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Randy Brecker
has been shaping the sound of jazz, R&B and rock for more than two decades. His
trumpet and flugelhorn performances have graced hundreds of albums by a wide
range of artists from James Taylor, Bruce Springsteen, Chaka Khan, George Benson
and Parliament Funkadelics to David Sanborn, Horace Silver, Jaco Pastorius arid
Frank Zappa. Randy
Brecker's history is as varied as it is distinguished. Born in Philadelphia to a
piano-playing father, Randy spent summers in big band stage camps where he got
his earliest experience in ensemble playing. He began playing R&B and funk in
local bar bands while in his teens, but at the same time he had an ear for hard
bop. "I'd listen to Sonny Rollins, Lee Morgan, Miles' quintets, Art Blakey,
the Clifford Brown/Max Roach group."
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Alter finishing high school.
Randy attended Indiana University. In 1966, he moved to New York and one of his
first gigs upon arriving was with Clark Terry's big band. Randy also began his
foray into jazz-rock by helping to form Blood, Sweat and Tears. He worked with
BS&T for a year and played on their innovative 1968 debut, Child is Father to
the Man.
Randy left BS&T to join the Horace Silver Quintet. "BS&T was a very
structured situation...I needed to stretch and play jazz." In 1968, Randy
recorded his first album as a leader, Score (re-issued in 1993 on Blue
Note), which also featured a 19 year-old Michael on tenor sax.
After Horace Silver, Randy joined forces with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers
before teaming up with brother Michael, Barry Rogers, Billy Cobham, and John
Abercrombie to form the seminal fusion group Dreams. The group recorded two
adventurous and wildly acclaimed albums - now collector's items - for Columbia
Records before they disbanded in 1971.
In 1973, Randy was back with Horace Silver, teaming up with brother Michael as
the front line in Horace's quintet. By now, the two horn players had become two
of the most in-demand studio musicians of the day. The following year, the
brothers joined Billy Cobham's group, and by 1975 they were ready to front their
own band.
The Brecker Brothers were to become a band of immeasurable influence and impact.
Hailed by pop and jazz critics alike, their first album, which Randy produced,
was nominated for four Grammys. The Brecker Brothers went on to record a total
of six albums and garner seven Grammy nominations between 1975 and 1981.
In the late 70s. Randy recorded on Charles Mingus' last album. Me Myself and
Eye. Randy has performed with various incarnations of Mingus Dynasty Big
Bands and Epitaphs up to the present day.
After the Brecker Brothers parted in 1982. Randy recorded and toured extensively
with Jaco Pastorius, recording the famous Word of Mouth album, a live
concert in Japan. It was soon thereafter that Randy met jazz pianist Eliane
Elias. Eliane and Randy formed their own band. touring the world several times
and recording one album together, Amanda for Passport Records. In 1986,
Randy produced, arranged and recorded his first acoustic jazz album, In the
Idiom, for Denon Records, with Al Foster. Ron Carter, Dave Kikosky and Joe
Henderson.
In 1988, Randy recorded Live At Sweet Basil, a live album for Sonet
Records at the famed jazz club Sweet Basil in New York with Bob Berg, Joey Baron
and Dieter Ilg. Through the end of the 80s Randy toured North America and Europe
several times as a leader, as well as touring with Stanley Clarke's Jazz
Explosion. In 1989, he performed a sold out week at the Albert Hall In London
with Eric Clapton.
The 1990s began with Randy on tour with the Mingus Dynasty/Epitaph. He also
recorded and co-produced his third album as a leader. Toe To Toe, for
MCA/Impulse in 1990. And in 1992, exactly ten years after they disbanded, Randy
and Michael joined forces again in a much heralded reunion featuring a world
tour and the triple-Grammy nominated GRP recording, The Return of the Brecker
Brothers.
In the fall of 1994, the Brecker Brothers released the double-Grammy winning
Out of the Loop, with tours that followed into 1995 throughout the U.S. and
Europe. A tour highlight, they were the first international contemporary jazz
group to perform in the People's Republic of China, playing to sell-out crowds
in Beijing and Shanghai. Branching out again in 1995, Randy toured Japan as a
special guest with Stanley Turrentine and, as a leader, was one of the first
Western jazz artists to tour for several weeks throughout Poland. Most
significantly, he began recording his first solo album in six years with a band
of musicians assembled from different parts of the globe, including long-time
friend and musical cohort David Sanborn. guitarist Adam Rogers from Lost Tribe,
Brazilian vocalist Maucha Adnet (singer with the late Jobim's band), and bassist
Bakithi Kumalo of Graceland fame, among others.
In 1996, drawn to and inspired
by the music of Brazil since his first visit there in 1979, Randy offered up his
impression of Brazilian music mixed with pinches of Latin, world music, funk and
Jazz on Into the Sun. Released first in Japan on Pony Canyon, it is
available on Concord Records in the rest of the world and won Randy his first
Grammy as a soloist in 1998 for "Best Contemporary Jazz Performance." A live
concert of the music from the album was filmed by Japanese television station
NHK and broadcast in 1997. Randy closed the year on tour with the Mingus Big
Band across the U.S. and South America, and the Carnegie Hall Big Band in
Europe. 1998 began with Randy's appearance on tour as a special guest with Billy
Cobham in the U.K. In fact, it was while on stage in London with Billy that
Randy first heard the news of his Grammy win. Summer appearances include several
reunion concerts with Larry Coryell and the 11th House as well as a special
guest appearance with the Vanguard Orchestra in a Tribute to Thad Jones In
Marciac, France. Randy is now planning the recording of a new solo effort.
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