Jack DeJohnette

Jack DeJohnette

DeJohnette in 2006
Background information
Born (1942-08-09) August 9, 1942
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genres Jazz, jazz fusion, new-age
Occupation(s) Drummer, pianist, composer
Instruments Drums, piano, percussion, melodica
Years active 1961–present
Labels Milestone, Prestige, ECM, MCA, Blue Note, Columbia
Associated acts Miles Davis, Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans, Joe Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Sonny Rollins, Charles Lloyd, Michael Brecker, McCoy Tyner, Pat Metheny, Herbie Hancock, Don Byron
Website Official website
Notable instruments
Drums & piano
External video
Oral History, Jack DeJohnette talks about seeing himself as an orchestrater or colorist with his instrument, and the tremendous joy he gets from playing music. Interview date March 12, 2009, NAMM (National Association of Music Merchants) Oral History Library

Jack DeJohnette (born August 9, 1942)[1] is an American jazz drummer, pianist, and composer.

An important figure of the fusion era of jazz, DeJohnette is one of the most influential jazz drummers of the 20th century, given his extensive work as leader and sideman for musicians including Charles Lloyd, Freddie Hubbard, Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans, John Abercrombie, Alice Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Miles Davis, Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock and John Scofield. He was inducted into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame in 2007.[2]

Biography

Early life and musical beginnings

DeJohnette was born in Chicago, Illinois.[3] He began his musical career as a pianist, studying from age four and first playing professionally at age fourteen,[4] but he would later switch focus to the drums, for which he is known.[3] DeJohnette would later credit an uncle, Roy I. Wood Sr., as the person in his life who inspired him to play music. Wood was a Chicago disc jockey who would later become vice president of the National Network of Black Broadcasters.[5]

DeJohnette began his musical career on piano, then adding drums and eventually focussing on the latter, playing R&B, hard bop, and avant-garde music in Chicago. He led his own groups in addition to playing with Richard Abrams, Roscoe Mitchell and other eventual core members of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (founded in 1965).[5] He also occasionally performed with Sun Ra and his Arkestra (and later in New York as well). In the early 1960s, DeJohnette had the opportunity to sit in for three tunes with John Coltrane and his quintet, an early foray into playing with big name jazz musicians.[6][7]

In 1966 DeJohnette moved to New York City, where he became a member of the Charles Lloyd Quartet.[3] A band that recognized the potential influence of rock and roll on jazz, Lloyd's group was where DeJohnette first encountered pianist Keith Jarrett, who would work extensively with him throughout his career.[8] However, DeJohnette left the group in early 1968, citing Lloyd's deteriorating, "flat" playing as his main reason for leaving.[9] While Lloyd's band was where he received international recognition for the first time,[5] it was not the only group DeJohnette played with during his early years in New York, as he also worked with groups including Jackie McLean, Abbey Lincoln, Betty Carter, and Bill Evans.[3] DeJohnette joined Evan's trio in 1968, the same year the group headlined the Montreux Jazz Festival and produced the album Bill Evans at the Montreux Jazz Festival. In November 1968 he worked briefly with Stan Getz and his quartet, which led to his first recordings with Miles Davis.[7]

The Miles Davis years

In 1969, DeJohnette left the Evans trio and replaced Tony Williams in Miles Davis's live band. Davis had seen DeJohnette play many times, one of which was during a stint with Evans at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London in 1968, where he also first heard bassist Dave Holland.[10] Davis recognized DeJohnette’s ability to combine the driving grooves associated with rock and roll with improvisational aspects associated with jazz.[11]

DeJohnette is heard on the compilation album Directions, and was the primary drummer on the landmark album Bitches Brew. DeJohnette and the other musicians saw the Bitches Brew sessions as unstructured and fragmentary, but also innovative: "As the music was being played, as it was developing, Miles would get new ideas...He’d do a take, and stop, and then get an idea from what had just gone on before, and elaborate on it...The recording of Bitches Brew was a stream of creative musical energy. One thing was flowing into the next, and we were stopping and starting all the time."[12] While he was not the only drummer involved in the project, as Davis had also enlisted Billy Cobham, Don Alias, and Lenny White, DeJohnette was considered the leader of the rhythm section within the group.[13] He played on the live albums that would follow the release of Bitches Brew, taken from concerts at the Fillmore East in New York and Fillmore West in San Francisco. These ventures were undertaken at the behest of Clive Davis, then president of Columbia Records.[14]

