Barry Harris Jazz Workshop Pdf To Word

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Two Step (Live)
by Barry Harris
on Live in New York
9:18
I Got My Pride (Radio Edit)
by Barry Harris
on I Got My Pride
3:48
by Barry Harris on What Makes Your Heartbeat Faster (Part 2)
What Makes Your Heartbeat Faster (Luque & Thiago Big Room Tribal Remix)
by Barry Harris
on What Makes Your Heartbeat Faster (Part 2)
6:19
Somebody Loves Me
by Barry Harris
on Barry Harris Live at 'Dug'
9:19
I Got My Pride (Original Club Anthem)
by Barry Harris
on I Got My Pride
11:53
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley on The Kerry Dancers
The Londonderry Air (Album Version)
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley
on The Kerry Dancers
4:54
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley on The Kerry Dancers
Black Is the Color Of My True Love's Hair (Album Version)
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley
on The Kerry Dancers
6:13
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley on The Kerry Dancers
The Kerry Dancers (Album Version)
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley
on The Kerry Dancers
4:43
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley on The Kerry Dancers
25 1/2 Daze (Album Version)
by Johnny Griffin & Barry Harris & Ron Carter & Ben Riley
on The Kerry Dancers
4:41
by Barry Harris on Dive in the Pool (feat. Pepper Mashay) [2K16 Remixes]
Dive In The Pool 2K16 (feat. Pepper Mashay) [Isak Salazar Remix]
by Barry Harris
on Dive in the Pool (feat. Pepper Mashay) [2K16 Remixes]
7:37
  1. Barry Harris Workshop
  2. Barry Harris Jazz Pianist
  3. Jazz Workshop Boston

UCF Department of Music SAXOPHONE II SPRING MVW 2425 SECTION 2 Syllabus Instructor: Professor Jeff Rupert Semester. Jazz repertoire studies ( pertinent to the specific semester, as listed in the jazz. The Barry Harris Workshop Video ( 4 DVD set, and workbook). Workbook by Howard Rees.

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Jazz
Harris in 2007
Background information
Birth nameBarry Doyle Harris
BornDecember 15, 1929 (age 89)
OriginDetroit, Michigan, U.S.
GenresBebop, hard bop, mainstream jazz
Occupation(s)Musician, bandleader, composer, teacher
InstrumentsPiano
LabelsPrestige, Riverside, Xanadu
Associated actsCannonball Adderley, Dexter Gordon, Coleman Hawkins, Illinois Jacquet, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Max Roach, Yusef Lateef, Ryo Fukui
Websitebarryharris.com

Barry Doyle Harris (born December 15, 1929) is an American jazz pianist, bandleader, composer, arranger and educator. He is an exponent of the bebop style.[1]

  • 2Later life and career
  • 7Discography

Early life and career[edit]

Harris began learning the piano at the age of four. His mother was a church pianist and had asked if Harris was interested in playing church or jazz music. Having picked jazz, he was influenced by Thelonious Monk, and Bud Powell. Harris had a strong admiration for the style of Powell, claiming it to be the 'epitome' of jazz. He went to public areas to play dances for clubs and ballrooms. Harris learned the bebop styles largely by ear, imitating the solos played by Bud Powell in his teenage years.[2]

Later life and career[edit]

1950s[edit]

Harris was based in Detroit through the 1950s and worked with musicians such as Miles Davis, Sonny Stitt and Thad Jones. He also performed in place of Junior Mance, who was Gene Ammons's regular pianist for his group frequently. In addition, Harris toured with Max Roach briefly in 1956 as a pianist after the group's resident pianist Richie Powell (younger brother of Bud Powell) died in a car crash.[3]

1960s[edit]

Harris performed with Cannonball Adderley's quintet and even had a chance to do a television stint with them.[3]

Harris relocated to New York City in 1960, where he became a performer as well as a jazz educator. During his time in New York, Harris collaborated with Dexter Gordon, Illinois Jacquet, Yusef Lateef and Hank Mobley through performances and recordings.[3]

Between 1965 and 1969, Harris performed extensively with Coleman Hawkins at the Village Vanguard.[4]

