There are a number of highly talented jazz musicians from the late 1950s who can't really be called great because they recorded too few albums. In some cases these musicians never had an opportunity to record extensively. Or they came up too late and were trampled by the rock era in the mid-1960s. Or they succumbed to drug addiction and couldn't hold it together long enough to win the trust of record producers. One such jazz artist who fell into all of these categories was hard-bop trumpeter Don Sleet.
Yesterday I spoke to Howard Rumsey, Jimmy Heath and Ira Gitler about Sleet. I'll share their recollections with you in a moment.
Little is known about Sleet, and sadly he recorded only one album as a leader called All Members. On that superb 1961 date, Sleet was accompanied by Jimmy Heath, Wynton Kelly, Ron Carter and Jimmy Cobb. His only other albums were as a sideman. He first appeared on record in 1959 on vocalist Gloria Smyth's Like Soul! (World Pacific Jazz), Lenny McBrowne and the Four Souls (Riverside) and Eastern Lights. In 1964, he was in the trumpet section on Shelly Manne's My Fair Lady With The Un-original Cast (Capitol).
Sleet doesn't appear in the Encyclopedia of Jazz or the New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. From what I could piece together from research and from his brother David, Don Sleet was born in Fort Wayne, Ind, on Nov. 27, 1938. After his family moved to San Diego, he took piano lessons from his father, who was director of music for the La Mesa Spring Valley School District. Soon Don began playing the trumpet, and by age 18 he was playing in the San Diego Symphony. He also played in vibraphonist Terry Gibbs' group and the San Diego State University Jazz Ensemble.
This collegiate group consisted of Don Sleet (trumpet), Mike Wofford (piano), Gary Lefebre (tenor sax), John Guerin (drums) and Bob Sarabia (bass). They were invited by Howard Runsey to play at The Lighthouse in Hermosa Beach, CA., on Sundays. The group would go on to win first place at Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse Jazz Festival and was written up in Down Beat in 1956.
In 1961, with Chet Baker in prison in Lucca, Italy, for drug smuggling and forgery, producer Orrin Keepnews recorded the hungry and vulnerable-looking Sleet on Jazzland Records. Orrin had been recording Baker on Jazzland before the trumpeter's internment. After recording All Members, Sleet returned to the West Coast for an extended stay at Shelly's Manne Hole. Narcotic addition led to several stints in halfway houses and
Synanon. Don Sleet died in Los Angeles in December 1986 of lymphoma, at age 47.
All Members is one of those gems that has slipped through the cracks and is all but forgotten by most jazz listeners. Its success rests on Sleet's cool, angular sound pressed up against Jimmy Heath's powerful, sandpapery texture. The song selections also were superb: In addition to Jimmy's All Members, the group recorded two Clifford Jordan tunes (Brooklyn Bridge and The Hearing), three standards (Secret Love, Softly As in a Morning Sunrise and But Beautiful) and an original blues by Sleet called Fast Company.
To gain insight into Sleet, I called Howard Rumsey, Jimmy Heath and Ira Gitler, who wrote All Members' original liner notes.
Howard Rumsey [pictured]:
Jimmy Heath [pictured]:
"I wrote All Members on there. It was a quick relationship. I didn't know Don for a long
time. He wanted me with him on the date, so I did it. I suspect Orrin got everyone together for that one. Don could play. Sure he could play. I remember he wasn't exceptional but he was a good player. There were a lot of good players then and he was one of them."
Ira Gitler [pictured]:
JazzWax tracks: Don Sleet's All Members with Jimmy Heath, Wynton Kelly, Jimmy Cobb and Ron Carter has only just been discontinued by Concord Records but it is available on CD here from independent sellers. For a free listen to the album and two tracks from Lenny McBrowne and the Four Souls, go here to a podcast of Off the Beaten Tracks, a Dutch radio show. Just click on the little speaker icon.
Sleet's appearance on Shelly Manne's 1964 recording, My Fair Lady With The Un-original Cast (not to be confused with Shelly Manne and His Friends: Modern Jazz Performances of Songs From My Fair Lady recorded in 1956) can be found here as an import from Japan. Note that the song samples at Amazon are not from this album but mistakenly from the 1956 recording.
JazzWax thanks to Harry Sandick for reminding me of Don Sleet and All Members.

Gotta say: special thanks for this reminder and focus on a real great jazz album.
It's important for many reasons - not least as evidence of the rare, and very successful, hook-up between Ron Carter and Jimmy Cobb (I can think of a much later Mark Morganelli record too).
I'm happy to report that it does have great notoriety as an important record, too, amongst certain cognoscenti: Kenny Washington is known to especially love it and to call it - he's the one to hip me to it. I do thank him (and now, you, too).
PS.: Isn't that My Fair Lady sensational? And Irene Kral in there... oh boy! And Jack Sheldon is hilarious on it. (Another true under-regarded great Charlie Kennedy is on there too. Another treasure).
Posted by: Red Colm O'Sullivan | November 18, 2009 at 01:16 AM
The New York Times wrote 1/10/1987:
" LOS ANGELES, Jan. 9 (AP) - Don
Sleet, a jazz musician who was Down-
beat magazine's trumpeter of the year
three times during the 1950's, died Dec.
31 of cancer. He was 48 years old.
Mr. Sleet performed with Stan Ken-
ton's band in 1953 and went on to ap-
pear with the Lighthouse All Stars and
the Shelly Manne All Stars. The maga-
zine recognizid him as trumpeter of
the year from 1956 through 1958. "
Han Schulte
Netherlands
Posted by: Han Schulte | November 22, 2009 at 06:49 PM
Sorry, the above comment was me. Looks like the Typepad/Facebook linkup has some kinks to iron out...
Posted by: Ian Carey | December 02, 2009 at 06:12 PM
Just my take, but it's interesting to hear the difference in style in his playing on that podcast between the Pacific Jazz date and "All Members"--to me, he sounds like a pleasant Chet clone on the former, and a serious NY straightahead player on the latter. Jimmy Heath's comment is blunt but true--true even today. More good players than there will ever be gigs, unfortunately.
Posted by: Ian Carey | December 02, 2009 at 06:20 PM