8 February 2010 / , LONDON
Sir John Dankworth, the British jazz composer, saxophonist and band leader, has died.
He was 82. Jazz singer Dame Cleo Laine -- who married Dankworth in 1958 after meeting during an audition for a spot with his band -- announced her husband’s death before the finale of an anniversary concert at The Stables, the theater they founded together. Monica Ferguson, the theater’s chief executive officer, said on Sunday that Laine believed Dankworth would have wanted the evening to go ahead. Ferguson said Laine told the artists before the concert, “I’ll go on and I’ll have a lump in my throat and I might crack. But she didn’t crack.” Dankworth died on Saturday in a London hospital after several months illness. Born in Woodford, Essex in 1927, Dankworth began his musical career by playing a clarinet bought by his mother. “I loved music, but I didn’t want to be taught music, or learn anything, until my parents gave me up for lost, really, and that was when I was about 15,” he told the BBC. “Then I eventually just heard some jazz.” After starting out as a fan of Benny Goodman, Dankworth switched to the saxophone after hearing Charlie Parker play. In the early 1950s, Dankworth was auditioning singers to front his ensemble when he met Laine.