Smoke Signals 3 florc Pgpkzb - Psora Tome DrxiGrafli ; v Native American jazz musician who traveled the world with his music will be honored in Grand Ronde with Tribute concert. OCTOBER 15, 2001 Hollis Taylor and band will give benefit performance to help raise money for the Veteran's Memorial. Continued from front page He was, to start, an Oregonian. But he was also the son of Floy and Gilbert Pepper, a Creek and a Kaw respectively. And they were from Oklahoma originally, brought west by the lure of work at Chemawa Indian School in 1940. Born and raised in Portland, Jim Pepper possessed many talents. A four letter athlete at Parkrose High School, he also was a skilled tap dancer and a baseball player of tre mendous ability. "I always figured he would go on to play professionally and I pushed him in that direction," said Floy, who still resides in Portland. "He was so good at it." . Indeed he may have been, but after hoisting that tenor sax to his lips one day at the budding age of 15 there was no doubt that it was music and not base ball that would consume him. Pepper spent many days in Portland record shops nourish ing the new direction and many nights in clubs exercising it. Floy sensed the talent and even took steps to transfer him to Madi son High School where a music teacher of some repute would men tor. It worked, as Pepper earned a scholarship at Brigham Young Uni versity. But BYU would not be so welcom ing, particularly of his smoking habit, a taboo of the Mormon school. Pepper was kicked out during his freshman year and his college ca reer would be short-lived. After a brief stint in San Fran cisco, Pepper, like many musicians of that decade, decided to try his luck in America's musical Mecca, New York City. There Pepper fell in with Chris Hills, Larry Coryell and Bobby Moses to form The Free Spirits. Though the band demonstrated considerable flair for the rockjazz combination they parlayed, the late 1960's belonged to Rock and Motown, even a clever Indian song couldn't save them from being lost in a sea of competition. Nonethe less, Pepper's collaboration with Chris Hills on "Everything is Ev erything" helped produce a Top 40 hit, "Witchie Tai To," the first known blend of jazz and Indian rhythms. Pepper's venture into new terri tory with that hit put him on the path to his own niche in the annals of music history. Aside from Jack Teagarden, a well-known Choctaw trumpet player in the early part of the 20th century, jazz hasn't at tracted many Natives, much less any who could daringly blend tra ditional chants and songs with a music known for instrumental im- Photo courtesy of www.firstamericans.org provisation. Fellow saxophonist Ornette Coleman, whom Pepper met in the East Village, was the one who is generally credited with suggesting that Pepper incorporate some of his ancestral tunes into his music. And since Pepper spent many summers in his youth visiting his grandpar ents in Oklahoma, he was versed enough in his own ethnic back ground to know a score of catchy chants, among them which the peyote chant "Witchie Tai To" was but one. Unfortunately, New York City came particularly 7 enamored with f y Vienna, moving i- J 1 AAA A T mere m laey, two years before his death. "He loved it there, re ally," said Floy. "He felt like a person over there." Not until after his death really, did Americans begin to see that same person they had overlooked for so many years. In 1997 Up stream Productions released an ephemeral documentary on Jim, dubbed "Pepper's Powwow," which was also the title of his most famous mm W H7V r if . . . .,, v ;- if :- may have not been ready for Pep per and his lack of recognition sub tly nudged him into relocation. Alaska may not be often thought of as a hot jazz venue, yet that's precisely where Pepper ended up in the early 1970's, making a living doing social work with Indian chil dren and playing gigs here and there, like at the Gold Rush Hotel in Juneau. The northern confines would see some memorable mate rial, such as "Bear Tracks," which became one of Alaska's state songs, and the funky "Polar Bear Stomp." San Francisco hosted Pepper briefly, where in 1974 he won the Ralph J. Gleason Award, given to new young musicians. Europe and Africa, however, were to be the places that Pepper found what in America had eluded him for so long: recognition. In the early 1980's the legendary Don Cherry (part Choctaw himself) recruited Pepper to play on a tour of western Africa with the U.S. De partment of State. The mission was simply "an exchange of arts," as Floy put it, but one Jim would never forget. "He was very well received by the Africans," said Floy. "Over there they carried him around on a sil ver platter." Permanent popularity, however, would be enjoyed just due north of the Dark Continent, in Europe. Jazz had always enjoyed a good run over there, and Europeans quickly embraced Pepper. Pepper made recordings and played in such places as Denmark, Germany, Turkey and Austria, where he became a legend. He be- album. The film premiered and won an award at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1998 the First Americans in the Arts recognized him with its Lifetime Achievement Award. That same year he was inducted into the Indian Hall of Fame and on that occasion, like the previous, Floy and Pepper's old flame Caren Knight at tended to accept on his behalf. Floy's acceptance speech may have captured the essence of Pepper bet ter than anything ever written. "Jim Pepper was a member of the Kaw Indian Nation known as The Wind People' from his father. From me, his mother, he was a member of the Creek Indian Nation known as The People of the Waters.' It's no wonder his music was so strong and powerful with the wind to carry his music to the four directions of the Earth. And as long as the grass shall grow and the waters flow which is forever may his spirit re main alive for time immemorial." His funeral in 1992 was well-attended by jazz maestros, which makes the appearance of Hollis Taylor and Portland bassist Phil Baker in Grand Ronde on October 26 suddenly not so surprising. Oddly enough, this will not be the first time a Baker has attended a Pepper event. Phil's father, former Western Oregon University profes sor, ardent jazz fan record collec tor, and practicing musician R.S. Baker crossed paths with Pepper before. In the 1980's, he booked Pepper to play at WOU (then West ern Oregon State College), and had him over for lunch. "You now what's funny, he was also very knowledgeable about astrology," said Baker, who was known at WOU for maintaining an astrological profile on each of his students. "Pepper was a Triple Gemini'" he said, and explained some thi'npp jihniir. nlanetarv nlipTi- O - 1 D ments or something to that ef fect. "That means he was very concentrated... very focused." But he was not too focused to for get his roots. "He neither exploited nor hid his ancestry," said Baker. "He was re spectful but not uncritical of both sides." Perhaps that explains why no body ever really has anything bad to say about Pepper, because his life was music, and he never had time for the pettiness that can dis tract one from one's craft. Perhaps that's why he was so original. "In music, you're not 'there' until you bring something new," said Baker. "And he was unique." Original, Unique not bad words to be remembered by. D Pepper's Pow Wow (1971) Embryo SD 731 (distributed by Atlantic Records) Comin' & Goin' (1983) - Island Antilles Dakota Song (1987) Enja 5043 (CD-34), King K32Y-6225 The Path (1988) Enja 5087 (CD-60) Bear Tracks (1988) Extraplatte Remembrance (1994: Live Recording in Munster, Germany) Tutu Records K3JHEI!C