DeJohnette continued to work with Davis for the next three years, which led to collaborations with other Davis band members John McLaughlin, Chick Corea, and Holland; he also drew Keith Jarrett into the band.[5] He contributed to such famous Davis albums as Live-Evil (1971), Jack Johnson (1971), and On the Corner (1972).[15] He left the Davis group in the middle of 1971, although he returned for several concerts through the rest of that year.[7]

DeJohnette as a solo artist and bandleader in the 1970s and '80s

DeJohnette's first record, The DeJohnette Complex, was released in 1968; on the album, he played melodica as well as drums, preferring often to let his mentor, Roy Haynes, sit behind the set. He also recorded, in the early 1970s, the albums Have You Heard, Sorcery, and Cosmic Chicken.[5] He released these first four albums on either the Milestone or Prestige labels,[5] and then switched to ECM for his next endeavors; ECM gave him a "fertile platform" for his "atmospheric drumming and challenging compositions."[16]

The musical freedom he had while recording for ECM offered DeJohnette many dates as a sideman and opportunities to start his own groups.[16] He first formed the group Compost in 1972, but this was a short-lived endeavor, and DeJohnette cited the music as far too experimental to achieve commercial success.[17] During this period, DeJohnette continued his career as a sideman as well, rejoining Stan Getz's quartet from 1973 to October 1974, and also enticing Dave Holland to join Getz's rhythm section.[7] This stint briefly preceded the formation of the Gateway Trio, a group that DeJohnette helped form but did not lead. This group came directly out of the DeJohnette's time with Getz, as Holland joined him in this group along with guitarist John Abercrombie, both of whom would become associated with DeJohnette throughout his career.[5] His next group effort was Directions, a group formed in 1976 featuring saxophonist Alex Foster, bassist Mike Richmond, and Abercrombie,[17] showing the links between the members of the Gateway trio. This was another short-lived group, yet it led directly to the formation of DeJohnette's next group, New Directions, which featured Abercrombie again on guitar along with Lester Bowie on trumpet and Eddie Gómez on bass.[17] This group coexisted with another DeJohnette group, Special Edition, which was the first DeJohnette-led group to receive critical acclaim.[7] This group also helped the careers of many lesser-known young horn players, as it had a rotating front line that included David Murray, Arthur Blythe, Chico Freeman, and John Purcell, among many others.[7]

During this period, especially with Special Edition, DeJohnette offered "the necessary gravity to keep the horns in a tight orbit" in his compositions while also treating his listeners to "the expanded vocabulary of the avant-garde plus the discipline of traditional jazz compositions."[18] DeJohnette's work with Special Edition has been interrupted regularly by other projects, the most significant of which are his recordings in 1983 and tours from 1985 as a member of Keith Jarrett's trio, which was totally devoted to playing jazz standards.[7] The trio included his long-time compatriot Jarrett and bassist Gary Peacock, and all three have been members of the group for over 25 years.[5]

In 1981 he performed at the Woodstock Jazz Festival, held in celebration of the tenth anniversary of the Creative Music Studio.

DeJohnette in the 1990s and the present

DeJohnette continued to work with Special Edition into the 1990s, but did not limit himself to that. In 1990 he toured in a quartet consisting of himself, Herbie Hancock, Pat Metheny, and his long-time collaborator Holland,[7] and released the Parallel Realities CD with this group the same year.[5] In 1992 he released a major collaborative record, Music for the Fifth World, which was inspired by studies with a Native American elder and brought him together musically with players like Vernon Reid and John Scofield.[5] He had also, during the 1980s, resumed playing piano, which led to his 1994 tour as an unaccompanied pianist.[7] He also began working again with Abercrombie and Holland, reviving the Gateway trio.[7]

