Robert Edward "Bob" Brookmeyer (December 19, 1929 – December 15, 2011) was an American jazz valve trombonist, pianist, arranger, and composer who was long considered a very advanced arranger whose writing was influenced by modern classical music.
Brookmeyer was born in Kansas City, and learned the clarinet as a child. When he was 11, his father took him to hear Count Basie's big band, which he would later describe as an almost orgasmic "body-thrill" that changed a predominantly unhappy childhood. Brookmeyer played the trombone and piano in high school – and after three years at the Kansas City Conservatory, worked in jam sessions in Chicago as a pianist, was drafted into the army, and from 1951 performed as a freelance pianist and trombonist in a variety of swing and bebop bands, including the Claude Thornhill ensemble that had inspired the composer/arranger Gil Evans and Miles Davis's famous Birth of the Cool sessions. He was also part of small groups led by Stan Getz, Jimmy Giuffre, and Gerry Mulligan in the 1950s.
During the 1950s and 1960s, Brookmeyer played in New York clubs, on television (including being part of the house band for The Merv Griffin Show), and on studio recordings, as well as arranging for Ray Charles and others. In the early 1960s, Brookmeyer joined flugelhorn player Clark Terry in a band that achieved some success. In February 1965, Brookmeyer and Terry appeared together on BBC2's Jazz 625.
Brookmeyer moved to Los Angeles in 1968 and became a full-time studio musician. He spent 10 years on the West Coast and developed a serious alcohol problem. After he overcame this, he returned to New York. Brookmeyer became the musical director of the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra in 1979, although he had not composed any music for a decade.
In the 1980s Mr. Brookmeyer established himself as a prominent educator in the US and internationally. He was appointed to the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music (1988), served as Director of the BMI Composer’s Workshop (1989), and appeared as a clinician at various colleges and universities. In 1991 he moved to Rotterdam, where he organized the World School for New Jazz and taught composition and improvisation at Rotterdam Conservatory.
Mulligan & Brookmeyer |
In 1994 he was appointed musical director the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival Big Band, a worldwide jazz-based ensemble dedicated to new music. Over the next few years, this ensemble evolved into Brookmeyer’s award-winning NewArt Orchestra. In 1996 he was named artistic director of the Composition Workshop at Rhythmic Conservatory in Copenhagen. Returning to the US, in 1997 Brookmeyer began teaching full-time at the New England Conservatory, where he chaired the department of jazz composition and created the NEC’s Jazz Composers’ Workshop Orchestra before his retirement in 2007.
In June 2005, Brookmeyer joined ArtistShare and announced a project to fund an upcoming third album featuring his New Art Orchestra. The resulting Grammy-nominated CD, titled Spirit Music, was released in 2006. Brookmeyer was named a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master in the same year. His eighth Grammy Award nomination was for an arrangement from the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra's album, Forever Lasting, shortly before his death. That same album was also nominated in the 57th Annual Grammy Awards for the category of Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album; the CD was entirely made up of Brookmeyer's compositions.
Brookmeyer boasts an extensive discography, appearing both as leader and sideman on dozens of albums, including numerous recordings with US jazz icons. He was a multiple Grammy Award winner and three-time grant recipient for composition from the National Endowment for the Arts. He was awarded honorary doctorates by the University of Missouri-Kansas City (1991) and the New England Conservatory (2008) and was named a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master in 2006.
On December 15, 2011, Brookmeyer died in his sleep at a hospital near his home in Grantham, New Hampshire; the cause was congestive heart failure. He passed just a month after releasing the album Standards via the ArtistShare website, and only three days shy of his 82nd birthday.
