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  • Cornetist Bobby Bradford performs at Hammer Museum
    Male presenting person with eyeglasses and a cap holds a cornet.
    Bobby Bradford has been an educator and jazz musician, collaborating with Ornette Coleman and Quincy Jones.

    Topline:

    Local jazz legend Bobby Bradford performs his tribute to Jackie Robinson on Aug. 14 as part of the Hammer Museum’s JazzPop series.

    Why it matters: The 91-year-old musician lost his Altadena home and instruments in the Eaton Fire, but is determined to be part of the series.

    The backstory: Bradford became nationally known in the 1970s when he collaborated with jazz great Ornette Coleman. The collaboration was labeled “free jazz.”

    The series: JazzPop at the Hammer focuses on West Coast Jazz, a musical movement that produced different music to its East Coast counterparts. The Nicole McCabe Quartet will be playing on Aug.7 and the Naomi Moon Siegel Quartet on Aug. 21.

    Go deeper: Did you miss these great Tiny Desk jazz performances?

    In 2019, the late baseball historian Terry Cannon asked Bobby Bradford to compose a musical piece for the 100th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s birth.

    “I said, 'OK, well I'll write a suite. I'll make each of the segments in the suite connected to a facet of Jackie Robinson's life that I particularly like,'” Bradford said.

    Six men and one woman, light and dark stand next to a brass music instrument.
    Bobby Bradford (center) and his band.
    (
    Ramon Garibaldi
    /
    Courtesy Bobby Bradford
    )

    He called the piece "Stealin’ Home: a tribute to Jackie Robinson" and named the segments “Lieutenant Jackie,” “Up from the Minors” and “High and Inside.”

    Bradford, who plays the cornet, became nationally known in the 1970s when he collaborated with jazz great Ornette Coleman. The album Science Fiction cemented Coleman and Bradford’s playing as avant garde “free jazz.”

    Listen 4:06
    SoCal legend Bobby Bradford on Altadena, jazz, and his upcoming performance celebrating Jackie Robinson at the Hammer

    Bradford’s been an educator for much of his professional life, teaching jazz history at Pomona College and Pasadena City College.

    This has been a tough year for the 91-year-old. He lost his home in Altadena in the Eaton Fire, including his favorite cornet that he’d played for 32 years.

    An older Black man wearing glasses and a cap is looking down at the camera
    Jazz educator and musician Bobby Bradford.
    (
    Courtesy Hammer Museum
    )

    “I lost all of my music textbooks, all of my 10-inch LPs, like the very earliest of Charlie Parker and people like that, that I had all these years,” he said.

    But music endures. Bradford will be playing the rarely-performed Robinson tribute as part of the Hammer Museum’s JazzPop series at 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 14. More information on the series can be found here.

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