monterey Jazz Festival in Sept.
2005, and has been received well on the film festival circuit, including
the In-Edit Music Documentary Festival in Barcelona last October. For
Jimmy, the documentary’s release on DVD was a welcome addition to
the yearlong celebration of his 80th birthday in 2006, and a much appreciated
tribute to the eldest Heath.
“We played well that night, not our best, but I thought it was a
good night because of the atmosphere, the idea that we were finally doing
a Brothers DVD,” he says. “And it’s very good we did,
because it wasn’t long after that Percy passed."
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