Modern Jazz Quartet

The Modern Jazz Quartet was established in 1952 by Milt Jackson (vibraphone), John Lewis (piano, musical director), Percy Heath (bass), and Kenny Clarke (drums). Connie Kay replaced Clarke in 1955. Jackson, Lewis, and Clarke had originally played together in a quartet while in the Dizzy Gillespie orchestra from 1946 to 1950. Together with Ray Brown they played in interludes designed to give the trumpeters time to recover from the challenging upper register trumpet parts. The same group recorded as the Milt Jackson Quartet in 1951. Jackson and Lewis originally shared the role of musical director but Lewis eventually took over the entire responsibility of this position. The group occasionally played with classical musicians, but its repertoire consisted mainly of bop and Swing. Among its original compositions are "Django" by Lewis (a tribute to the French jazz guitar player Django Reinhardt) and "Bags' Groove" by Jackson (named after his nickname). Jackson left the group in 1974 because he was tired of touring, and the group soon disbanded. In 1981 the group reorganized. Their last recording was issued in 1993. Heath is the only surviving original member. 2003 Interview with Percy Heath (registration required) Modern Jazz Quartet

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
nottingham castle
seventh day adventist reform movement
ppd
chehalis (tribe)
north western territory
anheuser busch
hrunting
beurre blanc
john welsh (footballer)
follicle
stardate
nuggets: original artyfacts from the first psychedelic era
paul jennings hill
paul hill
intertwingularity
georg lukcs
fort kent, maine
distributive lattice
dual (category theory)
coalgebra
bialgebra
coproduct
male genital waxing
blues magoos
croup
kahless
hodge dual
starflight
joensuu
fifth crusade
lie algebroid
lie groupoid
einherjer
integer basic
leipziger land
principal bundle
soong ai ling
stationary
macroom
subcategory
barclays bank
sun one
low tatra
the two gentlemen of verona