Roy Brooks (March 9, 1938 – November 15, 2005) was an American jazz drummer.
Biography
Early life
Brooks was born in Detroit and drummed since childhood, his earliest experiences of music coming through his mother, who sang in church.[1] He was an outstanding varsity basketball player as a teenager and was offered a scholarship to the Detroit Institute of Technology; he attended the school for three semesters and then dropped out to tour with Yusef Lateef.[2]
Brooks's performances often included unusual instruments such as the musical saw and drums with vacuum tubes set up so as to regulate the pitch.[2] He began to acquire a reputation for bizarre behavior on and off stage, and occasionally sought treatment for mental disorders.[2][4] In 1975 he left New York and returned to Detroit, and began using lithium to regulate his behavior.[2] In the 1980s he returned to The Artistic Truth and gigged regularly in Detroit with Kenny Cox, Harold McKinney, and Wendell Harrison. With those three he co-founded M.U.S.I.C. (Musicians United to Save Indigenous Culture), and later also founded the Aboriginal Percussion Choir, an ensemble devoted to the use of non-Western percussion instruments.[4] He used his basement as a practice and learning space, working with children as well as accomplished musicians.[4]
In the 1990s Detroit's jazz scene waned, and Brooks ceased taking medication; he again began breaking down at gigs, and in 1994 was institutionalized for three weeks.[4] In 1997, he threatened his neighbor with a shotgun during a dispute over a lost set of house keys.[4] He was charged with assault but was declared mentally unfit to stand trial and was sentenced to mental treatment; however, he missed many of his appointments, and in 1999 he threatened another neighbor with a bullwhip and a machete over property rights to an adjacent vacant lot.[4] Sentenced to further psychiatric treatment, he disappeared again, and when probation officers found him, he was imprisoned late in 2000.[4] He served time at Marquette Prison until 2004, when he was placed in a nursing home[2] where he died in late 2005.
Posthumous albums
In June 2011, Sagittarius A-Star Records of Italy released a vinyl LP entitled Roy Brooks & the Improvisational Sphere, recorded by Charles Jazzrenegade Wood on September 3, 1999 Live at Lelli's, a well known Italian restaurant in Detroit. This is the sole available recording of this innovative select group assembled by Roy Brooks as the Improvisational Sphere for the three-day performance run at Lelli's. Personnel: Roy Brooks: Drums, Marimba, Steel Drum, Keyboard; Amina Claudine Myers: Hammond B-3 Organ and Vocals; Ray Mantilla: Congas, Bells, Percussion; Jerry LeDuff: Tabla, Cuica, Shekere, Berimbau, Percussion; Rodney Rich: Guitar. This recording was released with thanks and the approval of Hermine Brooks and Raheem Brooks.
In 2021, the Reel To Real label released Understanding, a two-CD live recording from 1970 featuring Brooks with saxophonist Carlos Garnett, trumpeter Woody Shaw, pianist Harold Mabern, and bassist Cecil McBee.[5]