Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Fred Taylor was born in Boston, Massachusetts on June 29, 1929 and was raised in nearby Newton, Massachusetts. He studied piano as a youth and played drums but it was jazz where he found his calling. Captivated by bebop in the 1940s and ’50s, he got a degree from Boston University, with jazz as his major area of study, seeing live shows, collecting albums, listening to the radio, and simply hanging out. While gaining his jazz legs he worked at his parents’ mattress and upholstery business.

Taylor first started promoting a mix of jazz and folk acts around Boston in 1961. In 1965 he and his business partner Tony Mauriello bought two nightclubs, and renamed them Paul’s Mall and the Jazz Workshop, where the who’s-who of modern jazz, from legends of the bebop generation to young innovators of the fusion era.

When the two venues closed in 1978 the partners bought a movie theater and ran it for eight years. During that period Miles Davis came out of retirement with a new band and asked Taylor to promote his comeback gigs, and his coming-out party in Boston became international news, and the material recorded at Kix was later released on the album We Want Miles, named after the chants that greeted Davis and the group at those first shows.

In 1990 he took over the lounge at the Embassy Suites Hotel which eventually became a full-fledged jazz venue called Scullers. Under his leadership, the club became an essential part of the local music landscape.

Fred then took a young saxophonist named Grace Kelly under his wing, whom he met when she was just 13 years old. He became both Kelly’s mentor and advocate, recommending her to everyone and anyone in the jazz community. Their relationship reflects a lifelong pattern of seeking out new artists, presenting them as performers, and then working to raise both the industry and the public’s awareness of their importance.

In a move that was widely unpopular in Boston and even drew national criticism, Hilton Hotels, the owner of Scullers, terminated its relationship with Taylor in 2016. This ended his reign of more than a quarter-century at the club. At 87 years old, he continued to promote Kelly and other artists he believed in. During his last few years, he finished his autobiography and fought the cancer that would eventually end his life. Jazz impressario Fred Taylor died on October 26, 2023.

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