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George Freeman, a trailblazing jazz guitarist who enjoyed a late-career renaissance, dies at 97

George Freeman, a trailblazing jazz guitarist who enjoyed a late-career renaissance, dies at 97

Chicago Tribune01-04-2025

You could recognize George Freeman's playing anywhere.
When tenor saxophonist Gene Ammons and his sextet appeared as guests on WTTW in 1970, most members of the band generally hewed to the backing progressions. Then there was Freeman, daringly traipsing around their harmonic fringes in hard-rocking, blazing solos.
That was typical for the ever-adventurous Freeman, who died in Chicago on April 1. He was 97 years old. His death was confirmed by his nephew, Mark Freeman.
While still in his teens, Freeman was among the fiMcBriderst musicians in Chicago, and one of the first jazz guitarists anywhere, to champion the bleeding-edge bebop of his idol, Charlie Parker. He eventually got to play with Parker, in now-lauded performances at the Pershing Ballroom in the early 1950s.
The list of jazz greats with whom Freeman collaborated is long. Besides Parker and Ammons, for whom he wrote the hit 'The Black Cat,' he side-manned for Count Basie, Dexter Gordon, Lester Young, Sonny Stitt, Jimmy McGriff, Coleman Hawkins and Harrison Bankhead.
Freeman's virtuosic presence on the bandstand long attracted critical and connoisseurial plaudits. 'Among the many talented musicians I first got to see and hear during my recently concluded three-and-a-half year stay in Chicago, one of the most memorable was guitarist George Freeman,' DownBeat editor Dan Morgenstern gushed in a 1971 profile for the magazine, the same year Freeman released his first album as a bandleader. 'Freeman's way of going outside is exciting but also musical, and doesn't sound at all like what other contemporary guitarists attempt in this vein.'
Despite his résumé and insider acclaim, Freeman's career never took off the way he and his supporters expected. He was often overshadowed by his older brother Von Freeman, a monumental tenor player with whom he shared the Freeman family home in Greater Grand Crossing for decades. The younger Freeman sometimes suspected his perch at jazz's vanguard came at his own professional peril.
'The (radio) DJs didn't quite understand me, because I was going a different direction,' Freeman told the Tribune in 2023. 'My playing has always been so advanced. … It wasn't my time, because I came home. I was always coming home.'
'Home' for Freeman was Chicago, save some mid-career stints in New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area. Born on the South Side on April 10, 1927, Freeman was the youngest of three boys, all musical: Von and oldest brother Eldridge 'Bruz' Freeman, a drummer, both joined Freeman for the first of Parker's Pershing Ballroom performances. Music was nurtured at home by their father, George Freeman, Sr., a police officer whose beat included clubs on the 35th Street strip, and their mother, Earle, herself a guitarist. The brothers would stay up late listening to jazz radio with their father, even if it meant showing up to school the next day bleary-eyed.
Freeman was inspired to pick up guitar after he heard blues star T-Bone Walker play the long-defunct Rhumboogie Café in Hyde Park as a teen; too young to enter the club legally, he snuck in through a stage door to hear him. 'He was singing, had that guitar up behind his neck — he was dynamic,' Freeman later recounted to JazzTimes.
Freeman was already sitting in for Eugene Wright's Dukes of Swing band when he passed through Walter Dyett's prestigious band program at DuSable High School. Freeman wasn't immune to the exacting pedagogue's fits of anger — he was booted from class on a couple occasions — but Dyett later invited him to join his swing orchestra at Rhumboogie Café, the same place Freeman fell in love with the guitar.
In 1947, tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin, a DuSable classmate, recruited Freeman to join the Joe Morris Orchestra. It was his first touring break, and his first move to New York. Freeman racked up early recording credits but unjustly missed out on a compositional credit for the band's first hit, 'Lowe Groovin'.' He quit in protest, landing back in Chicago just in time to link up with Parker for the Pershing residency.
A few years later, Freeman was cheated out of another potentially career-making opportunity. He crossed paths with one of Sarah Vaughan's bandmates, who narrowly kept him from joining the epochal singer on the road. The musician, who held a grudge against Freeman, told him the wrong date for the start of the tour and he missed the whole thing.
In the 1960s, Freeman linked up with soul and R&B singer Jackie Wilson and saxophonist Sil Austin, a partnership that opened the door to other genre-blending collaborations with Wild Bill Davis and Richard 'Groove' Holmes. After an unhappy few years in California, Freeman returned to Chicago, where he played in Gene Ammons' band from 1969 until Ammons' death in 1974.
