Albert Murray

Albert Murray

Albert Murray Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Aug. 19, 2013.
NEW YORK (AP) - Albert Murray, the influential novelist and critic who celebrated black culture, scorned black separatism and was once praised by Duke Ellington as the "unsquarest man I know," died Sunday. He was 97.

Murray died at home in his sleep, according to Lewis Jones, a family friend and Murray's guardian.

Few authors so forcefully bridged the worlds of words and music. Like his old friend and intellectual ally Ralph Ellison, Murray believed that blues and jazz were not primitive sounds, but sophisticated art, finding kinships among Ellington and Louis Armstrong and novelists such as Thomas Mann and Ernest Hemingway.

He argued his case in a series of autobiographical novels, a nonfiction narrative ("South to a Very Old Place"), an acclaimed history of music ("Stomping the Blues") and several books of criticism. Although slowed by back trouble, Murray continued to write well into his 80s, and also helped Wynton Marsalis and others sta ge the acclaimed Jazz at Lincoln Center concerts. Millions of television viewers came to know him as a featured commentator in Ken Burns' documentary series "Jazz."

An amiable counterpart to the aloof Ellison, Murray was many men: friend of Ellington and artist Romare Bearden (whose paintings hung in Murray's Harlem apartment); foe of Marxists, Freudians, academics, black nationalists and white segregationists; and mentor and inspiration to Ernest J. Gaines, Stanley Crouch, James Alan McPherson and many others.

Marsalis, in the book "Moving to Higher Ground," remembered visiting Murray in Harlem amid not just Bearden paintings, but decades-worth of "books and recordings of the most meaningful ideas in the history of humanity."

"He was asking you to pull down this book and that one and go to chapter so-and-so and page so-and-so, and on that page what he was talking about, and it was everything from Plato to John Ford to Frederick Douglass to thermonuclear dyn amics to James Brown," explained Marsalis, who cited "Stomping the Blues" as a profound influence on his music and his life.

Murray often wrote, and spoke, in a jazzy, mock-professorial style, not unlike Ellington's stylized stage introductions. One Murray book was titled "The Blue Devils of Nada: A Contemporary American Approach to Aesthetic Statement." He declared that blacks should not be regarded as transplanted Africans, but quintessential Americans, practiced in the art of "I-ma-gi-na-tive ex-al-ta-tion."

Interviewed by The Associated Press in 1998, the raspy-voiced Murray defined the blues as "the extension, improvisation and ritualization of the stylization of the beliefs and the feelings and emotions of the lifestyle of a particular culture."

"People want to say the blues is an ailment," Murray said, waving his hand. "Any fool can tell you the blues is good-time music. It's entertainment. It ain't for no church. 'Kill the white folks,' that's not wh at the blues is about. You see the blues with that stuff, it means some Marxist got hold of that."

Ellington once referred to him "the unsquarest person I know."

Born in 1916, Murray grew up in Magazine Point, Ala., a hamlet not far from Mobile. Like his fictional alter ego, Scooter, he was a boy who simultaneously knew and did not know who he was. At age 11, he learned, accidentally, that the couple raising him was not his parents; his mother had given him up for adoption out of shame for conceiving him out of wedlock. His real parents were educated and middle-class, his adopted ones common folk.

Murray, bright, self-confident and a born improviser, came to see himself as the adventurer-hero of his own life, a "prince among paupers." He left his hometown to study at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, where Ellison was an upperclassman, a music major with two-tone shoes who seemed to check out the same library books as Murray did. Murray graduated in 1939, s erved in the Air Force during World War II and received a master's degree from New York University after returning to the U.S.

While Ellison attained instant fame in the early 1950s with his first novel, "Invisible Man," Murray's turn came more than a decade later, when he was well into middle age. Before publication came the prelude: books read, records remembered, paintings appraised, experiences experienced, what Murray called "the also and the also" of constructing an identity that would reconstruct the identity of American culture.

"I was figuring out what kind of a writer I was going to be," he said. "I didn't have it together."

He finally broke through in the late 1960s, at the peak of the Black Arts Movement, which regarded art as an outlet for protest. Murray ridiculed this and other political art as "social science fiction." Like Ellison, he believed conflict was a given, that life was not a formula to be solved but a dance to be danced.

"(E) ven the most exuberant stomp rendition is likely to contain some trace of sadness as a sobering reminder that life is at bottom, for all the very best of good times, a never-ending struggle," Murray once wrote.

Murray's belated success had one apparent casualty: his bond with Ellison. The two drifted apart in later years, with friends speculating that Ellison, who never completed another novel after "Invisible Man," resented Murray's good fortune, while Murray tired of being labeled Ellison's protege.

In 2000, the Modern Library released "Trading Twelves," a collection of letters between Murray and Ellison, who died in 1994.

