Undetermined Music Artists

Sharing Artistopia
 
Music Is Life @ Artistopia.com

Independent Music Artist:   Sign In  |  Register

Home Music Indie News Discussion Resources Shop Saturday, February 11, 2012
  
 
 
  
 

Wayne Shorter

Music Home >>  Music Genres  >> Undetermined Music
 
  
 

< < < < <
> > > > >
More Info on Wayne Shorter Similar Undetermined Music Search Artistopia

Biography

Infobox musical artist| image = Weather Report (Wayne Shorter).jpg| name = Wayne Shorter| caption = Convocation Hall, Toronto, Nov. 27, 1977. Photo courtesy of Jean-Luc Ourlin| image_size =| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist| birth_name =| alias =| Born = Birth date and age|1933|8|25|mf=y
Newark, New Jersey|Newark , New Jersey, United States| death_date =| origin =| instrument = Saxophone| genre = Modal jazz , crossover jazz , post-bop , hard bop , jazz fusion , Third_stream|Third Stream | occupation = Musician, composer| years_active = 1958–present| label = Blue Note Records|Blue Note , Columbia Records|Columbia , Verve Records|Verve | associated_acts = Art Blakey , Miles Davis , Weather Report | website =| notable_instruments =
Wayne Shorter (born August 25, 1933) is an People from the United States|American jazz saxophonist and composer.

He is generally acknowledged to be jazz's greatest living composer,cite news| url= http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/s/wayne_shorter/index.html | work=The New York Times | first=Ben | last=Ratliff and many of his compositions have become Jazz standard|standards . Shorter's output has earned worldwide recognition, critical praise and various commendations, including multiple Grammy Awards . http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/s/wayne_shorter/index.html The New York Times: "Times Topics" listing

Shorter first came to wide prominence in the late 1950s as a member of, and eventually primary composer for, Art Blakey 's Jazz Messengers. In the 1960s, he went on to join Miles Davis 's second great quintet, and from there he co-founded the jazz fusion band Weather Report . He has recorded over 20 albums as a bandleader.

Biography


Early life and career


Shorter was born in Newark, New Jersey|Newark , New Jersey , and attended Newark Arts High School http://www.nps.k12.nj.us/arts/a_brief_history.htm A Brief History, Newark Arts High School. Accessed August 10, 2008. from which he graduated in 1952. He loved music, being encouraged by his father to take up the saxophone as a teenager (his brother Alan Shorter|Alan became a trumpeter). After graduating from New York University in 1956, Shorter spent two years in the United States Army|U.S. Army , during which time he played briefly with Horace Silver . After his discharge from the army, he played with Maynard Ferguson . It was in his youth that Shorter was given the nickname Mr. Gone , which would later become an album title for Weather Report . http://www.bigtakeover.com/recordings/weather-report-forecast-tomorrow-columbia-legacy The Big Takeover: Weather Report – Forecast: Tomorrow (Columbia Legacy) :

In 1959, Shorter joined Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers|Art Blakey . He stayed with Blakey for five years, and eventually became Music director|musical director for his group.

With Miles Davis (1964–1970)


When John Coltrane finally left Miles Davis ' band in 1960 to pursue his own group (after previously trying to leave in 1959), Coltrane proposed Wayne Shorter as a replacement but Shorter was unavailable and Davis went with Sonny Stitt on tenor followed by a revolving door of Hank Mobley , George Coleman , and Sam Rivers . In 1964, Miles Davis persuaded Shorter to leave Blakey and join his quintet alongside Herbie Hancock , Ron Carter and Tony Williams (drummer)|Tony Williams .

Miles' so-called "second great quintet" (to distinguish it from the quintet with Coltrane) that included Hancock and Shorter has frequently been cited by musicians and critics as one of the most influential groups in the history of jazz, and Shorter's compositions are a primary reason. He composed extensively for Miles Davis (e.g. "Prince of Darkness", "E.S.P.", "Footprints", "Sanctuary", "Nefertiti", and many others); on some albums, he provided half of the compositions, typically hard-bop workouts with spaced-out long melody lines above the beat.

Herbie Hancock said of Shorter's tenure in the group, "The master writer to me, in that group, was Wayne Shorter. He still is a master. Wayne was one of the few people who brought music to Miles that didn't get changed."citation needed|date=August 2010 Davis said, "Wayne is a real composer. He writes scores, write the parts for everybody just as he wants them to sound... Wayne also brought in a kind of curiosity about working with musical rules. If they didn't work, then he broke them, but with musical sense; he understood that freedom in music was the ability to know the rules in order to bend them to your own satisfaction and taste."cite book |title=Miles: The Autobiography |last=Davis |first=Miles |authorlink=Miles Davis |coauthors= Quincy Troupe|Troupe, Quincy |year=1990 |publisher=Simon and Schuster |isbn=0671725823 |page=274 |url=

Shorter remained in Davis's band after the breakup of the quintet in 1968, playing on early jazz fusion recordings including In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew (both 1969). His last live dates and studio recordings with Davis were in 1970.