1970s[edit]

During the 1970s, Harris lived with Monk at the Weehawken, New Jersey home of the jazz patroness Baroness Pannonica de Koenigswarter, and so was in an excellent position to comment on the last years of his fellow pianist.[5]

Harris also sat in for Monk for rehearsals at the New York Jazz Repertory Company in 1974.[6]

By the mid-1970s, Harris and his band members gave concerts in European cities and Japan. In Japan, he performed at the Yubin Chokin concert hall in Tokyo over two days and his performance were recorded and compiled into an album released by Xanadu Records.[7]

1980s[edit]

Harris in 1981

Between 1982 and 1987, Harris took charge of the Jazz Cultural Workshop on the 8th Avenue in New York.[8]

Harris appears in the 1989 documentary film Thelonious Monk: Straight, No Chaser (produced by Clint Eastwood), performing duets with Tommy Flanagan.

1990s[edit]

Since the 1990s, Harris has collaborated with Toronto-based pianist and teacher Howard Rees in creating a series of videos and workbooks documenting his unique harmonic and improvisational systems and teaching process.[9][10]

2000–present[edit]

In 2000, he was profiled in the film Barry Harris - Spirit of Bebop.[2]

Harris continues to perform and teach worldwide. When he is not traveling, he holds weekly music workshop sessions in New York City for vocalists, students of piano and other instruments.[11]

Harris has recorded 19 albums as a lead artist.

Jazz Cultural Theater[edit]

Barry Harris at Barry Harris' Jazz Cultural Theatre, New York NY 7/21/84

Larry Ridley, Barry Harris, Jim Harrison, and Frank Fuentes were partners in creating the Jazz Cultural Theater beginning 1982.[12] Located at 368 Eighth Avenue in New York City in a storefront between 28th and 29th Streets in Manhattan, it was primarily a performance venue featuring prominent jazz artists and also hosted jam sessions. Additionally, it was known for Barry's music classes for vocalists and instrumentalists, each taught in separate sessions. Several artists recorded albums at the club, including Barry on his For the Moment. Some of the many musicians and notable jazz figures who appeared at the Jazz Cultural Theater were bassist Larry Ridley, guitarist Ted Dunbar, pianist Jack Wilson, trumpeter Bill Hardman, tenor saxophonist Junior Cook, trumpeter Tommy Turrentine, alto saxophonist Charles McPherson, pianist Mickey Tucker, guitarist Peter Leitch, tenor saxophonist Clifford Jordan, guitarist Mark Elf, alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson, drummer Leroy Williams, drummer Vernel Fournier, bassist Hal Dotson, bassist Jamil Nasser, pianist Chris Anderson, pianist Walter Davis, Jr., pianist Michael Weiss, tap dancers Lon Chaney and Jimmy Slyde, Francis Paudras (biographer of pianist Bud Powell), and the renowned jazz patroness Baroness Pannonica de Koenigswarter, who would park her silver Bentley sedan in front of the club.

The Jazz Cultural Theater (JCT) enjoyed a vibrant five-year run until August 14, 1987, when its lease ran out and the rent was increased. Barry simply moved his jazz instrumental and vocal instructional classes to other venues in New York City, Japan, and Europe, supported by a devoted and ever growing international base of students. Many of them are now professionals, including Dave Glasser (alto sax), Armenian bebop pianist Vahagn Hayrapetyan, and Italian-born brothers Luigi (alto sax) and Pasquale Grasso (guitar).

Theoretical concepts[edit]

Harris can be heard and seen teaching his theoretical approach in this YouTube video of a 2008 clinic he conducted in Spain.

Frans Elsen took videos during several years of Barry Harris workshops at the Royal Conservatory of Music at the Hague. He edited them into 54 videos which he felt represent the techniques Harris taught in the Hague.

