Biography
A trumpeter, composer, and educator named Dave Burns naturally embodies the idea of a musician's musician, since players themselves frequently praise standout work by declaring that someone is burning. His recorded output on trumpet alone would fill a modest residence if assembled into stacks, and the mere mention of Dizzy Gillespie among the bandleaders who employed him routinely commands the notice of any brass master class.
As a writer of pieces, Burns assembled an engaging roster of compositions including "Automation" and "Rigor Mortis," selections that surface like carefully crafted hard-boiled eggs amid choice hard bop recordings. The trumpeter devoted extensive effort to that idiom beginning in the 1940s through affiliations with Dizzy Gillespie, whose large ensemble also acquainted Burns with the broader possibilities of vocal jazz. Listeners often encounter him alongside such partners as vocalist Eddie Jefferson and saxophonist James Moody, who frequently collaborated; Burns appears on landmark performances such as the Jefferson vocal treatment of Horace Silver's "Filthy McNasty" and, alongside Moody, on loose blowing dates including the aptly named "Jammin' With James."
Burns' early-1960s decision to record for the Vanguard label later seemed, in retrospect, to seal his professional fate. It initiated a shift whereby the mainstream jazz public came to link the Burns surname with the documentary filmmaker rather than this architect of the bop era. Although Vanguard maintains an enviable standing across numerous musical approaches, hard bop is not among them. The two albums the imprint issued featuring Burns in tandem with pianist Harold Mabern, tenor saxophonist Billy Mitchell, and vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson remain the sole instances of that style in the label's holdings, a circumstance that has drawn more notice than the recordings themselves.
Away from one variety of public attention, Burns remained the figure repeatedly cited when an advanced student would press a distinguished trumpeter for the name of an ideal instructor. His presence therefore threads through the intricate web of jazz lineage connecting successive generations of students and teachers. Commentators have occasionally noted him as "unheralded but awesome." Such observations may yet prove sufficient to prompt Vanguard to reissue Dave Burns and Warming Up.
As a writer of pieces, Burns assembled an engaging roster of compositions including "Automation" and "Rigor Mortis," selections that surface like carefully crafted hard-boiled eggs amid choice hard bop recordings. The trumpeter devoted extensive effort to that idiom beginning in the 1940s through affiliations with Dizzy Gillespie, whose large ensemble also acquainted Burns with the broader possibilities of vocal jazz. Listeners often encounter him alongside such partners as vocalist Eddie Jefferson and saxophonist James Moody, who frequently collaborated; Burns appears on landmark performances such as the Jefferson vocal treatment of Horace Silver's "Filthy McNasty" and, alongside Moody, on loose blowing dates including the aptly named "Jammin' With James."
Burns' early-1960s decision to record for the Vanguard label later seemed, in retrospect, to seal his professional fate. It initiated a shift whereby the mainstream jazz public came to link the Burns surname with the documentary filmmaker rather than this architect of the bop era. Although Vanguard maintains an enviable standing across numerous musical approaches, hard bop is not among them. The two albums the imprint issued featuring Burns in tandem with pianist Harold Mabern, tenor saxophonist Billy Mitchell, and vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson remain the sole instances of that style in the label's holdings, a circumstance that has drawn more notice than the recordings themselves.
Away from one variety of public attention, Burns remained the figure repeatedly cited when an advanced student would press a distinguished trumpeter for the name of an ideal instructor. His presence therefore threads through the intricate web of jazz lineage connecting successive generations of students and teachers. Commentators have occasionally noted him as "unheralded but awesome." Such observations may yet prove sufficient to prompt Vanguard to reissue Dave Burns and Warming Up.
Albums



