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#75
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CHARLIE CHRISTIAN 
Charlie
Christian (29 July 1916 – 2 March 1942) was an American
jazz guitarist.
Christian was an important early performer on the electric guitar, and
is cited as a key figure in the development of bebop.
Chistian was born in Bonham, Texas, USA and was raised in Oklahoma.
In the late 1930s, he came to the attention of record producer John Hammond,
who introduced Christian to bandleader Benny
Goodman. Goodman hired Christian
to play with the Goodman Sextet starting in 1939. Initially reluctant
to hire Christian, due in part to the fact that electric guitar was a
relatively new instrument, Goodman was so impressed by Christian's playing
that he changed his mind.
The story of their meeting on August 16, 1939 is notable: an encounter
that afternoon at the recording studio had not gone well, but Hammond
decided to try again: without consulting Goodman, he installed Christian
on the bandstand for that night's set at the Victor Hugo restaurant in
Los Angeles. Displeased at the surprise, Goodman called "Rose Room",
a tune he assumed that Christian would be unfamiliar with. After listening
to the changes a couple of times, Christian came in with his solo — which
was to be the first of about twenty, all of them different, all unlike
anything Goodman had heard before. That version of "Rose Room" lasted
forty minutes; by its end, Christian was in the band. In the course of
a few days, Christian went from making $2.50 a night to making $150 a
week.
Christian's solos are frequently referred to as "horn-like," and
in that sense he was probably more influenced by horn players such as
Lester Young than by early acoustic guitarists like Eddie
Lang and jazz/bluesmen
Lonnie Johnson and Scrapper
Blackwell, although they all had contributed
to the expansion of the guitar's role from "rhythm section" instrument
to a solo instrument. The single-note style of the Belgian gypsy jazz
guitarist
Django Reinhardt actually predates Christian's, at least in
recordings, and
Reinhardt's influence on Christian (and Christian's on
Reinhardt) is apparent. Although there had been electric guitar soloists
before—trombonist/composer ("Topsy") Eddie
Durham had
recorded with Count Basie; and Floyd
Smith recorded "Floyd's Guitar
Blues" with Andy Kirk in March 1939, using an amplified lap steel
guitar—Christian was the first great soloist on the amplified guitar.
Guitarists who followed Christian and who were to varying degrees influenced
by him include Mary Osborne, Oscar Moore (Nat
King Cole trio), Barney Kessel, Jimmy Raney, Tal Farlow, and—a generation later—Jim
Hall.
Christian paved the way for the modern electric guitar sound that was
followed by other pioneers, including T-Bone
Walker, Les Paul, Grant Green,
Wes Montgomery, B.B. King and
Jimi Hendrix. For this reason Christian
was inducted in 1990 into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as an "Early
Influence."
Though
known mainly for his influence on electric guitar, Christian was also
an important developer of Be-bop. His contributions at jam sessions
at Minton's Playhouse in New York City were landmarks in the evolution
from the then-popular, radio-friendly, accessible swing music to the
more experimental Be-bop. This transition is readily apparent in recordings
The Goodman Sextet made on one particular day. With Goodman absent, Christian
and the rest of the Sextet recorded "Blues in B" and "Waiting
for Benny", which were basically bop jam sessions. The free flow
of these sessions contrasts with the more formal swing music recorded
after Goodman had arrived at the studio. An even more striking example
is a series of recordings made at Minton's by a fan named Jerry Newman
in 1941. Newman captured Christian—accompanied by an almost inaudible
Thelonious Monk on piano and Kenny
Clarke on drums—stretching out
far beyond what the confines of the 78 RPM record would allow. His work
on "Swing to Bop"—clearly a title that was added well
after the fact (the term "bop" didn't exist in 1941, and tune
eventually becomes recognizable as Eddie Durham's "Topsy")—is
a stunning example of what Christian was capable of creating.
Charlie Christian contracted tuberculosis and pneumonia, and died at
the age of 25, at what is now called the Old Seaview Hospital in Staten
Island.
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