- Jazz guitarist
Jazz guitarists are
guitar players who playjazz music on the guitar using an approach to playing chords, melodies, and improvised solo lines which is calledjazz guitar playing. The guitar has fulfilled the roles of accompanist ("rhythm guitar ") and soloist in small and large ensembles and also as an unaccompanied solo instrument. Until the 1930s, before guitar amplifiers were widely used, it was difficult for jazz guitarists playing acoustic instruments to be heard over drums, piano or horn sections. As a result, jazz guitarists tended to act as accompanists, strumming chords as part of therhythm section . Once the first guitar amplifiers were developed in the 1930s, electric guitarists such asGeorge Barnes andCharlie Christian were able to project their solo sound over a jazz ensemble. The history of jazz guitar has been an integral part of the wide-ranging history of jazz. The early guitar players were the great blues singers who accompanied themselves on the guitar. By the 1930s, guitarists gained prominence in jazz and some were even featured performers, such asCarl Kress (1907-1965), who recorded in 1927 withBix Beiderbecke . In Europe,Django Reinhardt (1910-1953), a Belgian gypsy jazz guitarist recorded with hisQuintette du Hot Club de France . Beginning in 1939, Charlie Christian played withBig Band Swing bandleaderBenny Goodman , and in thebebop era,Tal Farlow was notable for his virtuoso playing. In the 1960s, guitarists tended to play in small groups, such as Jim Hall, who did his best work in duos withBill Evans ,Ron Carter and others.Wes Montgomery was a self-taught guitarist who used his right thumb rather than aplectrum (pick) to produce his unique sound in his late-1950s and 1960shard bop recordings.Joe Pass pioneered solo guitar with chordal substitutions in his duos withElla Fitzgerald .Grant Green 's was known for his funky 1970sorgan trio music. Fusion guitarists such asLarry Coryell (1943- ), John McLaughlin,Pat Metheny , andAllan Holdsworth combined the sound and energy of rock with jazz-style improvisation.1900s to 1920s
The history of the guitar in jazz is rooted in the great blues singers who accompanied themselves on the acoustic guitar, such as
Big Bill Broonzy and Huddy "Leadbelly " Ledbetter. The banjo, because of its loud volume, was an early stringed accompaniment instrument in jazz inNew Orleans andDixieland music. Banjoists such as Johnny St. Cyr (1890-1966) and Bud Scott (1890-1949) also played guitar in jazz bands of the 1910s-1920s.Summerfield, Maurice. 1998. The Jazz Guitar: Its Evolution, Players and Personalities Since 1900. United Kingdom: Ashley Mark Publishing.] Early jazz guitarists includedEddie Lang (1902-1933) [ [http://eddielang.com/ Eddie Lang ] ] ,Nick Lucas (1897-1982) [ [http://www.nicklucas.com/ Nick Lucas, The Crooning Troubadour and his Guitar ] ] ,Lonnie Johnson (1889-1970) andSnoozer Quinn (1906-1952).1930s
Even as late as the early 1930s sophisticated jazz orchestras such as the
Duke Ellington band still used a banjo to provide a rhythmic pulse. During the 1930s, though, guitarists gained prominence in jazz and some were even featured performers.Carl Kress (1907-1965) [ [http://classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=18 Classic Jazz Guitar - Guitarists ] ] andDick McDonough (1904-1938) [ [http://classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=46 Classic Jazz Guitar - Guitarists ] ] made an early guitar duo recording in 1934. Kress was featured with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra in 1926 and recorded in 1927 withBix Beiderbecke . He initially played banjo and four-string guitar, changing over to six-string guitar in the 1930s. Kress used an unorthodox tuning that he created for himself. He played in the 1950s on theGary Moore television show and into the 1960s in a duo withGeorge Barnes . McDonough led radio and performing bands and performed with many other musicians such as theDorsey Brothers . Other successful jazz guitarists of the period includedGeorge Van Eps (1913-1998) andFreddie Green (1911-1987), who played rhythm guitar in theCount Basie Orchestra for 50 years.George Van Eps (1913-1998) began recording as early as 1934 and taped his last records in 1996, along the way inventing the 7 string guitar in the 1950s [ [http://classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=30. Classic Jazz Guitar - Guitarists ] ] In Europe,Django Reinhardt (1910-1953), a Belgian gypsy jazz guitarist recorded with hisQuintette du Hot Club de France withviolin istStéphane Grappelli (1908 – 1997), a French jazz violinist. Reinhardt was an influential figure in jazz and among jazz guitarists as a soloist, accompanist and composer. [Delauney, Charles. 1981. Django Reinhardt. United Kingdom: Ashley Mark Publishing.] [Dregni, Michael. 2004. Django: The Life and Music of a Gypsy Legend. New York: Oxford University Press.] The Quintette du Hot Club de France included Django Reinhardt's brotherJoseph Reinhardt as well as several other Gypsy guitarists and non-Gypsy musicians. Because of international commerce, records featuring Django Reinhardt were heard in the United States and inspired many future famous jazz guitarists. Django's early style was influenced by the jazz of the time, includingLouis Armstrong and was later influenced bybebop musicians such asCharlie Parker andDizzy Gillespie . In 1946,Duke Ellington brought Django to the United States for a series of concerts.Jazz guitar reached a watershed with the development of amplification using a magnetic pickup and amplifier. With its amplifier, an
