All posts by Hank Hehmsoth

Dizzy Stops By To Say Hi

 

Omni AUSCTR

It was 1991 and I was playing happy hour in the atrium at the Omni hotel in downtown Austin.  A beautiful space and the piano music wafted thru the interior space of this . I had been playing when I felt a hand on my shoulder. I turned to see Dizzy Gillespie, the legendary jazz trumpet and father of bebop jazz. He said “That sounds great!” and I couldn’t believe my eyes!

dizzyJust behind him his tour bus was unloading, and his entire big band was checking in to hotel rooms. Dizzy said, “Keep it goin’!” One of my favorite tunes by Dizzy is Con Alma so I played it. Much to my surprise one of the guys pulled out his flute and played with me. Soon several guys sat down in the bar to listen.  We got to talking and they were playing that night at the Paramount.

I didn’t know that Dizzy was suffering and this was his last tour.  Dizzy passed on January 6, 1993. I was so lucky to have personally met this icon, and his warmth and outgoing nature really impressed me.

Thanks, Dizzy!

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My Basie story

 I came back from Eastman School of Music in New York with my head full of contemporary jazz.  I was playing all kinds of gigs. One Saturday afternoon I got a phone call at 2:30 and this agent asked me, “Hey, can you play for Count Basie tonight? He’s got the flu, and I need to find a sub for him!” I said, are you sure you want me? And he said, “I’ve already tried a lot of people.” I said, “OK that sounds good.”

The concert/dance was at the University of Texas Union Ballroom. And it was advertised as a “sock hop.” (I guess you know what that is. Everybody takes their shoes off and dance on the wooden dance floor in their socks.)

So when I arrived (oh by the way, this is probably 1976 and I looked like I was 14 years old, so blonde and blue eyed) I realized I was the only white guy in an all black Count Basie Orchestra Big Band. They looked at me like “oh no!” But we had to do this, so I sat down at the piano, and I realized there’s no music! There’s no piano book! After all it’s Count Basie’s band and it’s his music. He doesn’t need a book. I wasn’t versed in jazz history, and what I didn’t know at the time, was that I was sitting with super legendary jazz artists.
Freddie Green was Basie’s guitarist for 40 years. He said, “That’s all right kid. I know this music. Here’s my book. You can use my book.” After we played a tune, the band realized I could actually play jazz and warmed up to me. They were enthusiastic, friendly, and helpful.

Here’s one thing I didn’t know at all! Count Basie has this very famous cliché way of ending a song. It’s a very simple little “plink plink” piano solo. When it came time for me to play that, I launched into this really fast show-off ending, which made the band just about fall out of their chairs laughing. I didn’t know why or what I did. But a guy said, “Hey, just keep it really simple.” And I only found out later that I was really blowing the ends of these tunes.

I mentioned these legends. This very handsome black man came out to sing, and he had the most beautiful, baritone voice. I find out later that his name was Joe Williams, and was quite a voice superstar.
All in all, it was a great experience. I learned a lot. I learned what I should’ve known, and it was a great evening. 300 people were dancing to Count Basie’s great music and a this is a story I’ll never forget.

Performing Piano Live in Sync with Film

After La La Land won all the Academy Awards, the William Morris Talent Agency contacted me. They were embarking on a world tour for “La La Land – In Concert” and Austin was the 1st concert after the debut in Los Angeles. I’m not sure how they found me, but I got a phone call in my office at Texas State University. They needed a pianist familiar with film, classically trained, and a jazz musician.

This became one of the most satisfying, complicated, and challenging career undertakings I have had in the last 20 years.
179 pages of solo piano, Latin salsa,  jazz quintet, and a Rachmaninoff style concerto with orchestra, I was pleased to have performed multiple performances with orchestras in major cities. My best review here:
Reviewed by: David Hendricks, Arts/Entertainment critic – San Antonio Express.
Review: “Keeping the orchestra in sync with the film was “La La Land in Concert” tour conductor Erik Ochsner of New York City. With so much of the music flowing from Sebastian’s piano, Ochsner clearly took the approach of presenting the two-hour movie like it was a piano concerto.

