Jack DeJohnette, of the most daring and singular jazz drummers of the last 60 years, died on Sunday.
Jack DeJohnette, one of the most daring and dynamic jazz drummers of the last 60 years, has died at age 83., one of the most daring and dynamic jazz drummers of the last 60 years, with a loose-limbed yet exacting beat that propelled a limitless range of adventurous music, died on Sunday at HealthAlliance Hospital in Kingston, N.
Y. He was 83.DeJohnette had a singular voice at the drums: earthy and elastic, instantly recognizable. Rather than focus the articulation of tempo on his ride cymbal, he often distributed his emphasis around the drum set. He adapted this flowing approach from modern jazz innovators likeIn another sense, he moved in multiple directions throughout his career. He played with impeccable sensitivity in acoustic small groups, like a pair of illustrious piano trios led by. He exuded combustible intensity in other settings, including the quartet that brought saxophonist Charles Lloyd to The Fillmore in San Francisco, and the larger confab that trumpeterled into the frontier of psychedelic jazz-funk. Across hundreds of recordings and many more live performances — with everyone from saxophonistHe was also a prolific bandleader and composer with dozens of albums to his name. One of his earliest groups was the influential trio Gateway, which he co-led with guitarist. His band Directions, also featuring Abercrombie, leaned more pointedly into aspects of fusion. His most acclaimed ensemble was Special Edition, a rugged but chamberlike unit that featured free-thinking collaborators like tenor saxophonistin 2016 — and performing solo piano concerts, like one last year at the Woodstock Playhouse, near his home in the Catskills. He often said being a pianist made him a better drummer, because he had a deeper understanding of harmony and tone. His two Grammy Awards speak to the breadth of his musical expression. In 2022 he won best jazz instrumental album foran hourlong ambient statement on which he plays synthesizers and percussion; he released it on his own label, Golden Beams.Jack DeJohnette, Jr. was born in Chicago on Aug. 9, 1942, to Jack DeJohnette and the former Eva Jeanette Wood, who had each moved north during the Great Migration. He was raised on the South Side, mainly by his grandmother, Rosalie Anne Wood. She encouraged his early musical interests, setting him up around age 5 with a local piano teacher, and buying a Wurlitzer Spinet piano for the house. His uncle, Roy Wood, Sr. was a jazz enthusiast with a hand-crank Victrola and a stash of 78 rpm records; he'd later become a pioneering African American disc jockey, and co-founder of the National Black Network. Young Jack pored over his uncle's record collection, listened raptly to the radio, and tagged along to shows. By his late teenage years, he was gigging as a pianist — and training himself to be a drummer, which he found came naturally. DeJohnette was coming of age at a time of expansive musical possibilities in Chicago, where modern jazz, the blues and R&B were commingling with staunchly unclassifiable approaches. He played with the Sun Ra Arkestra, and with the soul-jazz tenor saxophonist and keyboardist Eddie Harris. And he fell in with a cadre of fiercely independent thinkers — like pianist Muhal Richard Abrams and saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell — just as they were beginning to form the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians in 1965. The following year, DeJohnette moved to New York, where he hit the ground running. On his first night in town, as he recalled last year inpodcast, he headed to Minton's Playhouse in Harlem and sat in with trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, who immediately counted off a supersonic tempo. He handled this trial by fire with no problem whatsoever."Basically, to play that way, you have to be relaxed," he explained."You can't have any tension whatsoever, so that you can focus on your ideas instead of how you're dealing with it physically."it features a short-lived quartet led by pianist McCoy Tyner and tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, with bassist Henry Grimes. At the time it was recorded, in the spring of 1966, DeJohnette had only been in New York for a matter of months. He was already working alongside pianist Keith Jarrett and bassist Cecil McBee in the newly formed Charles Lloyd Quartet, which recorded for Atlantic Records, and became a regular fixture in the burgeoning hippie counterculture. The group's 1967 album, recorded at the Monterey Jazz Festival, was a crossover hit, and Lloyd was hailed as an ambassador bringing jazz to youthful audiences. That notion applied no less in this era to Miles Davis, who was in the process of retooling his sound to reflect the urgency of Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix and James Brown. DeJohnette joined Davis' band during this alchemical transformation, recording on the landmarkJarrett, who also played in this edition of Davis' band, would become one of DeJohnette's steadiest musical associates. In the early '70s they made an experimental duo album,, for the recently established ECM Records. Then in 1983, Jarrett formed a trio with DeJohnette and bassist Gary Peacock, for the stated purpose of interpreting material from the standard songbook. This group would be a major concert attraction for the next 30 years. DeJohnette's own output reflected a deep investment in groove and an equally serious commitment to abstraction. He formed Trio Beyond with guitarist John Scofield and organist Larry Goldings, releasing an album calleda 2017 album inspired by their shared connection to the Woodstock area, as a place of residence and a cultural totem. The Jack DeJohnette Group, which he formed in 2010, explored a mercurial strain of fusion, with catalysts like alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa and guitarist David Fiuczynski. He led another intergenerational combo, with saxophonist Ravi Coltrane and electric bassist Matthew Garrison, on the albumDeJohnette never wavered in his commitment to sonic exploration, maintaining his close ties to trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith and multi-reedist Roscoe Mitchell. He helped organize a tribute to the AACM — with Mitchell, multi-reedist Henry Threadgill, pianist Muhal Richard Abrams, and bassist Larry Gray — that yielded the album"I think for all of us, the music is there for people to approach with an open mind," DeJohnette told me in 2015, speaking at his home."It's creative music presented at a high level. We all take it very seriously."The White House movie theater demolition ends a storied era in presidential history
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Republican Jack Ciatterelli scores another Dem endorsement in NJ governor raceToday's Video Headlines: 10/25/25
Read more »
Jack Hughes scores twice as Avalanche falls to Devils, 4-3, in overtimeThe Colorado Avalanche rallied twice Sunday afternoon, which was enough to claim one point.
Read more »
Jack Hughes' OT goal lifts Devils over Avalanche for 8th straight winHughes scored his second goal of the game and team-best eighth of the season to send New Jersey on its longest winning streak since early in the 2022-23 season.
Read more »
All Jewish councils in key New Jersey area endorse Jack Ciattarelli for governor: reportFox News Channel offers its audiences in-depth news reporting, along with opinion and analysis encompassing the principles of free people, free markets and diversity of thought, as an alternative to the left-of-center offerings of the news marketplace.
Read more »
Jack Hughes’ OT snipe extends Devils’ winning streak to eight: WATCH OUR RECAPJack Hughes scored at 1:53 of overtime and Jake Allen made 21 saves and the New Jersey Devils slipped past the Colorado Avalanche 4-3 for their eighth straight win.
Read more »
Photos: Jack London Square hosts Halloween Día de los Muertos Family Fun FestOver a hundred people turned out for Jack London Square’s Halloween Día de los Muertos Family Fun Fest on Sunday, which lent vibrant color to a drizzly gray day.
Read more »