Freeman recorded his first albums under his own name after returning to Chicago, releasing 'Introducing George Freeman Live, with Charlie Earland Sitting In,' (1971), 'Birth Sign,' (1972), 'New Improved Funk' and 'Man and Woman' (both 1974) in quick succession. Another run of albums followed nearly 30 years later, mostly on singer and collaborator Joanie Pallatto's Southport label: 'Rebellion' (1995), 'George Burns!' (1999), and 'At Long Last, George' (2001, featuring singers Kurt Elling and René Marie).
Freeman became a coveted guitarist-on-call for touring acts and worked the Chicago circuit for the rest of his life, often alongside Von. However, worsening vision problems from a childhood accident made it difficult for Freeman to travel to gigs without assistance.
When Von Freeman died in 2012, Chicago's jazz community swooped in to ensure that George, then 85, was looked after. Drummer Mike Reed set Freeman up with fellow guitarist Mike Allemana, a former bandmate of Von's, for a month-long residency at his then-new venue Constellation. Freeman's bookings, which had slowed to a trickle before Von's death, soon spiked. He became such a fixture that the Tribune named him its 2014 Chicagoan of the Year in Jazz.
In 2015, Freeman linked up with Von's son, Chico — himself a volcanic tenorist — to release 'All in the Family' in 2015. At that point, nephew and uncle hadn't collaborated since they shared an out-there local bill in the 1970s, one Chico felt nervous even offering the older musician.
His doubts were dispelled as soon as George began to play.
'He blew my mind. He came and he played just amazingly. He was just a total musician. That changed my mind about everything,' Chico told JazzTimes years afterward.
Freeman released an album roughly once every two years after 'All in the Family.' His most recent, 'The Good Life' (2023), featured bassist Christian McBride and organist/trumpeter Joey DeFrancesco, heavyweights in the jazz world.
This time, Freeman wasn't a sideman. They were the ones supporting him — a fact that tickled him endlessly.
'I wanted to play with (DeFrancesco) in the first place, and McBride had heard about me. They all knew me! That's what made it so great,' he said.
Besides a show-stopping appearance at the 2023 Chicago Jazz Festival, Freeman mostly kept his recent gigs contained to an annual birthday party he hosted at the Green Mill, the city's historic jazz venue. The next one, celebrating his 98th, was scheduled for April 11 and 12, with Allemana, organist Pete Benson and drummer Charles Heath; it's been fashioned into a memorial concert in his absence.
In his last conversation with the Tribune, Freeman echoed the sentiments he shared with DownBeat magazine in 1971, his first major print profile.
'With all this talk about musicians being brothers, there is too much competitiveness among them and they aren't cooperating enough. The way I see it, everybody can't be a leader, so you've got to get behind somebody,' Freeman told DownBeat.
'Why not help another musician to do his thing? You'll get your turn when the time comes.'
Freeman is survived by nephews Chico and Mark Freeman and by his great-nieces and -nephews. He was preceded in death by brothers Eldridge 'Bruz' Freeman and Von Freeman. A service will be announced at a later date.
Hannah Edgar is a freelance writer.
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SOUTH BEND, Ind. — If it's a road game, Marcus Freeman flips open his laptop on the charter bus, then continues the ritual on the team plane. If it's a home game, Notre Dame's head coach heads straight to his office after his news conference. He pulls down the blinds around his second-story office, then turns on the monitor mounted to the wall, left of his desk. Advertisement For these two-plus hours, Freeman isn't much different than the Kent State linebackers coach who broke into the business 14 years ago. Football tape is football tape, whether it's a national championship game between Notre Dame and Ohio State or a midweek matchup in the Mid-American Conference. Film gets Freeman closer to those roots, before the celebrity of Notre Dame, before he became one of the faces of college football. Watching the game back is also the only way Freeman can sleep after games. 'It's a way to decompress, win or lose,' the 39-year-old Freeman said. 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The 28-yard run by the NIU running back late in the first quarter didn't feel pivotal in the moment, but Freeman easily picked out ways this play (and others like it) were ominous in Notre Dame's only regular-season loss, a stunning upset in a game in which the Irish were favored by four touchdowns. It's a basic run misfit where Jaylen Sneed gets caught inside, failing to fill the gap that Jack Kiser and Jaiden Ausberry set. Brown bolts down the field before Xavier Watts pushes him out. It was the longest run by an opposing back the Irish allowed until Ohio State's Quinshon Judkins went for 70 yards to start the second half of the national title game. 'You're always looking for blue, white, blue, white, blue. That's gap sound,' Freeman said. 