
Headlines
Jazz matters: Appreciating Doug Ramsey, an admired colleague
by JJA Editor
May 26, 2026
by Harris Meyer
While he was far better known in jazz circles as a writer than a musician, Doug Ramsey loved playing trumpet and cornet with local musicians in his adopted hometown of Yakima, Washington. “I’ve never stopped playing, despite many requests,” he once said with his characteristic self-deprecating wit.
On May 19, 2026, Doug died in Yakima at age 91, and the jazz journalism community is mourning his loss.
“Doug’s writings about jazz are so artfully done that opening an LP or CD and finding that the liner notes were written by him is like “finding a real diamond at the bottom of a box of Crackerjacks,” Steven Cerra wrote.
I first became aware of Doug and got to know him after I moved to Yakima in 2007 with my wife to take a newspaper editor job there. We were surprised and delighted to find there was a first-rate jazz concert series at a former Unitarian church with excellent acoustics that had become the Seasons Performance Hall.
In January 2009, we attended the Blue Note 50th Anniversary Tour show at The Seasons, featuring Bill Charlap, Nicholas Payton, Ravi Coltrane, and other stellar players. Between sets, a tall, handsome older man who looked and sounded like a TV news anchorman interviewed the musicians. They all seemed to know him and like him, and he drew out interesting and informative answers through his knowledgeable questions and careful listening. My wife and I asked each other, “Who is this guy?”
We soon discovered that we were privileged to have a nationally acclaimed jazz writer living in our small town, someone who had written a highly praised biography of saxophonist Paul Desmond, liner notes to hundreds of jazz recordings, and many articles about jazz for major newspapers and music magazines. Before the Desmond book, he had published a compilation of essays,
Jazz Matters: Reflections on the Music and Some of Its Makers. In 2008, Doug received the Jazz Journalists Association Lifetime Achievement Award.
We also learned that Doug actually was a veteran TV news anchorman, correspondent, and news executive, just as he appeared, having worked in major markets including New York, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, New Orleans, Portland, Oregon and Cleveland. After his retirement, Doug and his wife Charlene moved back to her hometown of Yakima in 1997.
Indeed, it was Doug’s natural anchorman’s voice that got him his first broadcasting assignment, managing an Armed Forces Radio station in Japan and producing a show called the Far East Network Jazz Concert while serving as a U.S. Marine officer in the late 1950s.
While stationed in Japan, he played cornet at an off-base club in Iwakuni — illegally, he later said. Fortunately for him, the air wing’s commanding general also loved jazz and played the cornet. They struck up a friendship.
“We were on a first-name basis,” Doug said in an interview. “He called me Doug and I called him General.” One night, the general showed up at the club and sat in on a tune, “a bit shakily but with the right changes.”
Doug had fallen in love with jazz as a young teen, hanging out at the local record store in his hometown, Wenatchee, Washington. He started playing cornet in the junior high school band. He went on to study journalism at University of Washington in Seattle, and wrote about jazz for the school’s daily newspaper.
While covering a Dave Brubeck Quartet concert on campus in 1955, he met the group’s celebrated saxophonist Paul Desmond during intermission and picked up the conversation later that night at a party for the band. They eventually became close friends. Doug was one of the last people Desmond spoke to on the phone before his death in 1977 at age 52.
Knowing about Doug’s long friendship with Desmond, the owner of Parkside Publications, Malcolm Harris, himself a jazz musician and jazz author, asked him to write a biography of Desmond, Doug recalled in a 2013 interview. He interviewed scores of people who knew the intellectual, famously witty, but very private musician. They included Brubeck and other leading musicians, as well as some of the many women, such as Gloria Steinem, who were intimately involved with him.
Asked whether he was tempted to avoid material that could have cast his beloved friend in an unflattering light, Doug responded, “I am conditioned by a long life in journalism, and I put that into play… While I hope that our friendship and my admiration of him comes through in the writing, I believe I did a balanced job in presenting the whole man.”
The result was Take Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond, published in 2005. Critic Gary
Giddins called it “an appreciation by a gifted critic for a great artist… The telling is lyrical, funny, nostalgic, provocative, and allusive – just like a Paul Desmond solo.” It received best book of the year honors from the Jazz Journalists Association in 2006.
