Tuesday, January 28, 2014

A00006 - Albon Holsey, Business Leader

Albon Holsey (May 31, 1883, Athens, Georgia - January 16, 1950, Tuskegee, Alabama) was an African American business leader.

According to Albon L. Holsey, slavery deprived blacks of the opportunity to learn the art of business. Through his efforts with the National Negro Business League, the Colored Merchant’s Association, and writings about black business topics, Holsey attempted to assist African Americans in competing and succeeding in the world of commerce.

Holsey was the son of Albon Chase Holsey and Sallie Thomas Holsey. As a boy, he attended Knox Institute in Athens, Georgia, and later he matriculated at Atlanta University in Atlanta, Georgia.

Holsey joined the staff of Tuskegee Institute in 1914, during the time that the famous educator, Booker T Washington, headed the institution. He was hired as an assistant to Washington’s secretary, Emmett J. Scott. During his tenure, Holsey worked as secretary to president Robert R. Morton and assistant to president Frederick D. Patterson, served as associate editor of the Tuskegee Student and possibly acted as director of public relations. Between 1938 and 1944, Holsey was also on loan to the U. S. Department of Agriculture. While working for the government, he was involved in projects related to black farmers. Holsey worked at Tuskegee for thirty-six years.

A brief chronology of the Holsey's life reads as follows:

1883
Born in Athens, Georgia on May 31

1906
Marries Basiline Boyd on October 3

1914
Joins staff of Tuskegee Institute

1929
Expands Colored Merchants’ Association nationally

1930
Receives Harmon Foundation Award for achievements in business

1950
Dies in Tuskegee, Alabama on January 16

Holsey wrote numerous articles, most related to business topics, including the article “Learning How to be Black,” in which Holsey described the experiences of African American children that triggered their consciousness of color and the “deadly toll” on the manhood of the race. In “Public Relations Intuitions of Booker T. Washington,” Holsey described Washington’s common sense approach to keeping good relationships with various constituencies involved with Tuskegee Institute. The Public Opinion Quarterly published Holsey’s lengthy review of a book on the subject of black newspapers in 1948. Holsey, in a chapter in The Progress of a Race , recapitulated the first twenty-five years of the NNBL. He was business manager ofCrisis , the official publication of the NAACP, during the time that W. E. B. Du Bois edited the periodical.

Holsey was a member of the Masons and Phi Beta Sigma fraternity. The 1928–29 edition of Who’s Who in Colored America lists his political and religious affiliations as Republican and as African Methodist Episcopal.

After a brief illness, Holsey died on January 16, 1950, in John Andrews Memorial Hospital in Tuskegee, Alabama, at 67 years of age. Funeral services were held on January 26 in the Tuskegee Institute chapel. His wife, Basiline Boyd Holsey, whom he married on October 3, 1906, survived him. A sister, Annie Holsey of Baltimore, and brothers, Augustus J. Holsey and Crosby Holsey of Baltimore and Cleveland, respectively, also survived him. He was buried in Tuskegee.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

A00005 - Roy Campbell, Jr., Avant Garde Jazz Trumpeter

Roy Sinclair Campbell, Jr. (September 29, 1952 – January 9, 2014) was an American trumpeter frequently linked to free jazz, although he also performed rhythm and blues, bebop and funk at times during his career.

Born in Los Angeles, California, in 1952,  Campbell was raised in New York.  At the age of fifteen he began learning to play trumpet and soon studied at the Jazz Mobile program along with Kenny Dorham, Lee Morgan, and Joe Newman. Throughout the 1960s, still unacquainted with the avant-garde movement, Campbell performed in the big bands of the Manhattan Community College.  From the 1970s onwards, he performed primarily within the context of free jazz, spending some of this period studying with Yusef Lateef. 

In the early 1990s, Campbell moved to the Netherlands and performed regularly with Klaas Hekman and Don Cherry.  In addition to leading his own groups, he performed with Yo La Tengo, William Parker, Peter Brotzmann, Matthew Shipp, and other improvisors.  Upon returning to the United States, he began leading his group Other Dimensions In Music and also formed the Pyramid Trio, a pianoless trio formed with William Parker. He performed regularly as part of the Festival of New Trumpet Music, which is held annually in New York City.

Roy Campbell, Jr., died in January 2014 of hypertensive atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease at the age of 61.