Awards[edit]

  • 2000, American Jazz Hall of Fame for Lifetime Achievements & Contributions to the World of Jazz
  • 1998, Lifetime Achievements Award for Contributions to the Music World from the National Association of Negro Musicians
  • 1998, Congratulatory Letter as a Jazz Musician and Educator by the U.S. White House
  • 1997, Dizzy Gillespie Achievement Award
  • 1997, Recognition of Excellence in Jazz Music and Education
  • 1995, Doctor of Arts - Honorary Degree by Northwestern University
  • 1995, Special Presidential Award Recognition of Dedication and Commitment to the Pursuance of Artistic Excellence in Jazz Performance and Education
  • 1995, Honorary Jazz Award by the House of Representatives[13][14]
  • 1989, NEA Jazz Master

Compositions[edit]

  • 'Seein' Red'[15]
  • 'Lolita'[16]
  • 'Morning Coffee'
  • 'Luminescence'
  • 'Like this!'
  • 'Even Steven'
  • 'Nicaragua'
  • 'You Sweet and Fancy Lady'
  • 'Rouge'
  • 'Just Open Your Heart'
  • 'Sun Dance'
  • 'Fukai Aijo'
  • 'Looking Glass'
  • 'For the Moment'
  • 'That Secret Place'
  • 'Nascimento'
  • 'Tommy's Ballad'
  • 'Nobody's'
  • 'Cats in My Belfry'
  • 'The Bird of Red and Gold'
  • 'Mutattra'
  • 'Ascension'
  • 'Anachronism'
  • 'Teenie'
  • 'Sphere'
  • 'Around the Corner'
  • 'Stay right with it'
  • 'Bish, Bash, Bosh'
  • 'Bull's Eye'
  • 'Clockwise'
  • 'Off Monk'
  • 'Barengo'
  • 'Oh so Basal'
  • 'Vicissitudes'
  • 'Now and then'
  • 'Sweet Sewanee Blues'
  • 'Renaissance'
  • 'And so I Love You'
  • 'With a Grain of Salt'
  • 'A Soft Spot'

Discography[edit]

As leader[edit]

Year recordedTitleLabelPersonnel/Notes
1958Breakin' It UpArgoTrio, with William Austin (bass), Frank Gant (drums)
1960Barry Harris at the Jazz WorkshopRiversideTrio, with Sam Jones (bass), Louis Hayes (drums); in concert
1960Listen to Barry HarrisRiversideSolo piano
1960–61PreminadoRiversideOne track solo piano; other tracks trio, with Joe Benjamin (bass), Elvin Jones (drums)
1961Newer Than NewRiversideQuintet, with Lonnie Hillyer (trumpet), Charles McPherson (alto sax), Ernie Farrow (bass), Clifford Jarvis (drums)
1962Chasin' the BirdRiversideTrio, with Bob Cranshaw, (bass), Clifford Jarvis (drums)
1967Luminescence!PrestigeSextet, with Slide Hampton (trombone), Junior Cook (tenor sax), Pepper Adams (baritone sax), Bob Cranshaw (bass), Lenny McBrowne (drums)
1968Bull's Eye!PrestigeSome tracks trio, with Paul Chambers (bass), Billy Higgins (drums); some tracks quintet, with Kenny Dorham (trumpet), Charles McPherson (tenor sax), Pepper Adams (baritone sax) added
1969Magnificent!PrestigeTrio, with Ron Carter (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
1972VicissitudesMPSTrio, with George Duvivier (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
1975Barry Harris Plays Tadd DameronXanaduTrio, with Gene Taylor (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
1976Live in TokyoXanaduTrio, with Sam Jones (bass), Leroy Williams (drums); in concert
1978Barry Harris Plays Barry HarrisXanaduTrio, with George Duvivier (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
1979The Bird of Red and GoldXanaduSolo piano; Harris also sings on one track
1984For the MomentUptownTrio, with Rufus Reid (bass), Leroy Williams (drums); in concert
1990Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Volume TwelveConcordSolo piano
1991ConfirmationCandidQuartet, with Kenny Barron (piano), Ray Drummond (bass), Ben Riley (drums); in concert
1991Barry Harris in SpainNubaTrio, with Chuck Israels (bass), Leroy Williams (drums); in concert
1995Live at 'Dug'EnjaTrio, with Kunimitsu Inaba (bass), Fumio Watanabe (drums); in concert
1996First Time EverAlfa JazzTrio, with George Mraz (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
1998I'm Old FashionedAlfa JazzMost tracks trio, with George Mraz (bass), Leroy Williams (drums); two tracks with Barry Harris Family Chorus (vocals) added
2000The Last Time I Saw ParisVenusTrio, with George Mraz (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
2002Live in New YorkReservoirQuintet, with Charles Davis (tenor sax), Paul West (bass), Leroy Williams (drums); in concert
2004Live from New York!, Vol. OneLineageTrio, with John Webber (bass), Leroy Williams (drums)
2009Live in RennesPlus LoinTrio, with Mathias Allamane (bass), Philippe Soirat (drums); in concert