Until 1968, he played tenor saxophone exclusively. The final album on which he played tenor in the regular sequence of Davis albums was Filles de Kilimanjaro . In 1969, he played the soprano saxophone on the Davis album In a Silent Way and on his own Super Nova (recorded with then-current Davis sidemen Chick Corea and John McLaughlin (musician)|John McLaughlin ). When performing live with Miles Davis, and on recordings from summer 1969 to early spring 1970, he played both soprano and tenor saxophones; by the early 1970s, however, he chiefly played soprano.

Solo Blue Note recordings


Simultaneous with his time in the Miles Davis quintet, Shorter recorded several albums for Blue Note Records , featuring almost exclusively his own compositions, with a variety of line-ups, quartets and larger groups including Blue Note favourites such as Freddie Hubbard . His first Blue Note album (of nine in total) was Night Dreamer , recorded at Rudy Van Gelder 's studio in 1964 with Lee Morgan , McCoy Tyner , Reggie Workman and Elvin Jones .

JuJu (Wayne Shorter album)| JuJu and Speak No Evil are well known recordings from this era. Shorter's compositions on these albums are notable for their use ofor|date=August 2010:
  • Pentatonic scale|pentatonic melodies harmonised with pedal point s and complex harmonic relationships;

  • structured Solo (music)|solos that reflect the composition's melody as much as its harmony;

  • long Rest (music)|rests as an integral part of the music, in contrast with other, more effusive, players of the time such as John Coltrane.


  • The later album The All Seeing Eye was a free-jazz workout with a larger group, while '' Adam's Apple (album)|Adam's Apple of 1966 was back to carefully constructed melodies by Shorter leading a quartet. Then a sextet again in the following year for Schizophrenia (Wayne Shorter album)|Schizophrenia with his Miles Davis band mates Hancock and Carter plus trombonist Curtis Fuller , alto saxophonist/flautist James Spaulding and strong rhythms by drummer Joe Chambers . These albums have recently been remastered by Rudy Van Gelder .

    Shorter also recorded occasionally as a sideman (again, mainly for Blue Note) with Donald Byrd , McCoy Tyner , Grachan Moncur III , Freddie Hubbard , Lee Morgan , and bandmates Hancock and Williams.

    Weather Report (1971–1985)


    Following the release of Odyssey of Iska in 1970, Shorter formed the fusion group Weather Report with Miles Davis veteran keyboardist Joe Zawinul . The other original members were bassist Miroslav Vitous , percussionist Airto Moreira , and drummer Alphonse Mouzon . After Vitous' departure in 1973, Shorter and Zawinul co-led the group until the band's break-up in late 1985. A variety of excellent musicians that would make up Weather Report alumni over the years (most notably the revolutionary bassist Jaco Pastorius ) helped the band produce many high quality recordings in diverse styles through the years, with funk , bebop , Latin jazz , ethnic music, and futurism being the most prevalent denominators.

    Solo


    Shorter also recorded critically acclaimed albums as a bandleader , notably Native Dancer (album)|Native Dancer , which featured his Miles Davis band-mate Herbie Hancock and Brazilian composer and vocalist Milton Nascimento . Shorter was to work with both of these musicians again later.

    On the title track of Steely Dan 's 1977 album Aja (album)|Aja , he played a solo that moved the critic writing the album's liner notes to call it "suitable for framing". Concurrently, in the late 1970s and the early 1980s, he toured in the Herbie Hancock|V.S.O.P. quintet. This group was a revival of the 1960s Miles Davis quintet, except that Freddie Hubbard filled the trumpet chair instead of Miles. Shorter appeared with the same former Davis bandmates on the Carlos Santana double LP The Swing of Delight , for which he also composed a number of pieces.

    From 1977 through 2002, he appeared on ten Joni Mitchell studio albums, gaining him a wider audience.