There’s one story I love about Doug’s research for the book that showed his close listening to and encyclopedic knowledge of the music. While interviewing Brubeck, Doug mentioned to him that the bridge on Desmond’s monster hit tune Take Five is a chromatic reduction of the opening phrase of the 1943 Bing Crosby hit Sunday, Monday Or Always that Desmond frequently quoted on solos. “Brubeck sort of sat up and said, ‘My God, it is! You’re right!’ He had never thought of that,” Doug recalled.
While working as a TV newsman for 24 years, Doug visited jazz clubs across the county and got to know many musical greats, treasuring his conversations with them. In 1962, while working in Cleveland, he went to hear Dizzy Gillespie, who was in town guest hosting The Mike Douglas show and playing a club gig with a quintet that included James Moody and Kenny Barron. After they chatted at the club, Dizzy invited Doug to his hotel room to continue the conversation. “We shared a bottle of red wine, had a serious discussion about music, acted silly, and developed a warm acquaintance that lasted until he died,” Doug recalled.
While working in New Orleans, Doug said he helped plan the first New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in 1970, during which he hung out “nonstop” with Desmond, touring jazz clubs with him for four days. He called it “the finest jazz festival ever.” While always courteous, Doug also was always a straight-talking critic. He lamented that the jazz festivals in New Orleans and other cities “have morphed into huge parties. You wonder how much they have to do with music.”
As chief correspondent for UPI Television News in Washington, D.C. in the late 1960s and 1970s, he covered the Nixon administration, including the Watergate scandal. His first White House event was a party and star-studded jazz concert in 1969 honoring Duke Ellington on his 70th birthday party. Doug called it “the only domestic affairs high point of the Nixon administration.”
After 24 years in TV news, Doug became a journalism educator, taking a job as senior vice president at the Foundation for American Communication in San Diego, focusing on improving the skills, content knowledge, and ethical practices of journalists. He also lectured and conducted programs for journalists in Eastern Europe through the U.S Information Agency’s speaker program.
Throughout his busy journalism career, Doug continued to write jazz articles for major publications as well as hundreds of liner notes, and later started a jazz blog called Rifftides. One of his favorite writing outlets was the arts and leisure page of the Wall Street Journal, which was run by a talented but quirky editor. Doug suggested that I pitch a story idea (about trap shooting, not music) to this editor, and to my surprise he accepted it. After that, Doug and I commiserated about why the editor wouldn’t take our subsequent pitches, and we swapped ideas about how to hook him.
On his blog Rifftides, Doug maintained his usual high standards in reviewing new recordings. But he strove to be positive, says Jeff Chang, a jazz saxophonist and educator who lived in Yakima for several years and jammed with Doug’s group. “He told me, ‘If I don’t have anything nice to say, I won’t write about it. I won’t waste my time.’ I thought that was really cool, unlike some of the stereotypical critics,” Chang told me.
Another thing Doug avoided in his jazz writing was making lists or proclaiming favorites. “Why must we have favorites?” he lamented during an interview. “Why not evaluate every book, film, composition, solo, or painting on its merits, without ranking it?” He added that he distrusted critics’ polls because he had received too many emails from musicians and publicists pleading for his vote.
Asked why jazz continued to play a role in his life, Doug expressed his personal credo: “Because it goes to the core of what I value: individuality, freedom of expression, human interaction, beauty.”
Desmond died on Memorial Day 1977, and Doug would sometimes attend the Brubeck family’s Memorial Day gatherings in the years after that at their big Connecticut house. Dave Brubeck and other family members, Doug said, would talk a lot about Desmond, with laughing but tear-filled reminiscences about his witticisms and wordplay.
“I think about Paul all the time. He’s a presence,” Brubeck told Doug. “Boy, I sure miss Paul Desmond.” Adding a personal coda to that story, Doug said, “I couldn’t say it better. Boy, I sure miss Paul Desmond.”
