St. Elmo Sylvester Hope (June 27, 1923 – May 19, 1967) was an American jazz pianist, composer, and arranger, chiefly in the bebop and hard bop genres. He grew up playing and listening to jazz and classical music with Bud Powell, and both were close friends of another influential pianist, Thelonious Monk.
Hope survived being shot by police as a youth to become a New York-based musician who recorded with several emerging stars in the mid-1950s, including trumpeter Clifford Brown, and saxophonists John Coltrane, Lou Donaldson, Jackie McLean, and Sonny Rollins. A long-term heroin user, Hope had his license to perform in New York's clubs withdrawn after a drug conviction, so he moved to Los Angeles in 1957. He was not happy during his four years on the West Coast, but had some successful collaborations there, including with saxophonist Harold Land.
More recordings as leader ensued following Hope's return to New York, but they did little to gain him more public or critical attention. Further drug and health problems reduced the frequency of his public performances, which ended a year before his death, at the age of 43. He remains little known, despite, or because of, the individuality of his playing and composing, which were complex and stressed subtlety and variation rather than the virtuosity predominant in bebop.
This light shines on
And we see all the dumb faces
All your lives and memories
Will leave no truths or traces
You don't believe
In the truths we've told
So get lost
You listen to their laws
You listen to what they say
Listen now you will obey
Damn those
That stand in your path
Violence will rule
Clattering down upon you
So you obey
Don't forget what we say
'Cause we mean it
Don't be blind
And let them lead you away
Lead them away
Remember this wisp of hope
And strength will be felt
You'll feel it
No pain of right or wrong
With our army thousands strong