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Dick
HeckstallSmith
jazz/blues saxophonist whose work with John Mayall,
Colosseum and other bands embellished British music in the 1960s
DICK HECKSTALLSMITH, who died on December 17 aged 70, was a unique
figure in the world of British jazz and blues; a saxophonist and composer,
he was a founder member of Blues Incorporated, the band which launched
the worldwide vogue for bluesinflected popular music in the 1960s,
and later a star soloist with such leading bands as John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers, Colosseum and Mainsqueeze.
Because he was slightly older than others in his field, and prematurely
bald, HeckstallSmith cut an avuncular figure on stage. This impression
was dispelled, however, when he launched into his first explosive
solo, usually blowing two saxophones at once. He was also a witty
writer, whose observations of the milieu in which he moved are contained
in his memoirs, The Safest Place In The World, first published in
1989 and republished this year in expanded form as Blowing The Blues.
Richard Malden HeckstallSmith was born on September 26th 1934 at Ludlow,
Shropshire, and brought up near Knighton in Radnorshire. At the age
of 11 he was sent to boarding school in York, but refused to return
after his first term. In 1947 he was enrolled at Gordonstoun, where
his father, Hugh, had been appointed to the teaching staff. After
little more than a year, however, Hugh quarrelled with the headmaster,
Kurt Hahn, and the family decamped to a caravan at Dartington, Devon.
It was here, while at Foxhole School, that HeckstallSmith discovered
the music of Sidney Bechet, acquired a saxophone and became leader
of the school jazz band.
On leaving school he read Agriculture at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge,
where his energies were devoted mainly to coleading the university
jazz band. HeckstallSmith graduated, although the only evidence of
this achievement in later life was his ability to name the make and
model of every tractor glimpsed from the window of a band bus.
While still at school, he had been registered as a conscientious objector,
and he began his National Service as a porter at St Bartholomew's
hospital. He had no difficulty with the job, but St Bart's went through
agonies trying to fit him into its hierarchy. As a Cambridge man with
a hyphenated name, he should have been among the elite, but as a porter
he was the lowest of the low. To make matters worse, he was conducting
an affair with "a young lady from Xray" who was simultaneously
above and below his station in life. The problem solved itself when
he slipped a disc and was invalided out.
HeckstallSmith had, meanwhile, been playing on the London jazz scene
and realised that, with no other occupation, he must now be classed
as a professional musician.
In December 1957 he joined the bandied by clarinettist Sandy Brown,
leaving six months later to play a summer season at Butlin's holiday
camp, Filey, followed by three years of freelance jazz work.
In 1962 the guitarist Alexis Korner launched Blues Incorporated, a
sevenpiece band based upon the unlikely stylistic combination of Chicago
blues and modern jazz. To everyone's surprise, it was a great success,
and the Marquee Club in Oxford Street, where the band appeared once
a week, soon became the centre of a blues cult which quickly grew
to rival the craze for the Beatles. HeckstallSmith's forceful tenor
saxophone was an essential ingredient of Blues Inc's unique sound.
When Blues Incorporated broke up after a year, its former members
and hangerson were to be found in blues bands all over the London
area, the most successful being the fledgling Rolling Stones. HeckstallSmith
joined the organist Graham Bond, drummer Ginger Baker and bassist
Jack Bruce in a quartet billed as the Graham Bond Organisation. It
was rightly said at the time that the only thing organised about this
exciting but shambolic group was its name. Nevertheless, it lasted
for almost four years before Bond's increasingly manic, thugfuelled
behaviour caused its demise.
HeckstallSmith then joined John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, and his tough,
authoritative playing is one of the main features of Mayall's superb
1968 album, Bare Wires. Shortly after it was released, HeckstallSmith
and the drummer, Jon Hiseman, left Mayall to set up their own band,
Colosseum, under Hiseman's leadership.
Of all the bands that grew from the seed first planted by Blues Incorporated,
Colosseum was the most musically impressive. It also delivered the
best live performances, although its record sales never quite reflected
its grassroots popularity.
When Colosseum folded, towards the end of 1971, Heckstall-Smith recorded
an album, A Story Ended, under his own name, and launched his own
band, Manchild. Its career was cut short when he suffered a severe
back injury and was immobilised for six months. During convalescence
he became interested in sociology, and, in 1973, he enrolled for a
Social Sciences degree at South Bank Polytechnic. In 1976, having
graduated, he joined the band Big Chief, at the same time enrolling
for postgraduate research at the LSE.
In 1981, his research grant having been discontinued, HeckstallSmith
began a four year stint with Mainsqueeze, touring continually in Britain
and on the Continent, and for a while accompanying the veteran rhythm&blues
star Bo Diddley. This was followed by a period of playing with various
groups until, in 1988, he formed another band under the name DHSS.
In 1992 Heckstall-Smith underwent heart bypass surgery. While convalescing
he began work on an extended composition, Celtic Steppes,the recording
of which was released in 1996.
For several years, starting in 1994, HeekstallSmith toured Europe
with a revived Colosseum. An album, Bread and Circuses, was released
in 1997.
Despite deteriorating health, he continued to play and record. An
album, Blues And Beyond, by "Dick Heckstall-Smith & Friends"
was released in 2001; among the friends were Jack Bruce, John Mayall
and the former Rolling Stone Mick Taylor.
Dick Heckstall-Smith was divorced from his wife, Gary, and is survived
by their son.
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