Lennie Bush

M, b. June 1927, d. 15 June 2004, #387
Lennie Bush|b. Jun 1927\nd. 15 Jun 2004|p371.htm|Walter Leonard Bush|b. 28 Oct 1900\nd. Jan 1986|p374.htm|Gladys Lily E Carson|b. 14 Jan 1899\nd. Apr 1987|p247.htm|William Bush|b. 1868|p709.htm|Agnes Henton|b. 1872|p710.htm|Albert P. Carson|b. Mar 1874\nd. 8 Sep 1918|p169.htm|Elizabeth Wordsworth|b. 1875\nd. Mar 1938|p246.htm|

Jack Parnell and Lennie Bush
  • Lennie Bush was also known as Leonard W Bush.2
  • He was born on 6 June 1927 at Shepherds Bush, London, Middlesex.3
  • His birth was registered in the June 1927 quarter in the Hammersmith Registration District in London.2
  • He was the son of Walter Leonard Bush and Gladys Lily E Carson.1
  • Lennie Bush was working as a Music hall performer as a member of a variety act called "The Rolling Stones and Dawn". in 1944.3
  • He was working as a Musician, double bass player who toured regularly with the swing-style jazz trumpeter Nat Gonella's band (which included the emerging stars Kenny Graham and Phil Seaman), and with the smooth British-based American Roy Fox. between 1945 and 2002.3
  • He was Founded (with others) Club Eleven Jazz club in Windmill Street, London. in December 1948.3
  • He was Appeared with Louis Armstrong. in 1956.3
  • He was Joined Jack Parnell's ATV orchestra. in 1957.3
  • He married Anne (?).3
  • Lennie Bush died on 15 June 2004 at Long Melford, Sussex.3
  • Lennie's death was registered in the June 2004 quarter in the Bury St Edmunds Registration District in Suffolk.4
  • An obiturary written in 2004 said AN OLD jazz-world maxim used to be "If you are forming a band, always start by hiring a really good double-bass player." Another word of advice often passed on to aspiring jazz improvisers was "If you get into trouble during your solo, listen to the bass line."

    Lennie Bush totally understood and unfailingly provided the instrument's primary functions in ensemble performance. Throughout a 60-year career he dedicated himself to laying down an unerring sense of time, rich tone, and perfect harmonic direction. Over the past 20 years young double-bass virtuosi with flying fingers have been appearing from all continents. Lennie Bush admired them, but concentrated on the crucial business of underpinning the band with the most luxuriant and dependable of suspension systems. Colleagues gratefully came to realise that there would be no bumpy rides with Bush.
    Lennie Bush was born in 1927 at Shepherd's Bush in west London and was a childhood victim of polio. It left him with a permanent limp, but in his adult years his arrival at a gig, with rolling gait and handsome, craggy smile, gave musicians and fans a feeling of pleasant expectation. He studied violin as a youngster, but, as Louis Armstrong put it, "the doggone thing grew up on him".

    His move to the biggest and lowest-pitched member of the violin family happened when he was 16, and a year later, in 1944, he was working the halls as a member of a variety act called "The Rolling Stones and Dawn". Next came jobs with a variety of dance bands. He also toured regularly with the swing-style jazz trumpeter Nat Gonella's band (which included the emerging stars Kenny Graham and Phil Seaman), and with the smooth British-based American Roy Fox.

    The arrival from America of the new and complex bebop sounds in jazz had happily coincided with Bush's arrival on the British jazz scene. He was one of the many young men (Ronnie Scott and John Dankworth among them) who set about discovering everything they could about the new musical developments, and in December 1948 was one of the coterie of enthusiasts who founded Club Eleven in a rehearsal room in Windmill Street, London.

    From this Soho base came the first accomplished British bebop sounds. Dankworth says "Lennie was there, and for half a century he occupied the throne as Britain's most senior bebop bassist." Many younger up-and-coming bassists came to listen, and learn. The veteran Spike Heatley says,

    Lennie was the most influential player in my early career. He was never flashy, and although his technique was unorthodox he could really drive and anchor a rhythm section. He could even make poor drummers play good time.

    He worked on his technique, studying with James Merret Snr at the Guildhall School of Music and consequently became "a man for all sessions". Through the following decades Bush remained busy as both jazzman and studio musician, playing for films, television, commercials and albums. The sheer quality and dependability of his playing was appreciated by everyone, and he developed musical associations with top names like Ronnie Scott, Jimmy Deucher, Victor Feldman, Dizzy Reece, Tony Kinsey, Tony Crombie, Alan Clare, Stan Tracey, Kenny Baker and Don Lusher. One particularly close relationship was with the drummer and bandleader Jack Parnell, whose ATV Orchestra Lennie joined in 1957.

    He was also in demand with overseas jazz stars, touring with Benny Goodman several times in Europe, appearing with Louis Armstrong in London in 1956, and accompanying many others, including Zoot Sims, Roy Eldridge, Joe Pass and Stephane Grappelli.

    Lennie Bush and his wife Anne moved out of the London area a few years ago to Long Melford in Suffolk. Although semi-retired, he continued to practise assiduously each day and post to friends cassettes containing music which he had discovered and was enthusiastic about.

    Leonard Walter Bush, double-bass player: born London 6 June 1927; married (one son); died 15 June 2004.
    Campbell Burnap.5
  • Details of Lennie Bush's life can be found at http://vzone.virgin.net/davidh.taylor/bush.htm.
  • Last Edited: 3 May 2010

Family: Anne (?)

Citations:

  1. [S10] GRO index "Marriages Dec 1921 Carson Gladys LE BUSH, Hammersmith 1a 664
    Marriages Dec 1921 BUSH Walter L, Carson, Hammersmith 1a 664."
  2. [S10] GRO index "Births June 1927 Leonard W Bush, Carson, Hammersmith 1a 305."
  3. [S67] Obituary of Leonard Walter (Lennie) Bush "unknown cd."
  4. [S10] GRO index "Deaths Jun 2004 Lennie Bush (6 Jun 1927) 77, Bury St Edmunds A32D Entry 246."
  5. [S67] Obituary of Leonard Walter (Lennie) Bush "The Independent 19 June 2004."
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