Making that possible was the sparkling keyboard work of pianist Hank Hehmsoth, who performed the same role last year with the Austin Symphony when it performed “La La Land in Concert.”


Besides being a professional pianist, there are multiple additional skills involved. Here is an excerpt scene from the movie. Note the time code and click track.

Dinner with Bacall

Way back in 1980 in NYC, I was on tour with Christopher Cross. We were in NYC to play Radio City Music Hall (another story!!) We had played the night before, on The Tomorrow Show, with Tom Snyder. The Warner Brothers Rep took us all in limos to Elaine’s, the storied and excellent restaurant in the middle of the theatre district. Elaine’s was a New York City institution since opening in 1963 and remained one until it closed in 2011. Popular with celebrities and the social set, fans and photographers would frequently crowd the sides of the yellow awning just to sneak a peak at who was entering and exiting those signature wooden doors.

Bacall & GarnerWe were all seated at tables. I spotted James Garner and Lauren Bacall, seated at a table in the corner, and suggested to Chris to send them a note. I don’t know what was in the note, but James Garner came over right away, and talking to Chris, said he’d seen us on TV the night before. He said he’d been a big investor in Warner Brothers (soon to be Warner Communications) since his “Maverick” TV show. He suggested we all eat together. Elaine’s pushed several tables together. I remember making a beeline to sit next to Lauren Bacall. We must have chatted for 30 minutes! She was so gracious, and asked me all about my career. I told her how much a fan I was of hers. She and Garner were working on “The Fan”, a 1981 American psychological thriller film directed by Edward Bianchi, and starring Lauren Bacall, Michael Biehn, James Garner and Maureen Stapleton. They were eating before going to a Broadway show. They needed to get to the theatre, and I distinctly remember James Garner pulled a big roll of $100 dollar bills out of his pocket, wrapped in a rubber band. The Warner Brothers Rep grabbed the bill, but Garner tipped Elaine’s staff.  I remember how he peeled off $100s like he was a professional gambler. Just steps outside the famous wooden doors and awning of Elaine’s was a limo waiting for Garner and Bacall, doorman holding the doors open. They whisked off and were gone. A super NYC memory!!

Piano Lessons for Jack Lemmon

It was 1988 I believe, and I had been doing doubles, 6 nights a week at the Hyatt Regency in Austin. I played with a jazz quartet on the bottom floor, in a bar/club called “Branchwater”. I remember Austin radio personality  Cactus Pryor was a regular, who would come by to sing “What Are You Doing the Rest of your Life”. That was a 5 to 9 gig, and I had about 10 minutes to put on my tux, ride the elevator to the 17th top floor,  to another club called “Foothills”. Foothills had a spectacular view of the city above Town Lake, and was a favorite destination for many people.  I had a nice grand, and played solo piano, from 9 to 1AM, Monday through Saturday. Sundays I’d be back to play the Sunday brunch, so you can surmise the Hyatt was my “home away from home” for about 12 years.

og-jack-lemmon-4297It was a Monday or a Tuesday, about midnight, when Jack Lemmon and his manager came in for drinks. They sat a couple tables away, and I noticed that Jack Lemmon was really listening to everything I was doing. He smiled and we didn’t say anything, and I was done at 1AM. Then next night they were back again, sitting right in front of me. Smoking was still allowed back then, and they would talk and listen, drink and smoke. When I played solo piano back then, I had a couple hundred tunes in my repertoire, including all the Gershwin, Cole Porter,  Jerome Kern, Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer, Richard Rodgers, and Irving Berlin standards. I had my Bill Evans style down and I was totally into playing these tunes well, and getting well paid. This was, for a pianist, the very best gig in Austin.

