Norman O'Connor

Musical Artist

1921 – 2003

90

Who was Norman O'Connor?

Father Norman James O'Connor, "The Jazz Priest", was born in Detroit, Michigan, on November 20, 1921. He became interested in jazz music at an early age and began playing piano with local jazz bands while in high school. He continued to work occasionally as a musician into the 1940s, but had abandoned the thought of music as a career by the time he enrolled at Catholic University in Washington. He wrote his doctoral thesis on the aesthetics of popular music.

Ordained as a Roman Catholic priest of the Paulist order in 1948, Father O'Connor sometimes included jazz music in his services.

In 1954, three years after becoming the Catholic chaplain at Boston University, he was named to the board of the first Newport Jazz Festival. He would appear at the event in his priest collar, and serve as the master of ceremonies for concerts and moderator of panel discussions. His introduction of John Coltrane at the festival in 1965 can be heard on Coltrane's New Thing at Newport, and his introduction of Dave Brubeck at the 1971 festival can be heard on Brubeck's The Last Set at Newport. Fr. O'Connor also introduced Duke Ellington and the members of his orchestra at the 1956 Festival, as heard on Duke Ellington's Ellington at Newport. O'Connor wrote a weekly jazz column for The Boston Globe and freelanced for Down Beat, Metronome, and other music magazines. He did jazz radio shows on WGBH-FM for many years previous to, and overlapping with, the advent of TV at WGBH, in 1955. When television started, he continued in the new medium on Jazz with Father O'Connor. His guests included national jazz figures, like Cannonball Adderley and George Shearing, among others, as well as local Boston musicians like "Boots" Mussulli, Herb Pomeroy and Al and Buzzy Drootin.

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Born
Nov 20, 1921
Detroit
Also known as
  • Father Norman O'Connor
  • O'Connor, Norman, Father
Nationality
  • United States of America
Education
  • The Catholic University of America
Employment
  • Boston University
Lived in
  • Michigan
Died
Jun 29, 2003

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

Citation

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