(Edited from Wikipedia, bobbrookmeyer.com., The Guardian & AllMusic
For ”Bob Brookmeyer – The Essential Collection - Leader & Sideman 1954-55 (2006 Avid)” go here:
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1.1 9.20 Special 6:33
1.2 I Never Knew 4:16
1.3 Steeplechase 6:36
1.4 Lover Man 3:49
1.5 Liberty Belle 2:47
1.6 Have You Met Miss Jones? 3:31
1.7 Traditional Blues 2:34
1.8 Isn't It Romantic? 2:34
1.9 Doe Eyes 3:17
1.10 Red Devil 3:18
1.11 Last Chance 2:37
1.12 Body And Soul 3:19
1.13 You Took Advantage Of Me 5:30
1.14 He Ain't Got Rhythm 3:58
1.15 What Is There To Say? 3:41
1.16 There Will Never Be Another You 4:22
1.17 Jasmine 4:35
1.18 Sticks And Stems 5:29
2.1 The Bulldog Blues 7:59
2.2 Under The Lilacs 5:04
2.3 Rocky Scotch 4:37
2.4 Potrezebie 4:47
2.5 They Say It's Wonderful 5:46
2.6 Out Of This World 3:11
2.7 There's A Small Hotel 2:38
2.8 You Are Too Beautiful 4:01
2.9 When Your Lover Has Gone 2:56
2.10 Low Life 3:56
2.11 Rustic Hop 4:13
2.12 With The Wind And The Rain In Your Hair 5:09
2.13 Happy Minor 4:06
2.14 Scrapple From The Apple 4:56
2.15 Long Ago And Far Away 3:50
2.16 Gone With The Wind 6:24
Please note this playlist has been reconstructed using some original tracks and others from various digital sources
Bob Brookmeyer was a cool guy, a pianist, composer and arranger as well as a fine valve trombone player. A worthy addition to Avid’s Essential Collection cool jazz titles we feature Brookmeyer primarily as a trombone player on this excellent double CD. Featured both as leader and sideman between 1954 – 1955 we can hear Bob playing alongside such legends as Bud Shank, Red Mitchell, Larry Butler, Jimmy Rowles Buddy Clark, Mel Lewis and cool school sax man Zoot Sims, hey you don’t get a much cooler name than that!
Forget the haircut on the cover, (believe me that was cool back then) and just listen to the music and maybe change your opinion of what a trombone can do! (Avid notes)
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For “ Bob Brookmeyer – Leader & Co-Leader Four Classic Albums (2012 Avid Jazz)” go here:
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1-6: ‘Recorded Fall 1961’ (1961)
1-1 Minuet Circa '61 10:36
1-2 Who Could Care 4:43
1-3 Nice Work If You Can Get It 5:53
1-4 Thump, Thump, Thump 6:49
1-5 A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square 6:56
1-6 Love Jumped Out 7:46
7-14: ‘Brookmeyer’ (1957)
1-7 Oh, Jane Snavely 3:08
1-8 Nature Boy 7:04
1-9 Just You, Just Me 2:41
1-10 I'm Old Fashioned 2:53
1-11 Gone Latin 3:07
1-12 Zing Went The Strings Of My Heart 6:28
1-13 Big City Life 4:09
1-14 Open Country 6:09
2-1 Confusion Blues 4:17
2-9: ‘Tonite’s Music Today’ (1956)
2-2 Mr. Moon 4:57
2-3 I Hear A Rhapsody 2:27
2-4 The Chant 4:28
2-5 Blues 5:40
2-6 Zoot's Tune 4:42
2-7 How Long Has This Been Going On 4:50
2-8 Bobby's Tune 3:22
2-9 Blue Skies 4:49
10-15: ‘The Blues Hot And Cold’ (1960)
2-10 Languid Blues 7:27
2-11 On The Sunny Side Of The Street 6:08
2-12 Stompin' At The Savoy 6:00
2-13 I Got Rhythm 4:56
2-14 Smoke Gets In Your Eyes 5:52
2-15 Hot And Cold Blues 8:05
Please note this playlist has been reconstructed using some original tracks and others from various digital sources.
This two CD set comprises four original, Bob Brookmeyer albums as leader and co-leader originally released between 1957 and 1961, this pivotal jazz-man's glory years as an esteemed musician. Featuring too a virtual who's who of Brookmeyer's contemporaries from the era, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Gene Quill, Steve Kuhn, Jimmy Rowles, Hank Jones, Milt Hinton and others. This collection serves ideally well as the perfect starting place for those new to the great man's music, and as the ultimate go-to set for those already familiar.
Thanks for these 2 Bob.
ReplyDeleteOk gracias
ReplyDeletethanks for Bob B., bob!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, boppinbob.+
ReplyDeleteMany thanks
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