The discography of Roy Campbell, Jr. reads as follows:

As leader

  • New Kingdom (1992, Delmark)
  • La Tierra del Fuego (1994, Delmark)
  • Communion (1995, Silkheart)
  • Ancestral Homeland (1998, No More)
  • Ethnic Stew and Brew (2001, Delmark)
  • It's Krunch Time (2001, Thirsty Ear)
  • Akhenaten Suite (2008, Aum Fidelity)

with Other Dimensions in Music 

  • Other Dimensions in Music (Silkheart, 1990)
  • Now! (Aum Fidelity, 1988)
  • Time is of the Essence is Beyond Time (Aum Fidelity, 2002)
  • Live at the Sunset, Paris (Marge, 2007)
  • Kaiso Stories (Silkheart, 2011)

with The Nu Band (Roy Campbell Jr., Mark Whitecage, Joe Fonda, Lou Grassi)

  • Live at the Bop Shop (Clean Feed, 2001)
  • Live (Konnex, 2005)
  • The Dope and the Ghost (Not Two, 2007)
  • Lower East Side Blues (Porter Records, 2009)
  • Live in Paris (No Business, 2010)
  • Relentlessness Live at the Sunset (Marge, 2011)

with Tribute to Albert Ayler (Joe McPhee, Roy Campbell, William Parker, Warren Smith)

  • Live at The Dynamo (Marge, 2009)

As sideman

with Jemeel Moondoc
  • The Evening of the Blue Men (Muntu, 1979)
  • New York Live! (Cadence, 1981)
  • The Intrepid Live in Poland (Poljazz, 1981)
  • The Athens Concert (Praxis, 1982)
  • Konstanze's Delight - Live 1981 (Soul Note, 1983)
  • Spirit House (Eremite, 2000)
  • Live in Paris (Cadence, 2003)
  • Just Grew Orchestra Live at the Vision Festival (Ayler, 2003)
with Saheb Sarbib
  • Live at the Public Theatre (Cadence, 1981)
  • Aisha (Cadence, 1981)
with Billy Bang
  • Live at Carlos 1 (Soul Note, 1986)
with William Parker
  • Flowers Grow in my Room (Centering, 1994)
  • Sunrise in the Tone World (Aum Fidelity, 1997)
  • Mayor of Punkville (Aum Fidelity, 2000)
  • Raincoat in the River (Eremite, 2001)
  • Mass for the Healing of the World (Black Saint, 2003)
  • Spontaneous (Splasc(h), 2003)
  • Fractured Dimensions (FMP, 2003)
  • For Percy Heath (Victo, 2006)
  • Essence of Ellington (Centering, 2012)
with Ehran Elisha 
  • Sweet Empathy (Cadence, 1995)
  • The Kicker (CIMP, 1998)
  • Lowe Down Suite (CIMP, 1999)
with Peter Brotzmann's Die Like a Dog Quartet
  • From Valley to Valley (Eremite, 1998)
with Matthew Shipp
  • Strata (hatOLOGY, 1998)
  • Pastoral Composure (Thirsty Ear, 2000)
with Rob Brown
  • Jumping off the Page (No More, 2000)
  • The Big Picture (Marge, 2004)
with Alan Silva
  • & The Sounds Visions Orchestra (Eremite, 2001)
with Yuko Fujiyama
  • Re-entry (CIMP, 2001)
with Steve Lehman 
  • Structural Fire (CIMP, 2001)
  • Camouflage (CIMP, 2002)
with Peter Brotzmann Tentet + 2
  • Short Visit to Nowhere (Okkadisk, 2002)
  • Broken English (Okkadisk, 2002)
with Maneri Ensemble
  • Going to Church (Aum Fidelity, 2002)
with Khan Jamal 
  • Balafon Dance (CIMP, 2002)
with Kevin Norton
  • The Dream Catcher (CIMP, 2003)
with Yo La Tengo
  • Summer Sun (Matador, 2003)
with Exuberance
  • The Other Shore (Boxholder, 2003)
  • Live at Vision Festival (Ayler, 2004)
with Steve Sewell
  • Suite for Players, Listeners and Other Dreamers (CIMP, 2003)
  • Rivers of Sound Ensemble - News from the Mystic Auricle (Not Two, 2008)
with Burton Greene
  • Isms Out (CIMP, 2004)
with Dennis Gonzalez 
  • Nile River Suite (Daagnim, 2004)
with El-P
  • High Water (Thirsty Ear, 2004)
with Whit Dickey 
  • Coalescence (Clean Feed, 2004)
  • In a Heartbeat (Clean Feed, 2005)
  • Sacred Ground (Clean Feed, 2006)
with Marc Ribot 
  • Spiritual Unity (Pi recordings, 2005)
with Charles Tyler
  • Live at Sweet Basil vol. 1 & 2 (1984) (Bleu Regard, 2007)
with Garrison Fewell 
  • Variable Density Sound Orchestra (Creative Nation Music, 2009)
with Stone Quartet
  • Live at Vision Festival (Ayler, 2011)
with William Hooker Trio with Dave Soldier 
  • Heart of the Sun (Engine Records, 2013)
with New Atlantis Octet
  • Unto the Sun (Not Two. 2013)
with Adam Lane 
  • Blue Spirit Band (CIMP, 2013)
  • Oh Freedom (CIMP, 2013)