I feel the same way about Doug Ramsey. My deep condolences to his wife Charlene and their son Paul.
by Bob Blumenthal
In the early years of my writing career, Doug Ramsey was in a subset of the jazz journalists I admired (Terry Martin was in there as well): someone whose “day job,” unrelated to the music industry, was what defined him to the wider world. Yet Doug’s jazz writing was not a hobby, since he took it as seriously as his responsibilities as a local news anchor. I was in the same boat, albeit in a far less glamorous career, and the quality of Doug’s work gave me hope.
I’m not sure when Doug and I met. It might have been when he was in Boston for a journalism conference and I got a call asking if I was free for dinner. Unlike many of my writing colleagues, who opt for dim sum when dining (breaking dumplings?) together, Doug wanted to go to Locke-Ober’s, then the last word in local fine dining. (There are benefits to being a TV news anchor.) We went, enjoyed steaks, wine and a lengthy conversation on jazz and life.
Our most constant exchanges took place over Doug’s great Rifftides blog. I would write him on the rare occasion when I spotted an error (we all do make the occasional mistakes), but more often to thank him for leading me to a recording he had discussed, or to suggest an alternate version of the same composition or solo by the same artist. We also had a similar sense of humor, and when Doug posted about such Russian standards as “Giant Steppes” and “Crimea River,” I was happy to add “Old MacDonald Had a Collective Farm.” Often the subject was Paul Desmond, who Doug loved as much for his humor as his music, and how could you not love a guy who began a themeless improvisation with a quote from “The Rite of Spring” and titled the track “Sacre Blues”? Every Desmond exchange on my end always bore the disclaimer “bear in mind that I’m a Jackie McLean guy,” a comment he always returned in kind.
Many people will remember Doug primarily for his monumental Take Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond; but Doug wrote about all kinds of jazz, and never failed to approach his subjects with historical knowledge, literary style and taste. Rest in peace, Doug, and to those who carry on in similar fashion, stay on it.
by Steve Cerra
In the early days of developing content for my blog, a number of esteemed musicians, writers and critics came to my aid by consenting to be interviewed- among them – Ted Gioia, Gary Giddins, Bill Kirchner.
Doug Ramsey was the very first who volunteered to take the time to answer my questions so that I might prepare them as a formal interview for my readers. Once my blog was up-and-running, he would give me a plug on his own blog – Rifftides – if I was running something on my page that interested him.
When I called to thank him, he couldn’t say enough nice things about my efforts. Needless to say, given the source, such encouragement meant the world to me.
Doug died in his sleep on May 19th at the age of 91. I am reposting this interview in memoriam. Douglas Arthur Ramsey 1934-2026 – Semper Fi, Marine. Read more at JazzProfiles

by Joe Maita
From the Interview Archive: Paul Desmond biographer Doug Ramsey
In a 2005 Jerry Jazz Musician interview, Paul Desmond biographer Doug Ramsey discusses his subject – a jazz artist who transcended genres to establish one of the most immediately recognizable sounds in all of music.
Doug’s own bio, from Riffides
Doug is a recipient of the lifetime achievement award of the Jazz Journalists Association. He lives in the Pacific Northwest, where he settled following a career in print and broadcast journalism in cities including New York, New Orleans, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Antonio, Cleveland and Washington, DC. His writing about jazz has paralleled his life in journalism.
He is the winner of two ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards, one for Take Five, another for an essay about Bill Evans in The Secret Sessions. He contributed to Jazz Times starting in 1975 and, before that, wrote regularly for Down Beat. He was a contributing editor of Texas Monthly for 25 years and wrote a jazz column for The Dallas Morning News.
His novel Poodie James was published in the summer of 2007. His articles, reviews and op-ed pieces on music and on free press and First Amendment issues have appeared in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Seattle Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Oregonian and Congressional Quarterly, among other publications.
Doug is the co-editor (With Dale Shaps) of Journalism Ethics: Why Change? Under the American Speakers program of the United States Information Agency (when there was a U.S.I.A.), he lectured in Germany and Eastern Europe on jazz and on the role of a free press in a democracy. As senior vice president of FACS (Foundation for American Communications), he educated hundreds of professional journalists about analytical coverage of issues. He describes himself as an avocational trumpeter who sometimes plays for money.
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