Ralph Peterson, jazz drummer who inspired Berklee students as a professor, dies at 58
By Bryan Marquard Globe Staff,Updated March 8, 2021, 7:34 p.m.
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Drummer Ralph Peterson and The Messenger Legacy band performed during Winter JazzFest at Le Poisson Rouge in New York City.Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images/File 2019
With little more than 100 minutes to riff through a century of jazz history, Ralph Peterson Jr. addressed some 20 incoming Berklee College of Music freshmen a few years ago, his questions as sharp and rolling as the beats on the drums he had played in an illustrious career as a musician.
Ralph Peterson Jr., jazz drummer and bandleader, dies at 58
Onward and Upward by Ralph Peterson and the Messenger Legacy.
by Giovanni Russonello
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- Ralph Peterson, a thunderously swinging drummer who began his career as Art Blakeys last protégé and finished it as a mentor to a new generation of jazz talent, died on March 1 at his home in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts. He was 58.
His publicist, Lydia Liebman, said the cause was complications of cancer, which he had been fighting for six years.
Peterson came to the fore in the 1980s as a member of the so-called Young Lions, a coterie of young improvisers devoted to the core ideals of bebop: swing rhythm, acoustic instrumentation and rigorous improvisational exchange within the constraints of a standard song form. Within that context, he brought a take-no-prisoners style and a bountiful, collaborative spirit.