    Recent career



    After leaving Weather Report, Shorter continued to record and lead groups in jazz fusion styles, including touring in 1988 with guitarist Carlos Santana , who appeared on This is This! , the last Weather Report disc. In 1989, he contributed to a hit on the rock charts, playing the sax solo on Don Henley 's song " The End of the Innocence " and also produced the album Pilar by the Portugal|Portuguese singer-songwriter Pilar Homem de Melo . He has also maintained an occasional working relationship with Herbie Hancock, including A Tribute to Miles|a tribute album recorded shortly after Davis's death with Hancock, Carter, Williams and Wallace Roney . He continued to appear on Joni Mitchell's records in the 1990s. Shorter's distinctive sound is also apparent in the soundtrack for the Harrison Ford film The Fugitive (1993 film)|The Fugitive , released in 1993.

    In 1995, Shorter released the album High Life (Wayne Shorter album)|High Life , his first solo recording for seven years. It was also his debut as a leader for Verve Records . Shorter composed all the compositions on the album and co-produced it with the bassist Marcus Miller . High Life received the Grammy Award for best Contemporary Jazz Album in 1997.

    Shorter worked with Hancock once again in 1997, on the much acclaimed and heralded album 1 + 1 (album)|1+1 . The song "Aung San Suu Kyi" (named for the Myanmar|Burmese pro-democracy Aung San Suu Kyi|activist ) won both Hancock and Shorter a Grammy Award .

    In 2009, he was announced as one of the headline acts at the Gnaoua World Music Festival in Essaouira, Morocco.

    Quartet


    Shorter formed his current band in 2000, the first permanent Acoustic instrument|acoustic group under his leadership, a quartet with young musicians, pianist Danilo Perez , bassist John Patitucci , and drummer Brian Blade , playing his own complex compositions, many of them reworkings of tunes from his substantial portfolio going back to the 1960s. Two albums of live recordings featuring this quartet have been released, Footprints Live! (2002) and Beyond the Sound Barrier (2005). The quartet has received great acclaim from fans and critics, especially for the strength of Shorter's tenor saxophone playing. The Shorter biography Footprints: The Life and Work of Wayne Shorter by journalist Michelle Mercer contains an insight into the working life of these musicians as well as insight into Shorter's life, thoughts and Buddhist beliefs.cite web|url= http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php? id=15937|title= Footprints: The Life and Work of Wayne Shorter |publisher=allaboutjazz.com|accessdate=November 19, 2010 Beyond the Sound Barrier received the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Jazz Album.

    Shorter's 2003 album Alegría (Wayne Shorter album)|Alegría (his first studio album for ten years, since High Life ) received the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Jazz Album; it features the quartet with a host of other musicians, including pianist Brad Mehldau , drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and former Weather Report percussionist Alex Acuña . Shorter's compositions, some new, some reworked from his Miles Davis period, feature the complex Latin rhythms that Shorter specialised in during his Weather Report days.

    Personal life


    Shorter married Teruka (Irene) Nakagami, in the 1960s; they met in 1961 and later had a child, Miyako. http://100greatestjazzalbums.blogspot.com/2006/07/speak-no-evil-wayne-shorter-blue-note.html Some of his compositions are copyrighted as "Miyako Music". Shorter dedicated some pieces to his daughter: "Miyako" and "Infant Eyes". The couple separated in 1964.cite web |url= http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20122768,00.html |title= A Separate Peace |publisher=People|accessdate=February 21, 2010

    Shorter met Ana Maria in 1964 and they were married in 1970. In 1986, their daughter Iska died of a grand mal seizure at age 14. Ana Maria and the couple's niece Dalila were both killed in 1996 on TWA Flight 800 while en route to see him in Italy. Dalila was also the daughter of the jazz vocalist Jon Lucien who was married to Shorter's sister. Shorter married Carolina Dos Santos, a close friend of Ana Maria, in 1999. He is a Nichiren Buddhism|Nichiren Buddhist and a member of Soka Gakkai .

    Discography


    Main|Wayne Shorter discography
    Title Year Label
    Introducing Wayne Shorter style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1959 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Vee-Jay
    Second Genesis (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1960 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Vee-Jay
    Wayning Moments style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1962 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Vee-Jay
    Night Dreamer style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1964 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    JuJu (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1964 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Speak No Evil style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1965 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    The Soothsayer style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1965 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Et Cetera (album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1965 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    The All Seeing Eye style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1965 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    '' Adam's Apple (album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1966 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Schizophrenia (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1967 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Super Nova (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1969 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Moto Grosso Feio style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1970 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Odyssey of Iska style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1970 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Blue Note
    Native Dancer (album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1974 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Columbia
    Atlantis (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1985 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Columbia
    Phantom Navigator style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1986 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Columbia
    Joy Ryder style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1988 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Columbia
    Carlos Santana and Wayne Shorter - Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival 1988 with Carlos Santana style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1988 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Image Entertainment
    High Life (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1995 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Verve
    1 + 1 (album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 1997 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Verve
    Footprints Live! style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 2002 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Verve
    Alegría (Wayne Shorter album) style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 2003 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Verve
    Beyond the Sound Barrier style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" 2005 style="border-bottom:1px solid grey;" Verve