Murray was married to Mozelle Menefee Murray, whom he met at Tuskegee in 1941. They had a daughter, Michele, who performed with the Alvin Ailey dance troupe. Albert Murray wrote the program notes, about which Ailey joked, "Now I understand better what I've been trying to do all these years."

HILLEL ITALIE, AP National Writer


Copyright © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Sign Albert Murray's Guest Book

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August 23, 2013

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August 22, 2013

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August 21, 2013

Clem Richardson posted to the memorial.

28 Entries

August 23, 2013

Death is never an easy situation to deal with but just like Jesus referred to his good friend Lazarus as being "asleep" in death. That's the viewpoint that we need to have and we will be able to cope with not only the loss of Mr. Murray, but the loss and grief that we experience when we loose our loved ones.

August 22, 2013

EDDIE L RUTH SR. MY CONDOLENCE TO HIS FAMILY.

Clem Richardson

August 21, 2013

Several years ago I had the honor of interviewing Mr. Murray at his home. In the midst of our talk he glanced up and pointed across the room at a massive bookshelf lining one wall. "Get that book for me," he said, pointing. Mystified, I walked over and, following his directions, got the book in question and walked back. "Go to page" something, he said. When I got there, he began reciting the words I was reading. He recited the entire page. Mr. Murray later allowed me to meet him at the Strand Bookstore, where he told me several books I must read, including Andre Malraux's "Man's Fate," one of the most moving and evocative books I have ever digested. Meeting and spending even that little time with Mr. Murray - even now I can't imagine calling him anything else - was a seminal moment in my development as a writer and a human being. Our world is smaller with him gone.

joe belagio johnson

August 21, 2013

I am deeply sorry to here about the loss of your loved one. Fortunately though bible speaks about a time when there will be no more pain or suffering.

August 21, 2013

Grief can be so hard, but our special memories help us cope. Remembering you and your loved one today and always.

Alan Weitz

August 21, 2013

Albert Murray was a great American with a creatively academic view of the diverse cultures of this country and a profound appreciation for jazz. I never met him, but I will miss him.

Melvin Baber

August 21, 2013

Rev. Melvin R.Baber

M.H.G. Sr

August 20, 2013

May you be in The Book Of Life.

G. Freeman

August 20, 2013

May your hearts soon be filled with wonderful memories of joyful times together as you celebrate a life well lived.

DM

August 20, 2013

It was truly appreciated that Mr. Murray stood his ground for what HE thought was right and not just what the majority thought. It takes courage and strength to hold to what you feel is true and right. May the generations now and yet to come remember his legacy. The hope held out to see such men again is truly a joy. I look forward to meeting and conversing with him when he is resurrected to life on earth again.

Bettis Family Member

August 20, 2013

Rest In Peace...
My mother grew up with Mr. Murray in Plateau, AL and had several of his books.

Daneen

August 20, 2013

My sympathies to the family. May God comfort you in your time of loss.

August 20, 2013

Mr. Murray left a mark in history that I hope African American children around the world will be educated about. Thank you Sir.

August 20, 2013

As the days and weeks pass, and as you return to life's routine, may you continue to feel comforted by the love and support of family and friends.

Annie Stephens

August 20, 2013

May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.

August 20, 2013

A gifted and man who gave a great deal to the world...Rest In Peace...your work will live on...

V.Coates Columbus OH

Cynthia Goins

August 20, 2013

Thank You Mr. Murray

August 20, 2013

RIP.......

Patricia Barbee

August 20, 2013

With sympathy to all the Family. "Absent from the body; present with Our Lord".

Karen Davis

August 19, 2013

Prayers and condolences to the ALBERT MURRAY FAMILY. May you find comfort and peace during your time of sorrow. GOD BLESS

August 19, 2013

My condolences to the MURRAY family during this time of grief.

August 19, 2013

My condolences to The Murray Family. May the God of all comfort be with you as you cope with such a loss. 2Cor1:4. Please let the fine memories you have of Albert bring you joy and help to ease your pain.

Eddie

August 19, 2013

My deep sympathy to Mr. Murray's family and friends. May you please find solace in prayer. Psalms 65:2

Dwayne Bickham

August 19, 2013

in God's care rest in peace

August 19, 2013

What a talent and inspiring man, may his memories lives on in his work that Mr. Albert Murray leaves behind. May the God who gives peace be with all of YOU. Amen.- Roman 15:33
-

August 19, 2013

GOD BLESS YOU AND HEAVEN SMILE UP ON YOU AND GRACE BE WITHYOU. FRIENDS OF FAMILY BATES L UP ON YOU EARLINE BATES

deborah

August 19, 2013

So sorry for your loss. All mighty God is a comfort when you are sad reach out to him for comfort.

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August 23, 2013

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August 22, 2013

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August 21, 2013

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