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Tue, 11 September 2007 18:25 |
steve the artguy
Messages: 308 Registered: June 2005
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Jazz Great Joe Zawinul Dies at 75
By VERONIKA OLEKSYN – 2 hours ago
VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Joe Zawinul, the jazz keyboardist who soared to fame
as one of the creators of jazz-rock fusion with the band Weather Report,
has died, a hospital official said. He was 75.
Zawinul died early Tuesday, a spokeswoman for Vienna's Wilhelmina Clinic
said, without giving details. He had been hospitalized since last month and
suffered from a rare form of skin cancer, said Risa Zincke, his manager,
according to the Austria Press Agency.
Zawinul won acclaim for his keyboard work on chart-topping Miles Davis albums
such as "In A Silent Way" and "Bitches Brew," and was a leading force behind
the so-called "Electric Jazz" movement.
In 1970, Zawinul and saxophonist Wayne Shorter founded Weather Report and
produced a series of albums including "Heavy Weather," "Black Market," "I
Sing the Body Electric," and the Grammy-winning live recording "8:30."
He is credited with bringing the electric piano and synthesizer into the
jazz mainstream, but was frustrated by the lack of respect for electric keyboards
and new technology among jazz purists.
"There is no difference between a Stradivarius or a beautiful synthesizer
sound," Zawinul told Jazziz magazine earlier this year. "People make a big
mistake in putting down electronic music. Yes, it's been misused and abused,
but that's true of every music.
"There is nothing wrong with electronic music as long as you're putting some
soul behind the technology."
Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer praised Zawinul's "unpretentious way
of dealing with listeners" and said he wasn't "blinded by superficialities."
Born in 1932, Zawinul grew up in a working-class family during World War
II in the Austrian capital. He played accordion on the streets to make money
and received classical piano training as a child prodigy at the Vienna Conservatory.
In the postwar years, he grew interested in American jazz, playing in a dance
band that included the future Austrian President Thomas Klestil and making
a name for himself on the local jazz scene in bands led by saxophonist Hans
Koller and others.
"One thing about Viennese musicians, they can really groove, more than even
the German bands can," Zawinul said in a 2007 Downbeat magazine interview.
"It's something in our nature, perhaps. We're cosmopolitan and interracial
— Czech, Slavic, Hungarian, Romanian, Bulgarian, Turkish a little bit."
In 1959, Zawinul emigrated to the United States on a scholarship to study
at the Berklee School of Music in Boston, but left to join Maynard Ferguson's
big band. He next landed a gig with Dinah Washington; his funky piano can
be heard on her 1959 hit "What a Diff'rence a Day Made."
Zawinul rose to international fame after joining alto saxophonist Cannonball
Adderley's band in 1961. During his nine-year stint with the band, he composed
such tunes as "Walk Tall," "Country Preacher," and most notably the gospel-influenced,
soul-jazz anthem "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," his first important recording on
electric piano, which climbed the pop charts and won a Grammy for Adderley.
In the late '60s, Zawinul recorded with Davis' studio band, His tune "In
a Silent Way" served as the title track for the trumpeter's first foray into
the electric arena. Zawinul's composition "Pharoah's Dance" was featured
on Davis' groundbreaking 1970 jazz-rock fusion album "Bitches Brew," which
won Davis a 1970 Grammy for best jazz performance, large group or soloist
with large group.
Weather Report enjoyed its biggest commercial success with the 1977 album
"Heavy Weather" which featured Zawinul's catchy tune "Birdland," which became
one of the most recognizable jazz hits of the '70s after it was also recorded
by Maynard Ferguson and the vocal group Manhattan Transfer.
After Weather Report broke up in 1986, Zawinul went on to form The Zawinul
Syndicate, which brought together a global village of musicians who recorded
such albums as the Grammy-nominated "My People" (1996) and "World Tour" (1998).
Associated Press Writer Charles J. Gans in New York contributed to this report.
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