Overdue Debut

Legendary Detroit jazz pianist Charles Boles releases his first CD
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Photograph by Roy Ritchie

Say hello to Detroit鈥檚 newest recording artist. He鈥檚 got immeasurable talent, worlds of experience, an abiding respect for his music鈥檚 traditions, and you don鈥檛 have to wait for his national tour to see him perform. He and his three bandmates have been in concert at the Dirty Dog Jazz Caf茅 in Grosse Pointe Farms every Tuesday night for nearly two years.

Oh, and he鈥檚 81 years old.

Charles Boles, a fastidiously attired, 5-foot-2-inch package of verve and style, is more than one of the world鈥檚 great jazz pianists. He is an authentic Detroit treasure, so rare and historically significant that the DIA should be fighting to preserve him.

And with his first CD, Blue Continuum by the Charles Boles Quartet on the Detroit Music Factory label, his elegant, effortless technique finally has been captured for the ages.

鈥淚 could have put out a CD on my own,鈥 muses Boles, who has been playing almost constantly since 1947, as he relaxes in the Dirty Dog鈥檚 green room between sets on a recent Tuesday. 鈥淏ut if you don鈥檛 have backing, if you don鈥檛 have somebody like Gretchen [Valade, chair of Mack Avenue Records and co-owner of the Dirty Dog] that will go and distribute your music all around the country, they can tell you to f鈥 off. They [Detroit Music Factory] shipped our stuff all over the United States. I couldn鈥檛 have done that. I don鈥檛 know nobody in Omaha, Nebraska, or Denver, Colorado. But they do.鈥

Fortune smiled on Boles one Tuesday last summer when executives from Mack Avenue Records, parent label of Detroit Music Factory, joined Valade for dinner at the caf茅 and came to the same conclusion she had reached long before. 鈥淚 put Charles on Detroit Music Factory for the same reason I feature him at the Dirty Dog: I think he鈥檚 amazing,鈥 Valade says. 鈥淎nd I think he鈥檚 been underrated for some time by many in the business. I鈥檓 happy he finally has this opportunity. Clearly, it鈥檚 long overdue.鈥

Blue Continuum, recorded in just two days at Solid Sound studios in Ann Arbor, features five original compositions by Boles and four from veteran guitarist and CD co-producer Ron English. The Stevie Wonder classic 鈥淕olden Lady鈥 (鈥渢o maybe grab some of the younger people,鈥 Boles says) and a Valade favorite, 鈥淕od Bless the Child,鈥 are cover tunes. (And a bonus track, the nearly 10-minute meditation 鈥淎lone,鈥 can be downloaded on iTunes.) Bassist John Dana and drummer Renell Gonsalves from Boles鈥 live quartet, also perform on the CD. Boles鈥 favorite cut, the standout instrumental 鈥淟iz,鈥 is a tribute to his adoptive mother, a fine pianist herself.

鈥淎 CD from Charles Boles 鈥 as a leader, no less 鈥 is really something to say 鈥楢men鈥 to,鈥 cheers former Metro Times editor and longtime Detroit jazz chronicler W. Kim Heron. 鈥淐harles is one of our ever-fewer direct links to the heyday of bebop Detroit and those jam session tutorials at Barry Harris鈥 house.

鈥淓very time he sits at the keyboard, it鈥檚 a master class in that tradition.鈥

And when Boles sits down to play piano at the Dirty Dog, there鈥檚 a delicious coincidence that a giant framed photo of jazz immortal Fats Waller should hang over his shoulder. For it was Waller, Liz鈥檚 cousin, who persuaded Boles to take up the piano when he was a child growing up in Detroit鈥檚 fabled Black Bottom district.

鈥淗e used to come to our house in the 鈥30s and play the piano,鈥 Boles recalls. 鈥淗e was a big, happy-go-lucky guy, and he loved to have a good time. I would climb up on his knee. They assumed I wanted to play the piano, which they were probably right. I mean, once I started tinkering I got fascinated.鈥夆 My mother had to tell me to give it a rest! But she backed me 100 percent. She was a lovely, lovely lady. I was just starting to make it when she died.鈥

Make it he has. Part of the legendary 鈥7th Hour鈥 jam sessions at Northern High School, Boles went on to become conductor or musical director for some of the most iconic nightspots of Detroit鈥檚 storied past, places like the downtown Playboy Club. He was musical director for Aretha Franklin 鈥渨hen she didn鈥檛 have no money,鈥 worked for groundbreaking female comedian Jackie 鈥淢oms鈥 Mabley, and though his personal taste leaned more to boogie-woogie than blues, he toured around the world with B.B. King.

A warm, jovial character and raconteur with decades of stories to tell, perhaps his follow-up CD will be spoken word. 鈥淚 think about some people, literary writers, who keep going into their 90s,鈥 Boles reflects. 鈥淓ubie Blake was still playing piano at 101. It鈥檚 not up to you anyway, whether you survive or not. You鈥檙e not in charge of this life.鈥