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Tag Archives: Paul Motian

Studer/Doran

Swiss drummer/percussionist Fredy Studer and Dublin-born and Lucerne, Switzerland-raised electrical guitarist Christy Doran have collaborated in a number of jazz-inspired tasks. Initially working collectively in Om, a jazz fusion group they created in 1972, they continued to try out with Crimson Twist & Tuned Arrow, an organization they distributed to …

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Duo Due

Offering the multi-instrumental playing of brothers — Christian (1962- ) on piano, synthesizer and trombone, and Wolfgang Muthspiel (1965- ) on guit-synth, guitar and violin, Duo Due created a few of the most imaginative noises to emerge from behind the Eastern Bloc’s Iron Drape in the 1980s. Their studio room …

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Gianni Dall’Aglio

Gianni Dall’Aglio is among Italy’s best jazz-rock drummers. A longtime person in of Italian rock and roll group I Ribelli, he was also an associate of supergroup studio room music group Il Volo in the first ’70s. The group, which also included Alberto Radius (electric guitar, vocals), Mario Lavezzi (electric …

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Gerald Cleaver

Although jazz drummer Gerald Cleaver continues to be known in the Detroit area as an excellent musician and educator because the early ’90s, he had not been so well-known to listeners beyond the Midwest until an explosion of recordings released beginning in 1999 brought his effective and tasteful drumming towards …

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Alex Cline

Drummer and percussionist Alex Cline continues to be active in Western Coastline jazz and songs scenes because the past due ’70s. Cline and his twin sibling, guitarist Nels Cline, had been born and elevated in LA, where they started making music collectively at a reasonably young age. Maybe among their …

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Masabumi Kikuchi

Masabumi “Poo” Kikuchi was a Japan jazz pianist of legendary stature using a huge discography that ran the gamut from straight-up post-bop and vanguard classical to fusion recordings, single synthesizer schedules, as well as digital dub. He toured and documented with performers as different as Sonny Rollins, Lionel Hampton, Terumasa …

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Jim Pepper

Jim Pepper will be best remembered for his popular saving of “Witchi-Tai-To,” a peyote chant place to music. Pepper, who’s definitively profiled in the hour-long documentary Pepper’s Pow Wow (on video), infused advanced jazz using the impact of his Local American history. The son of the dad who also performed …

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Chuck Israels

Chuck Israels continues to be most widely known for his use the Costs Evans Trio (1961-1966), but he continues to be a significant educator because the 1970s. A sophisticated and supportive bassist, Israels’ initial documenting was the 1958 conference between John Coltrane and Cecil Taylor. He used George Russell’s sextet …

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Paul Lytton

Percussionist Paul Lytton is both an inventive, textural drummer within the custom of European free of charge jazz, along with a pioneer in electronic audio processing and the usage of homemade equipment of his very own invention. Lytton produced his initial noteworthy appearances over the United kingdom creative music picture …

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Tom Rainey

A local Californian who was raised in Santa Barbara, drummer Tom Rainey moved to NEW YORK in 1979 whilst in his early twenties (after their studies at the Berklee University of Music in Boston beginning in 1975 and time for California to reside in SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA). The brand …

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