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Office of University Relations
304 Administration Building
University of TN at Martin
Martin, TN 38238
(731) 881-7615
Director: Bud Grimes
bgrimes@utm.edu

 

 

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Ed Sargent Takes His Talents on the Road

 

By Rita Mitchell

Ed Sargent stepped on a tour bus three days after finishing finals at UT Martin in 1982 and began a jazz ride that lasted 24 years. Now, he has taken a walk on the wild side.


Sargent, Grammy-nominated producer and longtime tour manager for trumpeter Maynard Ferguson, became tour manager for rock guitarist Joan Jett and the Blackhearts in 2007.


While the music genre he is part of now differs distinctively from his years in jazz, the road has an attraction that drew him out again after the legendary Ferguson died in 2006.


It was Ferguson, a dear friend in addition to being a mentor and boss, who gave him his start in the business, promoting him to tour manager, later adding personal manager to his title. And, it was Ferguson’s final album, completed just weeks before his death and produced by Sargent and drummer Stockton Helbing, that gained a Grammy nomination in 2008.


In addition to his current responsibilities with Joan Jett, Sargent manages Tim Ries, Rolling Stones saxophonist, and Carl Fischer, Billy Joel’s trumpeter. While not touring, Sargent also conducts master classes and production-oriented workshops on college campuses mentoring young musicians.
Sargent’s love of music began as a small child. He would sit on the floor of his grandmother’s house with wooden spoons tapping out a tune. “She was my first big influence. She’d make over me and say, ‘You’re going to be a great drummer one of these days.’”


His interest took a formal turn when he joined the fifth grade band in Amory, Miss., and continued throughout high school after a move to Bolivar. His high school band director in Bolivar would get to school early and play his favorite albums before morning rehearsal. “I remember the first day he played an album from a trumpet player named Maynard Ferguson, and it just blew us all away.” It began a lifelong love of that trumpet player’s music and jazz in general.


Because of interest shown in him his senior year after a solo in a band workshop conducted by then UT Martin band director, Anthony D’Andrea, Sargent auditioned and joined the university’s band program in the fall of 1977. He majored in percussion, but also took business courses. “I loved to play, but I started becoming more involved in the whole business aspect.”


Maynard Ferguson was very popular with the UT Martin jazz and marching bands that even did a field show tribute to the jazz great. That led to Sargent attempting to get Ferguson to play a UT Martin concert. It didn’t work out that year, but Ferguson’s lead trumpeter, Stan Mark, did appear. “It was a really big hit. I was Stan’s liaison in a tour manager capacity – a junior in college. He had a really marvelous time.” Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, the professional music fraternity with Sargent spearheading the project, brought him back the next year in the fall.


In the spring of 1982, Sargent’s senior year, the Maynard Ferguson band appeared at UT Martin. Because of Sargent’s connection with Mark, he got to meet Ferguson. “I basically said, ‘I’d love to be out on the road to work for your band in any capacity…You’re my favorite band.’ I just kind of put my cards on the table. I told him ‘school’s out in three weeks.’ That’s the last thing I said to him. He just laughed as I walked out the door.


“I finished finals on a Tuesday and got a call on Friday,” said Sargent. “His tour manager, Bruce Galloway, asked if I could fly to Indianapolis the next day, and of course I told him I could. That was the first day of 24 years.” He accepted the job of valet or personal assistant. “I was willing to do whatever it took to maintain a position on that tour bus, travel the world and get to see my favorite band play every night.” Two years later, at the age of 24, Sargent was Maynard Ferguson’s tour manager, touring the world performing 200 dates a year.


Sargent tells the students in his master classes that it’s really OK “to fly by the seat of your pants and try to figure it out along the way … there’s no handbook for life …” as long as you are honest to yourself and to those with whom you are dealing.


As tour manager on the road, Sargent was responsible for literally every logistical aspect and on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week. “Once they (management, buyer) sign off on terms of an agreement, then it comes to the tour manager and it’s called ‘making it happen.’ The travel, personnel, logistics, equipment—all the components that make the show—sometimes, it’s complete insanity and always a phone call away from a disaster at any given point.”


He said the key to his success on the road has been his good communication skills and effective advance work that covers everything from the first call to the end of the show, to the doors shutting and the bus pulling out of the parking lot. “Do your advance work so you don’t have to figure out surprises on show day.”


Sargent follows the same formula with the Joan Jett tours. Noting that Jett has been in the business since she was 15, he said she has a strong work ethic. She, too, comes from that old school. “Nothing is more important to Joan on show day than preparing for the show. If a tour manager has done his job effectively, the musicians have nothing to worry about but playing.”


During his long career with Ferguson, when they were not touring or recording, that’s when he had the opportunity to work with other legendary musicians – Ray Charles, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey, Al Hirt and Billy Eckstein. Charles also was and still is one of his boyhood heroes. “I still think he was probably the most soulful cat that ever lived.”


“I was very fortunate being a drummer and having ‘ears’ for music,” he said. Ferguson gave him the opportunity to be involved in all of his projects right through the final album, The One and Only Maynard Ferguson. The recording in Tony Bennett’s studio was completed 30 days before Ferguson died.


With the Joan Jett organization, Sargent has been on tour with Aerosmith, Alice Cooper, Motorhead, Cyndi Lauper and Def Leppard. “Tours are run like a business. There’s very little trashing of dressing rooms or hotel rooms anymore. That just doesn’t fly any more in the business we’re in.”


Meshed with Sargent’s years on the road are his memories – especially those of his days with Ferguson. “He took a 22-year-old kid from West Tennessee who was green as a gourd, who was willing to do anything—eyes and ears wide open and good enough sense to keep my mouth shut—and basically gave me the opportunity to see the world. He molded me into what he wanted in a tour manager, and we became best friends in the process.”


Ferguson took Sargent on trips during tour breaks, including India, one of the jazz legend’s favorite places to relax and recuperate. Sargent also hung out with Ferguson and his wife, Flo, at their Ojai, Calif., home. “I felt like and was treated like one of his kids.”


Ferguson also wanted his band to have fun and provided sightseeing excursions during days off.

“How could you not feel like a blessed person working for your favorite band, traveling all over the world, eating at the best restaurants, hanging with fun people and your best friend. How could you not dig that?


“This is what I do in life. I can’t ever see myself stopping.” After a brief hiatus as president of johnnyraBB drumstick company in 2000-01, Sargent realized his place was on the road. “If I’m home for two weeks, I get stir crazy. I love the excitement this business brings.


“Being nominated for a Grammy was certainly one of my highlights.” Sargent said he broke his parents’ hearts when he left UT Martin lacking just a few hours to graduate. “But it was an opportunity I couldn’t let get away. When the album received the Grammy nomination last year (for The One and Only Maynard Ferguson)…I think my mom finally forgave me.”


And now he is making new memories with Joan Jett and the Blackhearts. “I’ve always been a big fan of Joan’s. Touring with her is great and I must say …is never boring.”


Sargent is happy to have the opportunity to do university master classes like the one he offered earlier this year at UT Martin. It is a way to give back in honor of a mentor, Nancy Matheson, his UT Martin percussion instructor. “She was not cautious about speaking her mind or her choice of words that motivated me in a way, at the time, I really needed. She never sugar-coated the truth.” Once she told him he was an OK drummer, but that he was great with people and had keen sense for musical production. “She wasn’t happy I left (early), but she saw the opportunity for me to go out and utilize my strengths in a business I loved. She motivated me to do my best and pursue the dream, which, let’s face it, is the best gift a teacher can give a student.”


Sargent took his talents on the road—and what a ride.