Thelonious Monk (1917-1982)

June 16, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Saheed Adejumobi

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Clockwise from left- Charles Mingus

Photo by Bob Parent

Jazz pianist Thelonious Monk became one of the 20th Century’s most influential and innovative jazz musicians.  Born on October 10, 1917 in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, the son of Thelonious and Barbara Monk, young Thelonious Monk grew up in New York City after the family moved there in 1922 and began playing the piano without formal training.  Monk, who was raised in the midst of gospel traditions and street music, later studied at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City.

At age 17, Monk toured the United States as an organist with a traveling evangelist.  By the early 1940s he began working as a sideman with New York City jazz groups.  Eventually he became the house player (regular performer) at Minton’s Playhouse, a legendary Manhattan nightclub. While there Monk came into contact with other musicians such as Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, Sonny Rollins and Milt Jackson.  Along with these artists, Monk became one of the creators of the bebop jazz tradition.

Monk’s first recorded jazz performance came in 1944 while he was with the Coleman Hawkins Quartet.  He made the first recording under his own name in 1947 at a session for the Blue Note label.  His premier album included unusual songs like Evidence, Criss Cross, and Carolina Moon, all of which reflected what would become Monk’s trademark style, incorporating silence and dissonance as forms of self-expression.  Soon after his first recording session, Monk married Nellie Smith.  The couple had two children.

If Thelonious Monk’s style was appreciated by other jazz musicians such as Miles Davis and John Coltrane, it did not catch on with the jazz audiences of the era.  Not until the release of Brilliant Corners in 1956 did Monk have an album considered commercially successful.  Shortly afterwards he released  Thelonious Himself  and Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane, which proved to be masterpieces that launched Monk’s career as one of the most acclaimed and controversial jazz improvisers of the era.  Monk would record other compositions such as Epistrophy, Straight No Chaser, and 52nd Street Theme.  “Round Midnight” (from the album Thelonious Himself) would become a jazz standard.

In 1964, Thelonious Monk was the subject of a Time Magazine cover story which led to several international tours.  Legendary saxophonist John Coltrane wrote in the 1960s, “Working with Monk brought me close to a musical architect of the highest order.  I felt I learned from him in every way—through the senses, theoretically, technically.”

Thelonious Monk quit performing in the late 1970s and spent the rest of his life in seclusion.  He died on February 17, 1982.  In 1993 Monk was posthumously given the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.  In 2006 he was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Music.

About the Author

Author Profile

Saheed Yinka Adejumobi is Associate Professor in the History Department at Seattle University. He also teaches for two additional programs at SU, African and African American Studies and Film Studies.

Dr. Adejumobi specializes in African and African American history, African diaspora intellectual and cultural traditions, and utopian studies across the Black diaspora within the framework of Atlantic modernity and Global South relations.

He is the author of The History of Ethiopia, a contribution to the Greenwood Press History of Modern Nation Series. He has also contributed to several publications on African, African American and the Black diaspora history.

His work centers on concepts of heritage, history, and social relations as vital components of development. He explores how these ideas have evolved over the past two centuries and how they are being manifested or manipulated in twenty-first century literary, film, visual and sonic arts, as well as in political and freedom movements.

Dr. Adejumobi has taught at The University of Texas at Austin; Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan; and Zhejiang Normal University in Jinhua, China.

He holds degrees from the University of Lagos; the University of Oregon; and The University of Texas at Austin, where he was awarded his Ph.D

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Adejumobi, S. (2007, June 16). Thelonious Monk (1917-1982). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/monk-thelonious-1917-1982/

Source of the Author's Information:

Amiri Baraka, (Leroi Jones), Blues People: Negro Music in White America (New York: William Morrow, 1963); Leslie Gourse, Straight, No Chaser: The Life and Genius of Thelonious Monk (New York: Schirmer Books, 1997).

Further Reading