The next night, before closing, Jack Lemmon’s manager came up to me, and asked if I would stay after hours and keep playing. He said Mr. Lemmon’s private hotel suite was directly below me on the 16th floor, and he’d been listening all night. I said sure, I’d be happy to. And so it came to be, that for the next 4 nights, after the club emptied, Jack, his manager, the bartender, and I would hang until 4AM in the morning. Jack would request tunes. He asked if he could sit just to the left and behind me so he could watch my hands. We started talking, and became fast friends. Jack was in Austin making a movie (I’m guessing it was “Dad” 1989). I didn’t know until years later that Jack had 2 jazz piano albums. He was well known as a pianist. He was so complimentary, and started asking if I would show him some stuff. I explained how I built chords and soloed, and used my classical training to phrase lyrically. We played for each other, and had a great time each night.

Jack LemmonWhat I will always remember, is that at one point Jack Lemmon looked me straight in the eye, and said. “I’d give this all up, if I could play like that!” I was taken aback. I said, “Jack, you have the adoration of millions of people, who love everything you’ve done in the movies, and you’re a world class actor. How can you say that?”  He said, “Acting’s easy. I’m really a frustrated jazz piano player.” I said, “the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence. You have the awards, and acclaim from all your peers. You don’t need anymore.”

Jack Lemmon - piano2On his last night, Jack Lemmon left me an enormous tip. I tried to turn him down, but he wouldn’t think of it. We left like we were friends for life. And I am so happy this happened to me. Thanks, Jack!

 

Lady Bird Johnson Movie Premiere

LadyBirdLDocumentaryLBJRanch_Page_1 It was 20 years ago this year that I wrote the music for a documentary celebrating the life and times of Lady Bird Johnson, FLOTUS, First Lady of the United States.

The documentary is shown daily (hourly) at the Lyndon B Johnson National Historical Park, Texas.

I was honored to perform my music at the premiere of the film at the Texas White House, with many dignitaries. My long time associate, John Mills, and I performed a duet for the luncheon.

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A year later, Lady Bird sent me an autographed photo commemorating the event, and she wrote a handwritten thank you to me.

In her words, she wrote:

“for Hank Hehmsoth, whose talents added pleasure and charm to “my film” on this special day” – Lady Bird Johnson
Lady Bird Johnson Premiere
Noted dignitaries attended, but I was especially proud that my mother and sister attended. My mom and Lady Bird’s best friend Liz Carpenter really hit it off, and I was proud to have included them in this event.LadyBird Premiere2LadyBird Documentary pg5LadyBird Documentary pg6LadyBirdPremiere3

Poets and Jazzers

It’s been a pleasure to see the differences and commonalities shared between the art of the poet, the skill of a jazz improviser, and a composer’s creativity. poetrybanner

Mills-HehmsothLast night in Round Top, Texas, at the 16th Annual “Poetry at Round Top”, John Mills and I joined the nation’s most exciting and prominent poets for an evening of collaboration in art.

More and more, the kinship between poetry and music, especially jazz, has grown in understanding. In 2014 Harvard University appointed Herbie Hancock the Norton Professor of Poetry. Luminaries like Robert Frost, T.S. Eliot and Leonard Bernstein have held the honorary professorship. And for the last 3 years, jazz has been a new addition to the Poetry at Round Top annual festival.

So how do jazz and poetry talk to each other? In some ways, a poet and a composer both deal in perfection, working days, months, even years to create, revise, and perform a finished work. But in jazz, improvisation is at the center of the art form. Unlike the poet or the composer, the jazz improviser can’t go back and ‘get it right’. It has to be ‘right’ the first time. And it’s not written down. The one very deep commonality between all three art forms is it is a deeply personal thing. And all three share the importance of tradition in their art form. There is a component of rhythm that is a shared love between the three, too.

Round Top StgeSo want happens when poetry, composition, and jazz are asked to collaborate? The history goes back to the 40’s and 50’s American Beat poets like Jack Kerouac, for example. We viewed the music as a support and an intensifier to the poetry rather than the poetry’s being an addendum (or introduction) to the music.

jazz/poetry collaboration has a long tradition, going back (albeit patchily) some 70 years or so. There is no reason why these two forms, currently enjoying greater-than-usual popularity, should not combine more frequently.

Poetry and jazz speak to things deep in our human psyche: a love of patterned language and a love of the unpredictable, for a start.

I am sure John and I hope to do this again!