• Tune List

    Dick Hyman: A Man For All Seasons

    • NIGHTSPELL
    • IMPROMPTU ENSEMBLE w/ Dick Hyman
    • DINAH w/ Dick Hyman
    • HARLEM STRUT Dick Hyman solo
    • ETUDES FOR JAZZ PIANO Dick Hyman solo
    • TAKE, O TAKE THEOSE LIPS AWAY w/ Dick Hyman and Topsy Chapman
    • CHAMELEON DAYS
    • WOULDN'T IT BE LOVERLY Dick Hyman and Jim Cullum duet
    • A READ HEADED WOMEN (MAKES THE CHOO CHOO JUMP THE TRACKS) w/ Dick Hyman
    • FLASHES Dick Hyman piano solo
    • MISTY MORNING w/ Dick Hyman
    • Closer/Credits
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    Dick Hyman: A Man for All Seasons

    Program Sample

    Dick Hyman

    Early publicity photo of Dick Hyman courtesy rhapsody.com

    Dick Hyman doesn’t seem that old, but he is a living legend. Prolific and versatile, he played swing with Benny Goodman and bop with Charlie Parker. He’s been Music Director for Arthur Godfrey’s TV show and for Woody Allen movies Zelig, The Purple Rose of Cairo, and Sweet and Lowdown. In 1956, Hyman had a Top-10 hit single with “Mack the Knife” and in 1968 a Top 40 hit with “The Minotaur,” the first instrumental single ever recorded entirely on synthesizer. He’s made hundreds of his own acclaimed recordings and at least 1,000 more with other artists— including a long-running stint as a studio musician in New York, recording with everyone from rock groups like The Drifters, to Perry Como and Tony Bennett. For seven years running, he was voted Most Valued Player by his peers at the New York Chapter of the Recording Academy.

     

    Dick Hyman is famous for embracing so many styles of music so enthusiastically that he is sometimes known as a “musical chameleon.” But he has always maintained a strong devotion to classic forms of jazz. Hyman has

    Dick Hyman, 92nd Street Y, New York City, 2003. Photo by Hank O'Neal

    researched and recorded the piano music of Scott Joplin, Jelly Roll Morton, James P. Johnson, Eubie Blake and Fats Waller, among others. He took piano lessons from swing era legend Teddy Wilson, sat in with James P. Johnson and Willie “The Lion” Smith at Manhattan night clubs when he was still at student at Columbia University, and dropped in to hear Eddie Condon at Jimmy Ryan’s on 52nd Street even before he graduated from high school.

     

    This week Riverwalk Jazz celebrates the music of Dick Hyman. Hyman discusses the musical influences that shaped his career and joins The Jim Cullum Jazz Band on pieces by his favorite composers, including George Gershwin, James P. Johnson and Bix Beiderbecke. Dick recalls his long collaboration with the late trumpeter Ruby Braff, in a duet with bandleader Jim Cullum on “Wouldn’t It Be Lover-ly?” from My Fair Lady.

     

    Having appeared so often on Riverwalk Jazz over the years, Dick Hyman is sometimes referred to as the eighth member of The Jim Cullum Jazz Band.

    Dick Hyman and Ruby Braff

    Dick Hyman and Ruby Braff. Photo by Nancy Miller Elliot, courtesy Dick Hyman

    Photo credit for Home Page and Recent Radio Broadcast Page: Dick Hyman.
    Photo courtesy Sarasota Herald-Tribune



    Text based on Riverwalk Jazz script by Margaret Pick ©2012