Home / Tag Archives: Saxophone Jazz (page 38)

Tag Archives: Saxophone Jazz

Ernie Watts

Because he was involved with many commercial saving projects in the mid-’70s through the first ’80s and on an intermittent basis since, some observers wrote Ernie Watts off prematurely being a pop/R&B tenorman. In fact, Watts’ primary hero is definitely John Coltrane, and his afterwards function reveals him to become …

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Charles “Majeed” Greenlee

In his long job, this trombonist staked out perimeters in both politically charged free jazz from the ’60s and ’70s with famous brands Archie Shepp as well as the commercial showbiz stylings of conventional bandleader Maynard Ferguson. Charles Greenlee changed into the Muslim religious beliefs within the ’40s, changing his …

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Wayne Escoffery

“Small Lions” is really a term that jazz journalists have already been using to spell it out the very long set of straight-ahead, acoustic-oriented jazz improvisers who have been born within the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s, and London local Wayne Escoffery is probably the many Small Lions who started building …

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Ernie Krivda

An excellent tenor saxophonist having a forceful audio and a genuine attack that occasionally utilizes staccato phrases, Ernie Krivda has recorded stimulating classes for Inner Town, North Coastline Jazz, Cadence, and Koch without gaining very much popularity. He originally performed clarinet, switching to alto in senior high school and later …

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Dennis Rollins

b. 1964, Birmingham, Western Midlands, England. Motivated into music by his Jamaican-born parents and by his trombonist sibling, Winston Rollins, Dennis also used the trombone. Although his early hearing was funk, by his early teenagers he was hearing and playing jazz. As he created his own design, both forms came …

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Frode Haltli

b. 1975, nr. Trondheim, Norway. Haltli started playing accordion at age seven and even though he also performed French horn and trombone in blowing wind bands it had been to stay his principal device. As a kid he performed folk music but shortly shifted into different forms. Playing music by …

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Jeff Chan

Saxophonist/maker/composer Jeff Chan offers played a prominent part in what continues to be referred to as the Asian-American Creative Music Motion or Asian-American Creative Music Network within the ’90s and 2000s; essentially, it really is a coalition of Asian-American music artists who play jazz, the majority of it avant-garde jazz …

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David Tronzo

David Tronzo possesses a compelling and initial acoustic guitar sound which is due to his usage of the “processed slip- acoustic guitar,” slip acoustic guitar, and dobro in eclectic music settings. He takes on his highly-individual slide-guitar stylings in jazz, blues, rock and roll, funk, and avant garde configurations often …

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Gene Quill

In the 1950s, the alto sax didn’t get very much louder than Gene Quill, a hard-edged soloist who could rival Jackie McLean and frequent-partner Phil Woods when it found intensity, enthusiasm, and hard bop aggression. Like Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt or Dexter Gordon and Wardell Grey on tenor, Woods …

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Walter Bishop, Jr.

Walter Bishop, Jr. was a very important power pianist on many today’s jazz session through the bebop period, remaining a dynamic performer until his loss of life at age 70 in early 1998. The child of composer Walter Bishop, Sr., he was raised in Harlem’s Sugars Hill area, so when …

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