'You would watch this play at home and say is it Kiser? Is it Ausberry? The problem is 3 doesn't get over top.' Freeman doesn't want to live with the result of this play, but he sees its residue all over the game. Could Ausberry have been more physical setting the edge? Maybe. Then Freeman pulls up a 10-yard Brown run from the third quarter when Ausberry does shoot upfield with Sneed in pursuit. Brown gets outside Sneed for a first down. Adon Shuler taps Brown along the sideline, which basically lets the running back pick up a couple of extra yards. Advertisement The drive ends in a missed field goal. That's not what sticks with Freeman. 'It's little (stuff) like this. That's not typical for 3. Watch 8. That's the stuff I watch this game and go, hmmm …' Freeman said. 'Why aren't we playing as hard as we usually play? If this was Ohio State, Adon would knock the crap out of him.' Notre Dame had been setting up Louisville for a throwback screen all game by sprinting out Leonard. Now Denbrock wanted to get paid for that work, calling a screen that sucks in five Cardinals defenders and gives the entire Irish offensive line a free release to the second level. Sam Pendleton and Rocco Spindler make their blocks first. Anthonie Knapp delivers next, with Coogan looking for work. At least four defenders converge on Love at the 3-yard line, and the running back somehow gets through them all to score while barreling into Coogan. The touchdown gives Notre Dame control in a game that becomes a springboard to the College Football Playoff. All good, right? 'This is what I don't love,' Freeman said. 'This is what I'll watch and go, 'What is he doing?'' Freeman is looking at receiver Kris Mitchell, aligned to Leonard's left. He's running a route to clear space for the throwback screen. Check. But when the boundary cornerback, Tahveon Nicholson (23), comes screaming across the field, Mitchell doesn't pick him up. Nicholson is the first defender to drill Love. If Mitchell blocks him, the touchdown comes much easier. 'Go find work. Turn around and block this guy because this dude almost stops it,' Freeman said. 'This is the guy you gotta get blocked because you never know! Those are the things that I'm watching. Not is it a good play, is it a bad play. Who is finishing the play? That's how we evaluate every play. All 11.' Advertisement Two days after Notre Dame's win over Louisville, Freeman watched Monday Night Football as the Detroit Lions beat the Seattle Seahawks. Midway through the third quarter, Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson called a throwback pass from Amon-Ra St. Brown to Jared Goff that went for a 7-yard touchdown. Freeman made a note. Two months later, he'd revisit it, combined with his memory of a fake punt from about eight years earlier. As the linebackers coach at Purdue (2013-16), Freeman ran the punt team and rarely saw a fake he didn't like, even if head coach Darrell Hazell didn't always agree. One fake aligned Purdue's backup quarterback behind a tight end on the left side of the formation. That quarterback hit the tight end for a first down. 'This is when I went to (special teams coordinator Marty Biagi) and said I got an idea for a punt fake,' Freeman said. 'Then it's about how do you enhance it? How do you incorporate Buchner and get all eyes on Love?' Notre Dame had already taken care of the Love part with its fake punt at Georgia Tech, when Jayden Harrison did a reverse pitch with Love, who went 22 yards for a first down. If USC needed a reminder to be on alert with Love in punt formation, that film study was it. The Irish just needed to make that prior knowledge work against the Trojans. Buchner lines up behind Love, basically hiding the former starting quarterback in plain sight. USC still calls out Evans as a danger man, but linebacker Anthony Beavers gets sucked into the Love motion. Buchner lofts the pass for an easy completion. A fake that originated in West Lafayette and got repackaged in Detroit hits in Los Angeles. The former renditions helped the Irish special teams understand how to hit this play because they'd already seen it work. 'You gotta show guys,' Freeman said. 'When you show the players, you show them the vision that we have for this type of play. And then it just evolved.' Here's the thing about the pick that set the stage for Love's 98-yard touchdown. Advertisement It started with a mistake against Virginia. And it didn't have anything to do with Watts. Just before halftime against the Cavaliers, Kiser set up in the middle of the defense, watching quarterback Anthony Colandrea. On the backside of the play, Virginia receiver Malachi Fields — now an incoming Notre Dame transfer — lined up against Leonard Moore. At the snap, Kiser got sucked into the Virginia run game, which Drayk Bowen had covered. And that meant Kiser abandoned the backside hash, his post with Notre Dame in Cover-1. Colandrea hit Fields for a 12-yard gain. Freeman had the play queued up to watch. 'Kiser got his ass ripped for this,' Freeman said. 'He doesn't have the back. That's Drayk's guy. He should be packing it back right to the weakside hash. He doesn't. Look what happens.' Fast forward to the College Football Playoff. Kiser is in the middle of the defense. This time Sneed takes the back and Kiser doesn't false step. Instead, he takes a peek at Indiana slot receiver Myles Price (4), who's breaking behind him with Jordan Clark in coverage. Kiser hauls to the weakside hash. And where does the ball go? To the weakside hash. 'Kiser does an unbelievable job and (Watts) is just making a play. This is all Kiser. He causes this ball to be thrown off-target,' Freeman said. 