Can I tell you how great he was?  Do I need to say anything
at all? He was all that.

fh

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Jazz drummer Elvin Jones dies at 76 

May 19, 2004 

ASSOCIATED PRESS 

NEW YORK -- Elvin Ray Jones, a renowned jazz drummer and member
of John Coltrane's quartet who also played alongside Duke
Ellington, Charlie Parker and Miles Davis, died Tuesday. He was
76.

Jones died of heart failure in an Englewood, N.J., hospital,
said his wife of 38 years, Keiko Jones.

"He's happy. No more suffering," said Keiko Jones. "He's been
fighting for so long."

Jones, called by Life magazine "the world's greatest rhythmic
drummer," was born in Pontiac, Mich., one of ten children. He
had two musician brothers: Hank, a jazz pianist, and Thad, a
trumpet and flugelhorn player.

Jones entered the Detroit jazz scene in the late 1940s after
touring as a stagehand with the Army Special Services show
Operation Happiness.

After a brief gig at the Detroit club Grand River Street, he
went to work at another club, backing up such jazz greats as
Parker, Davis and Wardell Grey.

Jones came to New York in 1955 for an unsuccessful audition for
the Benny Goodman band but stayed in the city, joining Charlie
Mingus' band and making a record called "J is Jazz." In 1960, he
became a member of John Coltrane's quartet.

Jones, with his rhythmic, innovative style, became one of jazz's
most famous drummers under Coltrane. He can be heard on
Coltrane's "A love Supreme" and "Coltrane Live at the Village
Vanguard."

After leaving the Coltrane quartet, Jones briefly played with
Duke Ellington and formed the Elvin Jones' Jazz Machine. He put
out several solo albums and continued to tour, including last
month in Oakland, Calif., Keiko Jones said.

Besides his wife, Jones is survived by a son and a daughter. 

http://www.freep.com/entertainment/music/jones19_20040519.htm

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