Joe Brazil (1927-2008)

July 16, 2017 
/ Contributed By: Selorm Tamakloe

Joe Brazil

Joe Brazil

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Joseph Brazil was an American jazz saxophonist and educator born in Detroit, Michigan, on August 25, 1927. He taught jazz at Garfield High School in Seattle, Washington, and co-founded the music curriculum at the University of Washington in the late 1960s. He also founded the Black Academy of Music in Seattle.

Growing up in Detroit, Brazil purchased a home in 1951 where he lived with his mother and brother. He built a bar in the basement and installed a baby grand piano on which he would play during his legendary jam sessions. Trumpeter Donald Byrd, saxophonist Sonny Red, pianist Barry Harris, bassist Doug Watkins, and drummer Frank Gant all played there. Pianist Alice Coltrane met her first husband, John Coltrane, in Joe’s basement.

Brazil moved to Seattle to work as a tool maker at the Boeing Company in 1961. In 1965, he recorded on flute with John Coltrane in Lynnwood, Washington. This recording was released as Om on the Pulse label.

Brazil, alongside bassist Chuck Metcalf, taught at Garfield High School beginning in 1968. In 1967, he established the Black Academy of Music with guitarist George Hurst. The academy’s faculty included trumpeter Floyd Standifer, saxophonist Jabo Ward, and bassist Milt Garred, and for the next twenty years, they taught a number of aspiring young jazz artists in the Seattle area.

In 1976, Brazil became the center of controversy at the University of Washington when he was denied tenure after becoming the first African American hired. The Black Student Union (BSU) at the University of Washington demanded that he be hired to teach in the university’s music department. Brazil had taught at the university from 1969 to 1976 but was denied tenure. The UW Black Student Union (BSU) protested and demanded that Brazil be tenured.  Nonetheless, the Music Department stood by its decision, and the university administration supported the department. Brazil left the university and focused his energy on the Black Academy of Music.

Joe Brazil died in Seattle on August 6, 2008. He was eighty.

Author Profile

Selorm Tamakloe is currently a sophomore at the University of Washington, Seattle, pursuing a double degree in Biochemistry and Dance with the aspiration of becoming a pediatrician. Because Selorm was born and raised Ghana, she is still learning about the abundance and variety of culture available here in the United States with the African American community being one of the most fascinating to her. In her pursuit of this learning and understanding she realizes the old saying that we are similar and yet very different.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Tamakloe, S. (2017, July 16). Joe Brazil (1927-2008). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/brazil-joe-1927-2008/

Source of the Author's Information:

Paul De Barros, “Drink in Steve Griggs, His ‘Cup of Joe Brazil’ on Dec. 5.” The Seattle Times. December 1, 2016, http://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/music/drink-in-steve-griggs-his-cup-of-joe-brazil-on-dec-5/;  Marc Robinson, “The Early History of the UW Black Student Union” Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project, http://depts.washington.edu/civilr/BSU_beginnings.htm.

Further Reading