Booker Telleferro Ervin II (October 31, 1930 – August 31, 1970) was an American tenor saxophone player. His tenor playing was characterised by a strong, tough sound and blues/gospel phrasing. He is remembered for his association with bassist Charles Mingus.
Biography
Ervin was born in Denison, Texas, United States. He first learned to play trombone at a young age from his father, After graduating from high school, Ervin enlisted in the United States Air Force and was stationed in Okinawa, Japan, during which he taught himself to play the tenor saxophone.
Between October 1964 to summer 1966, Ervin worked and lived in Europe, playing gigs in France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and The Netherlands. Basing himself in Barcelona, Spain, he featured regularly at the city's Jamboree Club. He recorded and broadcast while overseas, making albums with his own quartet, Dexter Gordon and Catalan vocalist Núria Feliu, featuring on various radio programmes and appearing at several jazz festivals, including a guest slot at the 1965 Berlin Jazz Festival, during which he performed a 25-minute improvisation. This performance was issued as "Blues For You" on the album Lament For Booker Ervin (Enja Records) in 1977.
Following his return to the United States in summer 1966, Ervin led his own groups in jazz clubs throughout the country, and appeared at both the Newport Jazz Festival (1967) and the Monterey Jazz Festival (1966) performing with Randy Weston; a recording of their performance was issued on CD in 1994. In 1968, Ervin again appeared at clubs and festivals in Scandinavia, broadcasting with the Danish Radio Big Band. He recorded again for Prestige, but in late 1966 was signed to West Coast label, Pacific Jazz, for whom he taped two albums, Structurally Sound and Booker 'n' Brass (1967), before switching to Blue Note. Ervin recorded two Blue Note albums under his own name, In Between and Tex Book Tenor, the latter going unissued during his lifetime, initially being released in the 1970s as part of a double album shared with recordings (on which Ervin features) made under the leadership of Horace Parlan (Back from the Gig). In 2005, Blue Note issued as single CD of Tex Book Tenor in its limited edition Connoisseur series.
Ervin's final recorded appearance occurred in January 1969, when he guested on a further Prestige album headed by teenage multi-instrumentalist Eric Kloss.
Ervin died of kidney disease in New York City in 1970, aged 39. Most biographical accounts of Ervin's death give an incorrect date. His gravestone in The National Cemetery, East Farmingdale, New York, clearly shows the date as August 31, 1970.
In 2017, Ervin was the subject of a mini-biography written by English saxophonist and author Simon Spillett, published as part of an anthology package titled The Good Book (Acrobat Records)
Tributes
Booker Ervin has been remembered by many artists, Ted Curson called one of his albums Ode to Booker Ervin; the band "Steam", in their album Real Time, called one of their tracks "Tellefero"; and others...
Discography
As leader
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Year recorded
!Title
!Label
!Year released
!Personnel/Notes
|-
|1960
|The Book Cooks
|Bethlehem
|1960
|Sextet, with Ervin and Zoot Sims (tenor sax), Tommy Turrentine (trumpet), Tommy Flanagan (piano), George Tucker (bass), Danny Richmond (drums)
|-
|1960
|Cookin
|Savoy
|1961
|Quintet, with Ervin (tenor sax), Richard Williams (trumpet), Horace Parlan (piano), George Tucker (bass), Danny Richmond (drums); reissued as Down in the Dumps (1978)
|-
|1963
|The Freedom Book
|Prestige
|1964
|Quartet, with Ervin (tenor sax), Jaki Byard (piano), Richard Davis (bass), Alan Dawson (drums)
