Earl Hines

by Scott Yanow music biography
Once called "the first modern jazz pianist," Earl Hines differed from the stride pianists of the 1920s by breaking up the stride rhythms with unusual accents from his left hand. While his right hand often played octaves so as to ring clearly over ensembles, Hines had the trickiest left hand in the business, often suspending time recklessly but without ever losing the beat. One of the all-time great pianists, Hines was a major influence on Teddy Wilson, Jess Stacy, Joe Sullivan, Nat King Cole, and even to an extent on Art Tatum. He was also an underrated composer responsible for "Rosetta," "My Monday Date," and "You Can Depend on Me," among others.
Earl Hines played trumpet briefly as a youth before switching to piano. His first major job was accompanying vocalist Lois Deppe, and he made his first recordings with Deppe and his orchestra in 1922. The following year, Hines moved to Chicago where he worked with Sammy Stewart and Erskine Tate's Vendome Theatre Orchestra. He started teaming up with Louis Armstrong in 1926, and the two masterful musicians consistently inspired each other. Hines worked briefly in Armstrong's big band (formerly headed by Carroll Dickerson), and they unsuccessfully tried to manage their own club. 1928 was one of Hines' most significant years. He recorded his first ten piano solos, including versions of "A Monday Date," "Blues in Thirds," and "57 Varieties." Hines worked much of the year with Jimmy Noone's Apex Club Orchestra, and their recordings are also considered classic. Hines cut brilliant (and futuristic) sides with Louis Armstrong's Hot Five, resulting in such timeless gems as "West End Blues," "Fireworks," "Basin Street Blues," and their remarkable trumpet-piano duet "Weather Bird." And on his birthday on December 28, Hines debuted with his big band at Chicago's Grand Terrace.
A brilliant ensemble player as well as soloist, Earl Hines would lead big bands for the next 20 years. Among the key players in his band through the 1930s would be trumpeter/vocalist Walter Fuller, Ray Nance on trumpet and violin (prior to joining Duke Ellington), trombonist Trummy Young, tenor saxophonist Budd Johnson, Omer Simeon and Darnell Howard on reeds, and arranger Jimmy Mundy. In 1940, Billy Eckstine became the band's popular singer, and in 1943 (unfortunately during the musicians' recording strike), Hines welcomed such modernists as Charlie Parker (on tenor), trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, and singer Sarah Vaughan in what was the first bebop orchestra. By the time the strike ended, Eckstine, Parker, Gillespie, and Vaughan were gone, but tenor Wardell Gray was still around to star with the group during 1945-1946.
In 1948, the economic situation forced Hines to break up his orchestra. He joined the Louis Armstrong All-Stars, but three years of playing second fiddle to his old friend were difficult to take. After leaving Armstrong in 1951, Hines moved to Los Angeles and later San Francisco, heading a Dixieland band. Although his style was much more modern, Hines kept the group working throughout the 1950s, at times featuring Muggsy Spanier, Jimmy Archey, and Darnell Howard. Hines did record on a few occasions, but was largely forgotten in the jazz world by the early '60s. Then, in 1964, jazz writer Stanley Dance arranged for him to play three concerts at New York's Little Theater, both solo and in a quartet with Budd Johnson. The New York critics were amazed by Hines' continuing creativity and vitality, and he had a major comeback that lasted through the rest of his career. Hines traveled the world with his quartet, recorded dozens of albums, and remained famous and renowned up until his death at the age of 79. Most of the many recordings from his career are currently available on CD.

discography snapshot

1945
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
Year Title Rovi Rating    
1950 Earl Hines and the All Stars
1951 Fats Waller Memorial Set
1952 Earl Hines Trio
1953 Earl Hines All Stars
1953 Earl Hines Plays Fats Waller
1953 Earl Hines with Billy Eckstine
1954 Earl Hines All-Star Session
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1954 Esquire All Stars
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1955 Earl Hines at Club Hangover, Vol. 5
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1956 Earl Fatha Hines Plays Fats Waller
1956 Oh, Father!
1958 Earl's Backroom and Cozy's Caravan
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1958 Earl Fatha Hines Trio
1960 Earl's Pearls
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1960 Swingin' and Singin'
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1961 A Sunday's Date
1963 Earl Fatha Hines
1964 In Concert
1964 Up to Date
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1964 Linger Awhile
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1964 The Real Earl Hines: Recorded Live in Concert
1965 Earl Hines & Roy Eldridge at the Village Vanguard
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1965 Grand Reunion
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1965 Grand Reunion, Vol. 1
1965 Grand Reunion, Vol. 2
1965 Reunion in Brussels
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1965 Blues in Thirds
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1965 Hines (1965)
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1965 Live: Aalborg Denmark 1965
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1965 The Grand Terrace Band
1965 Paris Session
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1965 Hines Shines
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1965 At the Village Vanguard
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1965 Hine's Tune
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1965 The New Earl Hines Trio
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1966 Here Comes Earl "Fatha" Hines
1966 Dinah
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1966 Blues So Low
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1966 Once Upon a Time
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1966 Spontaneous Explorations
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1967 Life with Fatha
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1967 Blues & Things
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1968 Fatha Blows Best
1968 A Night at Johnnie's
1968 Jazz Heritage: Rhythm Sundae (1968)
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1969 Hines Rhythm
1969 Earl Hines at Home
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1970 The Quintessential Recording Session
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1970 At the Party
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1970 Earl Hines and Maxine Sullivan
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1970 Fatha and His Flock on Tour
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1971 Hines Does Hoagy
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1971 My Tribute to Louis
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1971 Comes in Handy
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1971 Four Jazz Giants
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1972 Partners in Jazz
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1972 Hines Plays Hines
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1972 Earl Hines Plays Duke Ellington, Vol. 2
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1972 Tour de Force
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1972 Tour de Force Encore
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1973 Live at the New School
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1973 Earl Hines Plays George Gershwin
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1973 An Evening with Earl Hines
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1973 Earl Hines Quartet
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1973 Quintessential '74
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1973 Quintessential Continued
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1973 Swingin' Away
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1974 Piano Solos
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1974 Live at the New School, Vol. 2
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1974 Earl Hines Plays Cole Porter
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1974 West Side Story
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1974 At Sundown
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1974 Earl Hines and Budd Johnson
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1974 Live in Orange
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1974 Hines (1974)
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1974 It Don't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing!
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1976 Live at Buffalo
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1977 Lionel Hampton Presents Earl Fatha Hines
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1977 Earl Hines in New Orleans
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1977 Texas Ruby Red
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1977 Fatha [1977]
1977 The Father of Modern Jazz Piano
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1978 Earl Hines at Saralee's
1978 Fatha' Plays Hits He Missed
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1978 Honor Thy Fatha
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1979 Live and in Living Jazz
1979 The Incomparable Earl Fatha Hines
Earl Hines in New Orleans (Giants of Jazz)
Earl's Pearl [HDJ]
Fatha's Hands
Indiana CD 1
Indiana CD 2
Jazz Foundations, Vol. 22
Live in New York 1965 at the Village Vanguard
On His Own: Solo Jazz Piano
Rosetta, CD 1
Rosetta, CD 2
Swings: Rock and Rye
When ''Fatha'' Swings
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