Source:[17]

As sideman[edit]

With Cannonball Adderley

  • Them Dirty Blues (Riverside, 1960)

With Charlie Byrd

  • Blues Sonata (Riverside, 1961)

With Donald Byrd

  • Byrd Jazz (Transition, 1955) - also released as First Flight (Delmark)

With Al Cohn

  • Play It Now (Xanadu, 1975)
  • Al Cohn's America (Xanadu, 1976)
  • No Problem (Xanadu, 1979)

With Sonny Criss

  • Saturday Morning (Xanadu, 1975)

With Art Farmer and Donald Byrd

  • 2 Trumpets (Prestige, 1956)

With Dan Faulk

  • Focusing In (Criss Cross Jazz, 1992)

With Terry Gibbs

  • Bopstacle Course (Xanadu, 1974)

With Benny Golson

  • The Other Side of Benny Golson (Riverside, 1958)

With Dexter Gordon

  • Clubhouse (Blue Note, 1965 - released 1979)
  • Gettin' Around (Blue Note, 1965)
  • The Tower of Power! (Prestige, 1969)
  • More Power! (Prestige, 1969)
  • True Blue - with Al Cohn (Xanadu, 1976)
  • Silver Blue with Al Cohn (Xanadu, 1976)
  • Biting the Apple (SteepleChase, 1976)

With Johnny Griffin

  • White Gardenia (Riverside, 1961)
  • The Kerry Dancers (Riverside, 1961–62)

With Coleman Hawkins

  • Wrapped Tight (Impulse!, 1965)
  • Sirius (Pablo, 1966 [1974])

With Louis Hayes

  • Louis Hayes (Vee-Jay, 1960)

With Jimmy Heath

  • Picture of Heath (Xanadu, 1975)

With Buck Hill

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  • Capital Hill (Muse, 1990)
  • The Buck Stops Here (Muse, 1992)

With Illinois Jacquet

  • Bottoms Up (Prestige, 1968)

With Carmell Jones

  • Jay Hawk Talk (Prestige, 1965)

With Thad Jones

  • The Magnificent Thad Jones (Blue Note, 1956)

With Sam Jones

  • Cello Again (Xanadu, 1975)
  • Changes & Things (Xanadu, 1977)

With Clifford Jordan

  • Repetition (Soul Note, 1984)

With Lee Konitz

  • Lullaby of Birdland (Candid, 1991 [1994])

With Harold Land

  • West Coast Blues! (Jazzland, 1960)

With Yusef Lateef

  • Eastern Sounds (Moodsville, 1960)
  • Into Something (New Jazz, 1961)
  • Suite 16 (Atlantic, 1970)

With Warne Marsh

  • Back Home (Criss Cross Jazz, 1986)

With Earl May

  • Swinging the Blues (Arbors, 2005)

With Charles McPherson

  • Bebop Revisited! (Prestige, 1964)
  • Con Alma! (Prestige, 1965)
  • The Quintet/Live! (Prestige, 1966)
  • McPherson's Mood (Prestige, 1969)
  • Charles McPherson (Mainstream, 1971)
  • Siku Ya Bibi (Day of the Lady) (Mainstream, 1972)
  • Today's Man (Mainstream, 1973)
  • Live in Tokyo (Xanadu, 1976)

With Billy Mitchell

Barry Harris Workshop

  • The Colossus of Detroit (Xanadu, 1978)

