Remembering Terry Jean Pollard

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Terry Jean Pollard was known in the Detroit jazz community as “the queen of the vibes” for her mastery of the instrument. A Detroit bred pianist/vibraphonist, Pollard was a powerhouse performer who started out playing at jazz clubs around the city including a famous stint with the Billy Mitchell band at the Blue Bird Inn during the 1950s. She was discovered by vibraphonist Terry Gibbs while performing a gig at the Beehive Club in in Detroit in 1952.

According to Gibbs, “Terry was the first female I ever heard swing that hard.”

The Terry Gibbs Quartet featuring Terry Pollard toured nationwide between 1952 – 1960.

Another cool note I discovered about Pollard is that jazz greats like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie offered Terry a job when they played at Birdland numerous times and she turned them down due to her loyalty to Gibbs.

I first learned about Pollard while reading the book Before Motown: A History of Jazz in Detroit and became fascinated by her story and musical acumen. I wanted to learn more about her and why she was not as well known within jazz circles as some of her Detroit music peers. She was the force behind my research of other Detroit female musicians and was included in my presentation for Detroit Sound Conservancy titled “What About Us: Community Archiving and documenting the legacy of Detroit female jazz musicians.

Pollard passed away in 2009 and her son, musician Dennis Michael Weeden started a foundation called the Terry Jean Pollard Foundation in 2014 to honor the memory of his mother.

The Terry Jean Pollard Music Foundation is dedicated to individual development by providing students with preparation to further their musical skills. Through my research on Pollard I got to know her son Michael and have been helping him to preserve the legacy of his mother through adding her items to museums across the country. On July 28th, the TJP Music Foundation honored Pollard with a street named after her in the Conant Gardens Community where she used to live.

The street naming of Pollard is a huge step for the foundation and Weeden is continuing to make sure his mother”s work is brought to the masses through the organization and having her items archived in museums. To learn more about Pollard, check out the TJP website.

Dennis Michael Weeden reading about Terry Jean Pollard during the street naming ceremony.

Veronica Johnson is a project manager, freelance writer, and recent graduate of Library and Information Science with a focus on Archival Administration. She is also an advisor for Detroit Sound Conservancy. Her work has been featured in Metro Times, Real Detroit Weekly, Model D, The Jazz Line and IXITI. Her current research is focused on women in jazz. Her work on Detroit hip hop is published in the book A Detroit Anthology, which features articles, poems, essays, and photos about the city of Detroit. The book came out May 2014.

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Terry Pollard: Detroit Legend




Terry Pollard
 
Somewhere out there in the Detroit region there are unreleased tapes of Terry Pollard. The accomplished female pianist and vibraphonist recorded only one solo album, for Bethlehem in Los Angeles in January 1955. She began her recording career in the early 1950s in Billy Mitchell's Detroit quintet. Then thanks to the keen eyes and ears of vibraphonist and bandleader Terry Gibbs, she joined his band and recorded seven albums with Gibbs from 1953 to 1956. She also appeared on TV with him that year. In 1958, Pollard retired from her music career to raise a family but in the years ahead she led a trio at Detroit's Hobby Bar, performing with touring artists.

Someone must have tapes of her playing at the Hobby Bar. Hopefully label gumshoes who specialize in unearthing such unreleased material will find recordings by Pollard, who is woefully undocumented. For now, Fresh Sound has just remastered in mono (24 bit) and released Pollard's Bethlehem leadership album as well as select recordings as a sidewoman.

Chronologically, this Fresh Sound album begins with Blue Room, which Pollard recorded with Billy Mitchell (ts), Thad Jones (tp), Pollard (p,vib), Alvin Jackson (b) and Elvin Jones (d). Then comes It Could Happen to You and Stompin' at the Savoy from guitarist Dick Garcia's A Message From Garcia, featuring Gene Quill (as), Pollard (p), Garcia (g), Bill Anthony (b) and Frank Isola (d).

The next eight tracks are from Terry Pollard on Bethlehem from January 1955, featuring Don Fagerquist (tp), Terry Pollard (p), Howard Roberts (g), Herman Wright (b) and Frank DeVito (d). The cover featured only a series of blurry lights, which allowed buyers to think Pollard was a white male.

There are four tracks by Pollard from Terry Gibbs for EmArcy in September 1955, featuring Terry Gibbs (vib,p), Terry Pollard (p), Herman Wright (b) and Bert Dahlander (d)—Pretty Face, Nutty Notes, Lonely Dreams and Dicky's Dream.

And finally, three from Gibbs's Mallets-a-Plenty recorded in June 1956, with Gibbs (vib), Pollard (p), Herman Wright (b) and Jerry Segal (d). The tracks are Then It Happens, I'll Remember April and Mean to Me.

Every track on this Fresh Sound release is a joy, and the remastering makes the album a must own. Pollard, Hazel Scott and Marian McPartland remain the queens of the jazz piano in the 1950s. Mary Lou Williams was in a league of her own.

Terry Pollard died in 2009.

JazzWax clips: How remarkable was Terry Pollard? Here she is with monster vibraphonist Terry Gibbs, Herman Wright (b) and Jerry Segal (d) playing two songs on the Tonight Show with Steve Allen in 1956...

Here's Pollard with lyrical trumpeter Don Fagerquist playing Pollard's own great Fedj...
 
Terry Pollard ℗ Bethlehem Records Released on: 1955-03-01

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This story appears courtesy of JazzWax by Marc Myers.  Copyright © 2022. All rights reserved. 

THE MUSIC OF TERRY POLLARD: AN EXTENSIVE VIDEO OVERVIEW, A CROSS SECTION OF RECORDINGS, MUSICAL ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY, PLUS VARIOUS INTERVIEWS WITH TERRY POLLARD:

 

Terry Pollard - Lonely Dreams



Terry Gibbs Quartet with Terry Pollard








Where Or When Terry Pollard -




Terry Gibbs (feat. Terry Pollard) - "Nutty Notes"


Bebop Beast Mode

Terry Pollard was an incredible vibes player, 
listen to her shred on "Now's The Time"