Billy Hart
Billy Hart stands as one of the most important and creative drummers in improvisational
music, not only as a drummer and musician, but also as an educator and thinker. In my research
on Billy Hart, I found his perspectives on hearing and thinking about music extremely interesting
and helpful, opening up my mind to different ways of understanding and experiencing music.
Born in Washington DC on November 29, 1940, Billy Hart grew up only about five
blocks away from the Spotlight Club in Washington DC. His grandmother lived across the street
from the legendary Washington DC saxophonist Buck Clayton, who became Hart's first
introduction to jazz music. Clayton gave him 78 RPM records of Charlie Parker with strings,
igniting Hart's love for jazz. He began frequenting the Spotlight Club, watching jazz musicians
who performed there, despite being underage to enter. Through the large fans in all clubs at the
time, he observed the musicians performing. Hart began teaching himself to play the drums by
playing along with records and started asking around to sit in at jam sessions, despite not being
taken seriously initially due to his age and inexperience. However, Buck Clayton intervened and
took him to sit in with the group he was playing with. It was during this time that Hart met his
greatest musical influence, Washington D.C. pianist and vocalist Shirley Horn. Hart often
mentions that she taught him to play the drums, and he still plays the drums the way she taught
him to this day. They only recorded one album together, later in Hart’s career in 1978, called “A
Lazy Afternoon,” as a trio with bassist Buster Williams, but they toured extensively together.
Hart then began working with other musicians around Washington DC, such as Wes
Montgomery and Jimmy Smith. He received calls from both James Brown and Jimmy Smith on
the same day, but chose his passion over the possibility of fame and fortune, opting to work with
Jimmy Smith because that was the music he loved. During his time with Jimmy Smith in the
1960s, Hart became interested in different, more "out" styles of drumming, listening to
drummers such as Sunny Murray, Rashied Ali, and Milford Graves. He developed a fondness for
multidirectional styles of music, such as the later works of John Coltrane. After Wes
Montgomery's death, Hart moved to New York and began playing and recording with musicians
such as Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, and Pharoah Sanders. He was also a member of Herbie
Hancock's "Mwandishi" sextet from 1969 to 1973. Later, he performed with McCoy Tyner and
Stan Getz. Getz frequently commented on Hart's ride cymbal pattern, urging him to "undulate,"
which Hart interpreted as implying a 6/8 caracara rhythm while playing time on the ride cymbal,
and talk extensively about this undulation and african influence in drummers such as Billy
Higgins, Roy Haynes, and Elvin Jones.
Overall, Billy Hart remains an extremely important figure in many different aspects of
jazz. He exemplifies an open-minded approach to the instrument and collaborating with others,
reflecting the depth of knowledge and thought of history and lineage required to excel as a jazz
musician.
Drummers Listed in Billy Hart Interviews
Rashied Ali
Donald Bailey
Louis Hayes
Albert “Tootie” Heath
Mickey Roker
Sunny Murray
Milford Graves
Andrew Cyrille
Beaver Harris
Barry Altschul
Chris Dave
Bud Powell
James Mtume
Joe Dyson
Lenny McBrowne
Vernell Fournier
Edgar Bateman
Pete La Roca
Notable Quotes
1. On Playing Ride Cymbal: Wavy is not the term. What I use as an example with my students is
this: Say you’re seeing somebody in the hospital and he’s got tubes in his arm and he’s got the
machine on. If the line on the heart machine is flat, you’re dead. It it’s going up and down,
you’re still alive. That’s how I explain undulation. It’s an energy field that moves horizontally.
2. Q: Joao Gilberto once told you to “play like the rain.”
A: Yeah, it’s a nice image. The great drummers around Washington, D.C., they all had phrases
like that. They’d say, “Don’t play like that, do like this.” And that’s exactly what Joao was doing.
That’s Brazilian rhythms. He was actually talking about kind of a samba pattern that didn’t even
have a name back then. They now call it partido alto.
3. There is a video of a Tony Williams clinic that I am going to
quote. Tony says, “As far as I am concerned, I don’t have my
own style. I was always trying to play like Art Blakey, Philly Joe
Jones and, Max Roach. I wanted to play like they played, if they
were me!”
4.So I could sit there, and watch myself play…check
out my posture. Sitting there watching myself, that’s how I
learned to play Wes’ beat
5.The snare drum, (as I understand it) relates to the treble
clef of any ensemble. (The bass drum relates more to the bass
clef.) That means your snare drum could be the trumpet section
of a big band. It implies a certain tradition of arranging, whether
it’s Duke Ellington, Fletcher Henderson, Thad Jones: it’s how
you put that in the mix. That’s what Wes needed, that tradition.
6.Rhythm is at least equal to hamony in the scheme of human
evolution. It’s just that the European concept (since it was so
devoid of rhythm) related harmony to emotion so clearly that it
used to seem like the only way to do it. At this point, we know
differently: obviously rhythm can give you that same emotional
value.
7.And when you are looking at Roker, that is what you are not
looking at: the island element. The cascara rhythm. Roker had
the cascara in his ride cymbal beat, just like Higgins and
Haynes. And drummers who have the cascara beat in their
cymbal will always be very popular
8. “Remember this, Billy: people have a tendency to only
like themselves when they sound like somebody else.”
9. “Jorge, you played great! Just make sure
that at least once a set, you play something only you can play.”
10. So, anyway, the feathering of the bass drum, it creates that
depth, that mood. It affects people psychologically immediately.
When you think about Elvin Jones, you think about that depth.
When you think about Art Blakey, he has that depth, that bass
drum depth. And of course, there are subtle versions of it,
depending on how smooth the texture is: is it cotton, is it silk,
and so on.
11. Oh, just the texture. Even if it seemed a little dated, it
immediately got the point across. Immediately. No rushing or
dragging or playing too loud or playing too soft – just the right
shit. Relaxed. No worries. No scuffling. Just total fucking selfconfidence. [chuckles]
12.So I’ve taken that to heart. I’ll tell you how I’ve used it: a lot of
times, you have to make a decision, or you feel you’re at a point
where you feel you have to make a decision. “Should I do this, or
should I do that?” And you have a fraction of a second to think.
And my answer is, if you thought of it – do that. Rather than fuck
around.
Use the confidence of playing what you hear, no matter what.
Just play it. Some people will ask you, “Well, what should I do?”
And I say, “Play it. Just play it.”