'Hopefully we beat it enough into their heads: backside hash, backside hash. That's the hardest part of the field to cover.' 'Other than J-Love is a freak,' Freeman said, 'there's a couple things I'm gonna show you.' Before getting into Love's touchdown that will show up on Notre Dame highlight reels for a generation, Freeman wanted to watch Leonard's touchdown run at the start of the third quarter. It's the same play call with different personnel. Love is the lead blocker for Leonard on that play. On Love's touchdown run, it's Mitchell Evans. On the Leonard touchdown run, Jayden Thomas is the edge blocker. On Love's touchdown run, it's Jaden Greathouse. Advertisement But those differences don't matter as much as how Penn State defends it with a defensive back in the box. On Leonard's touchdown, that's Jaylen Reed (1). He stays outside the tackle box. Thomas bluffs a block on defensive end Dani Dennis-Sutton (33) to slow him down, then works to Reed as Charles Jagusah pulls across the formation to block Dennis-Sutton. Because Reed stays outside, Thomas can get to him. Love takes linebacker Tony Rojas (13), just enough for Leonard to follow him into the end zone. On Love's touchdown, the defensive back in question is Zion Tracy (7). Film study indicated he'd stay outside the tackle box like Reed did. Except he fills inside. Greathouse bluffs Dennis-Sutton, then Jagusah wipes out the defensive end. But Greathouse can't get to Tracy, putting Evans in a bind. He has to block two defenders: Tracy and linebacker Kobe King (41). He takes out King, giving Tracy a free shot on Love. 'That's where it gets (screwed) up. Mitch doesn't know what to do,' Freeman said. 'He's gotta block most dangerous, but No. 7 didn't stay outside like we thought he would. Then J-Love is just a football player.' What else sticks with Freeman? After Greathouse can't get his block, he doesn't pick up defensive back Cam Miller (5), who stands Love up at the 2-yard line. 'What are you doing? Go block this dude,' Freeman said. 'You're just in the way.' And that's what it took to produce an iconic moment. Penn State adjusting a defender's position, a missed block and a lot of Love. Notre Dame knows Smith is going to run a reverse. His feet tell the story. Advertisement In preparation for the national title game, Notre Dame noticed every time Smith aligned in a tight formation and adjusted his stance at the line of scrimmage, shifting his outside foot forward, the all-world receiver came back across the formation. A reverse, a jet sweep — it didn't matter. Smith gave away where he was heading. Freeman popped on a couple of plays to prove it, showing Smith adjusting his stance and coming back across the formation against Oregon in the Rose Bowl and during a regular-season win over Nebraska. When Smith adjusts his stance on this play early in the second quarter, Christian Gray calls it out, just like he was coached to do. '(Ohio State offensive coordinator) Chip Kelly did a good job and they do self-scout, too,' Freeman said. 'The film study hurt us a little bit there.' Gray comes screaming across the formation to defend the reverse but Smith plants and cuts back into the open field. Walk-in touchdown. The play hurts as Ohio State begins a 31-0 run that leaves Notre Dame gasping for air. Freeman also knows that if Gray had cut back to mirror Smith, he might not have made the play. It might have just looked like Love's touchdown against Penn State. 'That's a hard tackle 1-on-1,' Freeman said. Sure, Smith makes the play against Gray. But just as impactful is Kelly, who is now with the Las Vegas Raiders, making the call against Al Golden, now with the Cincinnati Bengals. Sometimes one NFL coordinator beats another NFL coordinator on the headset. 'There ain't a whole bunch to say here,' Freeman says, before picking apart a half-dozen individual performances on the play. It's an inside zone and Freeman likes what he sees from the offensive line's protection of Carr. But he notices Joe Otting getting too far upfield, so he takes a note to talk to offensive line coach Joe Rudolph about the line not getting lost in the gray area of RPOs. 'Who cares about the catch. Why is (Otting) past the line of scrimmage three yards?' Freeman said. 'I'm looking at all that stuff.' It's easier to pick apart the defense. Moore gets caught moving inside and could have been wiped out by Bauman. Shuler's eyes are wrong, failing to move from Raridon in coverage to Bauman, who gets behind him. Tae Johnson gets sucked into a play-action fake to Kedren Young. Cole Mullins gets caught in between playing contain and rushing Carr, ultimately doing neither. Sneed might be too aggressive crashing the line, not waiting to see if it's a run play. Advertisement 'Adon has to be as deep as the deepest,' Freeman said. 'He's disrespecting Kevin a little bit — 'This dude isn't gonna beat me deep.' Well, it wasn't the catch as much as the throw.' Everyone in Notre Dame Stadium will remember Carr's feathery throw along the sideline, especially as the young quarterback heads into the 2025 season as the favorite to replace Leonard as the starter. And live, that's what Freeman noticed too. Mic'd up for the game, Freeman's initial reaction on the broadcast was, 'Oh, nice throw and catch.' But that's what film study is for. Seeing everything else.

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