    Awards



  • Down Beat Poll Winner New Star Saxophonist (1962)

  • Grammy Award for Best Jazz Fusion Performance for Weather Report|Weather Report's 8:30 (1979)

  • Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition for Dexter Gordon|Dexter Gordon's Call Sheet Blues (1987)

  • Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Individual or Group for A Tribute to Miles (1994)

  • Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album for High Life (1996)

  • Miles Davis Award Wayne Shorter was granted the Miles Davis Award by the Montreal International Jazz Festival . (1996)

  • Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition for Aung San Suu Kyi (1997)

  • NEA Jazz Masters (1998)

  • Honorary Doctorate of Music (1999; Berklee College of Music )

  • Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo for In Walked Wayne (1999)

  • Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition for Sacajawea (2003)

  • Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Individual or Group for Alegría (2003)

  • Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Individual or Group for Beyond The Sound Barrier (2005)

  • Jazz Journalists Association Jazz Award Small Ensemble Group of the Year to Wayne Shorter Quartet (2006)


  • References


    Reflist

    External links


    commons

  • http://web.archive.org/web/20080225123458/ http://www.orbismusic.com/old_site/wayne+shorter/shorterpaper.html Essay on Wayne Shorter (Internet archive copy from February 2008)

  • http://www.jazz.com/features-and-interviews/2008/3/21/in-conversation-with-wayne-shorter "An Interview with Wayne Shorter" by Bob Blumenthal, ( http://www.jazz.com Jazz.com).

  • http://home.ica.net/~blooms/wshome.html The Complete Wayne Shorter

  • http://www.zawinulfans.org/modules/sections/index.php? op=viewarticle& artid=43 Wayne Shorter's letter read during Joe Zawinul's funeral

  • http://www.jazzdisco.org/wayne-shorter/discography/ Wayne Shorter discography

  • http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php? id=34718 Wayne Shorter Quartet with NEC Philharmonia, Boston on AllAboutJazz.com

  • http://www.montrealjazzfest.com/artists/artist.aspx? id=28#artOnglets Wayne Shorter's artist file on Montreal Jazz Festival's website




  • Wayne ShorterWeather ReportUse mdy dates|date=June 2011
    Persondata | NAME =Shorter, Wayne
    | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
    | SHORT DESCRIPTION =
    | DATE OF BIRTH =August 25, 1933
    | PLACE OF BIRTH =
    | DATE OF DEATH =
    | PLACE OF DEATH =
    DEFAULTSORT:Shorter, Wayne Category:Jazz composers
    Category:Modal jazz saxophonists
    Category:Crossover jazz saxophonists
    Category:Jazz fusion saxophonists
    Category:Hard bop saxophonists
    Category:Post-bop saxophonists
    Category:Jazz tenor saxophonists
    Category:American jazz composers
    Category:American jazz saxophonists
    Category:American jazz soprano saxophonists
    Category:American jazz tenor saxophonists
    Category:American composers
    Category:American saxophonists
    Category:African American musicians
    Category:Grammy Award winners
    Category:Miles Davis
    Category:People from Newark, New Jersey
    Category:American Buddhists
    Category:Members of Soka Gakkai
    Category:1933 births
    Category:Living people
    Category:Blue Note Records artists
    Category:Vee-Jay Records artists
    Category:Weather Report members

    cs:Wayne Shorter
    da:Wayne Shorter
    de:Wayne Shorter
    es:Wayne Shorter
    eo:Wayne Shorter
    fr:Wayne Shorter
    id:Wayne Shorter
    it:Wayne Shorter
    he:???? ?????
    hu:Wayne Shorter
    nl:Wayne Shorter
    ja:????·?????
    no:Wayne Shorter
    nn:Wayne Shorter
    pl:Wayne Shorter
    pt:Wayne Shorter
    sc:Wayne Shorter
    fi:Wayne Shorter
    sv:Wayne Shorter

    Copyright Citations

    This article is licensed under the GNU License
    Click here for original article: Wayne Shorter





          

     
       
     
    Home  |  About Us  |  Privacy  |  Sitemap  |  FAQs  |  Terms and Conditions
     
    Copyright 2012, iCubator Labs, LLC, All Rights Reserved.