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Tag Archives: Albert Mangelsdorff

Wolter Wierbos

Famous jazz trombonist Wolter Wierbos continues to be mixed up in Dutch innovative jazz music scene since 1979, most widely known, perhaps, as an associate from the ICP Orchestra, regardless of the number of rings he’s played out in. Skilled similarly (and abundantly) in both specialized capability and improvisational creativeness, …

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Ray Anderson

Ray Anderson is a full time income embodiment from the uninhibited and sometimes rambunctious method of individualized expression that is clearly a vital component dating back again to the origins of jazz through Lester Bowie, Charles Mingus, Dizzy Gillespie, and Roy Eldridge to Excess fat Waller, Louis Armstrong, Jelly Move …

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Craig Harris

One of the most esoteric trombonists from the avant-garde, Craig Harris continues to be a genuine stylist throughout his profession. He performed in R&B rings in early stages, graduated from university in 1976, and got stints with Sunlight Ra (1976-1978) and Abdullah Ibrahim (1979-1981). Through the 1980s and ’90s, he …

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Paul Rutherford

An experimental, unstable player who also offers a good love of life, trombonist Paul Rutherford’s worked in lots of seminal free rings from the ’60s. He began on saxophone within the middle-’50s, after that turned to trombone and performed that device in Royal Atmosphere Force rings from 1958 to 1963. …

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Wolfgang Dauner

An interesting composer and ambitious pianist, German musician Wolfgang Dauner has combined jazz, rock and roll, digital music, and components of opera and theater in creating broad-based, ranging functions. While sometimes these compositions might seem as well far-reaching, Dauner’s greatest work displays the links between idioms and styles and will …

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Albert Mangelsdorff

Trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff pioneered the artwork of jazz polyphonics, introducing towards the avant-garde the symphonic custom of performing multiple records simultaneously. Delivered in Frankfurt, Germany, on Sept 5, 1928, Mangelsdorff was raised enthralled by jazz, devouring his old sibling Emil’s record collection. His uncle, a specialist violinist, offered him music …

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Hendrik Meurkens

Since he started taking harmonica solos within the mid-’50s, Toots Thielemans continues to be without the close competition in his instrument, a minimum of until Hendrik Meurkens arrived. Blessed in Germany to Dutch parents, Meurkens started being a vibraphonist, not really playing harmonica until he noticed Thielemans when he was …

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Peter Brötzmann

Almost four decades after his death, the legacy of Albert Ayler is simply — various reed-biting aural contortionists bent in exploiting the saxophone’s propensity to make sounds that resemble a human scream. Many such players, struggling to play anything resembling a coherent melody, rely rather on the severe manifestations from …

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Joseph Bowie

b. St. Louis, Missouri, USA. Younger sibling of trumpeter Lester Bowie, Joseph discovered piano and congas but finally resolved with trombone. At age 15 he used bluesmen Albert Ruler and Small Milton and spirit saxophonist Oliver Sain. He spent 2 yrs in Paris with additional members of Handbag (Black Performers …

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Volker Kriegel

Guitarist Volker Kriegel was widely considered the daddy of Western jazz-rock because of his influential stint using the Dave Pike Collection and a subsequent group of pioneering single LPs for the MPS label. Given birth to in Darmstadt, Germany, on Dec 24, 1943, Kriegel was learning sociology beneath the famed …

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