With Hank Mobley

  • Mobley's Message (Prestige 1956)
  • Jazz Message No. 2 (Savoy 1957)
  • The Turnaround (Blue Note, 1965)

With James Moody

  • Don't Look Away Now! (Prestige, 1969)

With Frank Morgan

  • You Must Believe in Spring (Antilles, 1992)

With Lee Morgan

  • Take Twelve (Jazzland, 1962)
  • The Sidewinder (Blue Note, 1963)

With Sal Nistico

  • Heavyweights (Jazzland, 1961)

With Dave Pike

  • It's Time for Dave Pike (Riverside, 1961)

With Sonny Red

  • Breezing (Jazzland, 1960)
  • The Mode (Jazzland (1961)
  • Images (Jazzland, 1961)

With Red Rodney

  • Bird Lives! (Muse, 1973)
  • Home Free (Muse, 1977 [1979])

With Jack Sheldon

  • Playing for Change (Uptown, 1986 [1997])

With Sonny Stitt

  • Burnin' (Argo, 1958)
  • Tune-Up! (Cobblestone, 1972)
  • Constellation (Cobblestone, 1972)
  • 12! (Muse, 1972)
  • My Buddy: Sonny Stitt Plays for Gene Ammons (Muse, 1975)
  • Blues for Duke (Muse, 1975 [1978])
  • In Style (Muse, 1982)

With Don Wilkerson

  • The Texas Twister (Riverside, 1960)

References[edit]

  1. ^Milkowski, Bill (1998). 'Barry Harris: Young-hearted elder'. Jazz Times.
  2. ^ abBarry Harris: Spirit of Bebop. Efor Films. 2004.
  3. ^ abcBarry Kernfeld, ed. (2002). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz Second edition. London, England: Macmillan Publishers Limited. p. 177. ISBN033369189X.
  4. ^Greg Thomas (16 July 2012). 'Bebop legend Barry Harris set to burn up Village Vanguard with 2-week gig'. New York Daily News. New York. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
  5. ^Watrous, Peter. 'Be-Bop's Generous Romantic', The New York Times, May 28, 1994. Accessed June 2, 2008. 'Mr. Harris moved to New York in the early 1960s and became friends with Thelonious Monk and Baroness Pannonica de Koenigswarter, Mr. Monk's patron. Eventually, Mr. Harris moved to her estate in Weehawken, N.J., where he still lives.'
  6. ^Carr, Ian; Fairweather, Digby; Priestley, Brian (1988). Jazz The Essential Companion. New York: Prentice Hall Press. ISBN0-13-509274-4.
  7. ^Bogdanov, Vladimir; Woodstra, Chris; Erlewine, Stephen Thomas (2012). All Music Guide to Jazz: The Definitive Guide to Jazz music. USA: Hal Leonard Publishing. ISBN0-87930-717-X. Retrieved June 11, 2015.
  8. ^Greg Thomas (July 16, 2012). 'Bebop legend Barry Harris set to burn up Village Vanguard with 2-week gig'. New York Daily News. New York. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
  9. ^'Evolutionary Voicings, Part 1 – Howard Rees' Jazz Workshops'. jazzworkshops.com. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  10. ^'About Howard Rees – Howard Rees' Jazz Workshops'. jazzworkshops.com. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  11. ^'Barry Harris Residency April 7 through 10'. www.brown.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  12. ^'Larry Ridley - Biography'. www.larryridley.com. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  13. ^'Recognition Awards to Barry Harris for Outstanding Devotion to Music and Education'. www.barryharris.com. 2014.
  14. ^'Barry Harris facts, information, pictures'. www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  15. ^'The Complete Regent Sessions - Pepper Adams'. AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  16. ^'Barry Harris at the Jazz Workshop - Barry Harris'. AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
  17. ^'Barry Harris Discography'. www.jazzdisco.org. Retrieved December 20, 2018.

External links[edit]

Barry Harris Jazz Pianist

  • Barry Harris at AllMusic
  • Artist Profile: Barry Harris at WBGO

Jazz Workshop Boston

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