electric guitar could be as loud as horns, drums, and piano put together. This dramatically changed the way that the instrument could be used, because before amplification was available, the guitarist would just play chords, because single-note melodies would be inaudible. One of the very first jazz guitarists to experiment with the electric guitar wasEddie Durham (1906-1987) who was playing one as early as 1938. Durham showed the instrument toCharlie Christian (1916-1942) in 1937 and toFloyd Smith . On March 16, 1939 Smith recorded "Floyd's Guitar Blues," perhaps the first hit record featuring electric guitar. But it was Christian who was to become the central figure of the electric guitar revolution in jazz, playing withBenny Goodman after an audition on August 16, 1939. Christian was influenced by the records of Django Reinhardt, learning some of his solos note-for-note. Christian was diagnosed withtuberculosis in 1940 and died at the Seaview Sanatorium inStaten Island in 1942.1940s
The 1940s saw jazz guitarists become firmly established as soloists in their own right as well as accompanists. Playing with
Nat King Cole broughtOscar Moore (1916-1981) to prominence in jazz and popular music. Moore was a pioneer for the role of jazz guitar in the small jazz ensemble and played with Cole for nearly a decade [ [http://classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=20 Classic Jazz Guitar - Guitarists ] ] . Moore also played withLionel Hampton andArt Tatum .Bill DeArango (1921-2005) played guitar with musicians of the caliber ofColeman Hawkins andDizzy Gillespie . [ [http://classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=11 Classic Jazz Guitar - Guitarists ] ] .Billy Bauer (1915-2005) was a member ofWoody Herman 's first Herd and also played withBenny Goodman andJack Teagarden . Bauer was at the forefront of bringing the guitar intobebop , playing withLennie Tristano and laterLee Konitz [ [http://classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=5 Classic Jazz Guitar - Guitarists ] ] .1950s and 1960s
In the 1950s,
Herb Ellis ' accomplished technique and elegant lines reached a wide public through the recordings ofOscar Peterson 's trio. During the same time period,Tal Farlow 'sbebop virtuoso playing did much to make up the ground between the guitar and the other "frontline" instruments such as saxophone and trumpet.Kenny Burrell (1931-) did recordings in the 1950s withDizzy Gillespie andJohn Coltrane and led his own groups.Lenny Breau (1941-1984) performs using an ensemble improvisational playing, along with a more orchestral fingerstyle solo jazz guitar. He used many diverse elements of music, including closed voicings,flamenco style guitar, use of varied rhythms, fingered harmonics,modal jazz harmony ,an intimate knowledge of inversions and tritone substitutions, and a great understanding of bebop.Charlie Byrd (1925-1999) did nylon-string guitar recordings with saxophone playerStan Getz which helped popularize Brazilianbossa nova andsamba music in North America.Jim Hall is a masterful melodic player,
composer , andarranger who did his best work in duos withBill Evans ,Ron Carter and others. Hall has a melody-based,motivic approach to improvisation.Wes Montgomery was a self-taught guitarist who used his right thumb rather than aplectrum (pick) to produce his unique sound in his late-1950s and 1960shard bop recordings.Joe Pass pioneered solo guitar with chordal substitutions in his duos withElla Fitzgerald .George Benson (1943-)'s success as a pop vocalist in the 1970s made him a household name, but he was an influential jazz guitarist in the 1960s, particularly with hisorgan trio recordings with organist Jack MacDuff.Grant Green 's funky 1970sorgan trio music makes him a favourite with 2000s-era lounge and clubDJ 's, but much of Green's best jazz work can be found in his 1960s output. The king of the descending blues lick, Grant Green's deceptively simple style was full of groove and tone, and it is hard to replicate. Fusion guitaristLarry Coryell (1943-) was among the first to combine the sound and energy of rock with jazz lines in the late 1960s.1970s and 1980s
John McLaughlin pioneered jazz-rock fusion in the 1970s. John Abercrombie has recorded with Billy Cobham, Jack DeJohnette and the Brecker Brothers. He also explores often the parameters of jazz fusion and post bop.
Pat Metheny is a Missouri-based guitarist and leader of his own band, thePat Metheny Group withLyle Mays onpiano . work.Mike Stern , who came to prominence withMiles Davis during the 1980s, has a unique take on fusingblues rock guitar withbe-bop lines in extended improvisations.Bill Frisell introduced folk andbluegrass music intojazz , use of intervals rather than single lines, combining harmonics and fretted notes.John Scofield played and collaborated with performers such as Miles Davis, and Billy Cobham, and groups such as Medeski Martin & Wood. At ease in the bebop idiom, Scofield is also well versed in jazz fusion, funk, blues, and soul.1990s and 2000s
Stanley Jordan is an American jazz/jazz fusion guitarist, best known for his development of the touch technique for playing guitar.John Pizzarelli is a jazz guitarist, singer, songwriter who scat sings in unison with his guitar line.Randy Napoleon composes, arranges, and performs in the tradition ofWes Montgomery . Reviewer Ken Dryden from the "All Music Guide" notes that "Napoleon consistently shows that he is in full command of his instrument without resorting to overindulgent solos like many young players".References
ee also
Charlie Christian at wwwallaboutjazz.com [http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=5699]
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List of jazz guitarists - a list of guitarists from a broad range of jazz subgenres
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