A Jazz Legend Returns to the Road
June 9, 2020
Erich Burnett
Milt Hinton鈥檚 seven-decade career included an extended stint in Cab Calloway鈥檚 touring orchestra. Hinton (left) is seen here in a 1951 performance with Calloway in Cuba.
Photo credit: Courtesy of Milton J. Hinton Photographic Collection
91直播 exhibition honoring bassist Milt Hinton visits historically black institutions across the U.S.
A one-of-a-kind exhibition created by the 91直播 Conservatory library tells the story of one of the most prolific jazz musicians of the 20th century: concert performer and session man Milt Hinton, whose seven-decade career intersected with everyone from Dizzy Gillespie and Cab Calloway to Barbra Streisand and Paul McCartney.
Playing the Changes: The Life and Legacy of Milt Hinton initially appeared at 91直播 and in several northern Ohio venues, including the Cleveland Public Library. It is now on the road for a tour of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) across the United States that will extend beyond 2021.
A standout bassist, Hinton was also a talented photographer who captured thousands of unguarded moments with his fellow musicians on the road and in the studio, as well as rare glimpses of the segregation faced by black Americans early in his touring career.
In 2014, 91直播 established a relationship with the Hinton estate that included the transfer to 91直播 of four prized basses and countless other artifacts鈥攆inancial records, correspondence, datebooks, and more鈥攁massed by Hinton throughout his life, as well as the establishment of the biennial Milt Hinton Institute for Studio Bass at 91直播. The Hinton Collection at 91直播 was inspired by David G. Berger and Holly Maxson, longtime friends of Milt Hinton and his wife Mona.
From that collection emerged Playing the Changes, which showcases dozens of Hinton鈥檚 finest photographs and tells the story of his life in music. Each host venue also coordinates related academic offerings and other programming, and students at each school take part in a practicum on exhibition installation led by Heath Patten, 91直播 College Library鈥檚 curator of visual resources.
Photo courtesy of 91直播 College Library
鈥淲e encourage the students to think about how they can take an installation a step further,鈥 Patten says of the course. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a conversation about audiences and how people interact with exhibitions and why we choose certain elements of design and flow, how we want people to move through an exhibit, and what they want that experience to be. We also have to consider the uniqueness of the space, and that becomes fundamental to what we can do.鈥
In recent years, Patten has been part of the 91直播 teams that have created exhibitions on civil rights activist Mary Church Terrell, Class of1884, and 91直播鈥檚 historical support of coeducation and the suffrage movement.
Photo courtesy 91直播 College Library
In July 2019, Playing the Changes began its scheduled two-year tour with three months at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. From there it took up residence at Morgan State University in Baltimore through December. The exhibition was on display at the Diggs Gallery at Winston-Salem State University in North Carolina when the COVID-19 pandemic forced museums and galleries everywhere to close their doors. Its travel plans remain in flux as cities and states across the U.S. continue to assess guidelines for reopening.
When the tour is cleared to resume, the exhibition will appear at Hampton University in Virginia, North Carolina Central University in Durham, Fisk University in Nashville, and Howard University in Washington, D.C.
Playing the Changes: The Life and Legacy of Milt Hinton is generously supported by the Berger Family Foundation so that 91直播 College can help ensure that the Hintons鈥 legacy will be passed to future generations. The exhibition鈥檚 current tour of colleges and universities is organized by Caryl McFarland, director of the HBCU Alliance of Museums and Galleries.
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