/ 22 August 2005

Boland ‘to be ranked with the geniuses’

Belgian jazz pianist and composer Francy Boland died on Friday in Geneva, aged 75, a statement from the Jazz Labo society of Fribourg said.

Born in Namur on November 6 1929, Boland began learning piano at the age of eight and studied at the Music Conservatory in Liege. He began his jazz career in 1949 and joined Chet Baker’s quintet in 1955.

Moving to the United States, Boland wrote arrangements for Count Basie and Benny Goodman and formed an octet with drummer Kenny Clarke.

Back in Europe, he teamed up with Clarke again in 1962 to form the Kenny Clarke-Francy Boland big band, which lasted for 11 years and included top European musicians such as Ronnie Scott and Tony Coe, plus a number of Americans living in Europe, such as Art Farmer and Herb Geller.

Some of Boland’s compositions became jazz standard, notably Sax No End.

In 1984, he was commissioned to set poems written by the late pope John Paul II to music for a television programme.

“Jazz has lost one of the most prestigious arrangers and band leaders in its history, to be ranked with the geniuses Duke Ellington and Woody Herman,” Jazz Labo enthused. — AFP