BlankJazz great Pete Fountain dead at 86 Dominic Massa, WWL-TV, New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS -- Pete Fountain, the famed New Orleans jazz clarinetist whose
60-year career was marked by performances for presidents and a pope, making him
an international ambassador for the music and culture of his hometown , has
died. He was 86. Fountain died at 5:08 a.m. CT Saturday in New Orleans, a
statement from his family said.
"It's a sad day for his family. And it's sad to for all of New Orleans. Pete
and
his clarinet brought a lot of love and music to the world. He will greatly be
missed," said Benny Harrell, Pete Fountain's son-in-law and longtime manager.
Fountain battled health problems in recent years, including heart surgery and a
stroke, and retired from performing in April 2014. Until then, he had remained
active, often performing alongside his protégé, clarinetist Tim Laughlin, at
the
New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and French Quarter Festival.
New Orleans favorite son Pete Fountain belts out a tune as he leads his Half
Fast Walking Club through the streets of New Orleans, Feb. 27, 2001. (Photo:
Bill Haber, AP)
This past February, he kept up his annual trek with his Half-Fast Walking Club,
parading along the Uptown parade route on Mardi Gras, as the group has done
since Fat Tuesday 1960 when Fountain debuted the club.
A mainstay of Bourbon Street clubs for many years, including one bearing his
name in the 1960s, Fountain closed his landmark club in the Hilton New Orleans
Riverside in 2003 but continued performing in New Orleans and at casinos on the
Mississippi Gulf Coast, even after Hurricane Katrina destroyed his home in Bay
St. Louis.
"I'm too slow and too nervous to steal, so I have to keep tootin," he joked in
a
WWL-TV interview shortly after the storm, saying he would continue to perform
despite losing most of his belongings and musical memorabilia.
Born July 3, 1930, in New Orleans, Pierre Dewey Fountain Jr. began playing the
clarinet following his doctor's orders to strengthen his weak lungs.
"I wanted to play the drums, which wouldn't have helped my lungs," he told
WWL's
Angela Hill in a 1989 interview.
In high school at Warren Easton, he joined the marching band and continued to
take private music lessons. But it was on-the-job training that made all the
difference.
Late-night gigs on Bourbon Street made it difficult for the 16-year-old to stay
awake in class. A teacher chastised him, but after learning how much the young
man was earning per night (at $150, it was more than the teacher's salary),
Fountain said the teacher told him to put down his books and make a go of it.
"I went to the Conservatory of Bourbon Street for many years," Fountain often
joked.
Once he began to perform professionally, he and close friend George Girard
founded the Basin Street Six, performing at Lenfant's Restaurant among other
venues.
Fountain later teamed up with the Dukes of Dixieland before television brought
his talents to an even larger audience.
In the 1950s, he spent two years on bandleader Lawrence Welk's television show,
which beamed Fountain's Dixieland sound into America's living rooms once a
week.
The bandleader's teenage son gets the credit for discovering Fountain and
recommending that his father have the young clarinetist join the show. But
after
two years, musical differences led a homesick Fountain (plus his wife Beverly
and their three children) to head back to New Orleans, where the French Quarter
called.
He opened his own club on Bourbon Street, just blocks away from the club owned
by his longtime friend Al Hirt. Fountain would later move to the Hilton, which
became home base for a musical career that continued to grow.
Even after finding national success, there were lean times. Fountain and Hirt
even worked as pest control men for a brief period. "He was in the roach
division. I was in the termite division," Fountain joked.
Fountain also liked to say that, had he not found success in music, he would
have easily been able to take over the delivery route for his father "Red," a
Dixie Beer truck driver who loomed large in his life and career.
As his stature grew, Fountain performed regularly on The Ed Sullivan Show' and
became a regular on The Tonight Show 'through the Johnny Carson years,
appearing
there 59 times. He earned four gold albums, recorded more than 50 total and
performed on some 44 more.
He performed for four U.S. presidents and called his 1987 performance of Just A
Closer Walk with Thee 'at the Mass celebrated in New Orleans by Pope John Paul
II the pinnacle of his career.
Fountain was equally famous for embodying the spirit of New Orleans' biggest
celebration -- Mardi Gras -- with his costumed jazz band walking the parade
route each year (with Fountain in recent years riding at the head of the parade
in a special bandwagon, his son-in-law and manager Benny Harrell at his side).
Fountain's famous friends often went along for the fun 'from Hirt and Phil
Harris to adopted New Orleanian John Goodman. The Half-Fast Walking Club was
named by Fountain's wife Beverly, a not-so-subtle play on words describing the
ragtag bunch that was known to overindulge along the way.
Fountain always credited Beverly, whom he married in 1951, with keeping him out
of trouble, taking care of their three children, tolerating what could
sometimes
be an entertainer's wild lifestyle and supporting him in so many other ways.
"She put up with my foolishness, really, through all the years. The girl should
have left 100 years ago. She was my anchor," he said in a 1989 interview.
Beverly was at his side in 2013, when he was the honored guest at a fundraising
concert for his alma mater, Warren Easton High School, featuring fellow alums
Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews and Nicholas Payton.
In addition to his wife, Fountain is survived by three children, six
grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending
but will include a traditional New Orleans second line, the family said.