In 2004 he was nominated for a Grammy award for his work on Keith Jarrett’s live album The Out-of-Towners, and continued to work with that group into 2005.[5] In the next few years DeJohnette would begin and lead three new projects, the first of which was the Latin Project consisting of percussionists Giovanni Hidalgo and Luisito Quintero, reedman Don Byron, pianist Edsel Gomez, and bassist Jerome Harris.[19] The other two new projects were the Jack DeJohnette Quartet, featuring Harris again alongside Danilo Perez and John Patitucci, and the Trio Beyond, a tribute to DeJohnette’s friend Tony Williams and his trio Lifetime (consisting of Williams, Larry Young and John McLaughlin), featuring John Scofield and Larry Goldings.[20] He also founded his own label, Golden Beams Productions, in 2005. That same year, he released Music in the Key of OM on his new label, an electronic album which he created for relaxing and meditative purposes on which he played synthesizer and resonating bells, and which was nominated for a Grammy in the Best New Age Album category.[20] He continued to make albums as a leader and sideman throughout this period as well, one of which was The Elephant Sleeps But Still Remembers, a collaboration that documents the first meeting of DeJohnette and guitarist Bill Frisell in 2001 and led to another tour, with Frisell and Jerome Harris.[20] The next year Trio Beyond released Saudades, a live recording of a concert commemorating Tony Williams in London in 2004. In 2008 he toured with Bobby McFerrin, Chick Corea, and the Jarrett trio, and the next year won the Grammy Award for Best New Age Album with Peace Time.[20] In 2010 he founded the Jack DeJohnette Group, featuring Rudresh Mahanthappa on alto saxophone, David Fiuczynski on double-neck guitar, George Colligan on keyboards and piano, and long-time associate Jerome Harris on electric and acoustic bass guitars.[21]

In 2012, DeJohnette released Sound Travels, which featured appearances by McFerrin, Quintero, Bruce Hornsby, Esperanza Spalding, Lionel Loueke, and Jason Moran.[22] The same year, he was awarded an NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship for his "significant lifetime contributions have helped to enrich jazz and further the growth of the art form."[23]

In 2016, Dejohnette collaborated with saxophonist Ravi Coltrane and Matthew Garrison on the ECM CDIn Movement.

Dejohnette also appears on the 2016 album by Paul Simon called "Stranger to Stranger"

Style

DeJohnette's style incorporates elements of jazz, free jazz, world music, and R&B, contributing to him being one of the most highly regarded and in-demand drummers. Initially a traditional grip player, later he switched to matched grip due to a problem with tendinitis.[24]

His drumming style has been called unique; one critic writes that he is not merely a drummer but a "percussionist, colourist and epigrammatic commentator mediating the shifting ensemble densities" and that "his drumming is always part of the music's internal construction."[25] Modern Drummer magazine, in a 2004 interview, called DeJohnette's drumming "beyond technique."[16]

DeJohnette calls himself an "abstract thinker" when it comes to soloing, saying that he puts "more weight on the abstract than, 'What were you thinking in bar 33?' I don't like to think that way. I can do it, but I like to be more in the flow."[16] In terms of what he feels when he plays, DeJohnette said that when he plays, he goes "into an altered state, a different headspace. I plug into my higher self, into the cosmic library of ideas."[16] He has remarked that he has to play with a lot of restraint when playing in Keith Jarrett's trio, in order "to play with the subtlety that the music requires."[16]

Discography

Awards

Bibliography

References

  1. "Jack DeJohnette:Artist Info". Riad.usk.pk.edu.pl. August 9, 1942. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
  2. "Modern Drummer's Readers Poll Archive, 1979–2014". Modern Drummer. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Stephen L. Barnhart, Percussionists: a Biographical Dictionary (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2000), 88.
  4. "Jack DeJohnette: Biography". Jackdejohnette.com. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Jack DeJohnette: Biography". Jackdejohnette.com. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  6. "Conversations with Jack DeJohnette". YouTube. 3 March 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Lewis Porter, "Jack DeJohnette," in Barry Kernfield, ed., The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, volume 1 (New York: Grove, 2002), 594.
  8. Stuart Nicholson, Jazz Rock: a History (New York: Schirmer Books, 1998), 77–78.
  9. Nicholson, Jazz Rock, 81.
  10. Paul Tingen, Miles Beyond: the Electric Explorations of Miles Davis, 1967-1991 (New York: Billboard Books, 2001), 51.
  11. Tingen, Miles Beyond, 55.
  12. Jack DeJohnette, quoted in Tingen, Miles Beyond, 65.
  13. Tingen, Miles Beyond, 65.
  14. Nicholson, Jazz Rock, 115.
  15. Barnhart, Percussionists, 89; Nicholson, Jazz Rock, 117.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Modern Drummer (May 12, 2004). "Jack DeJohnette". Moderndrummer.com. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  17. 1 2 3 Marjorie Burgess. "Jack DeJohnette Biography". Musician Biographies, Musicianguide.com. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  18. Geoffrey Himes (June 3, 1983). "Jack DeJohnette and Art Blakey". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  19. C. Andrew Hovan (February 19, 2005). "Reviews: Jack DeJohnette Latin Project". All About Jazz. Retrieved April 24, 2012.
  20. 1 2 3 4 "Jack DeJohnette: Biography". Retrieved April 24, 2012.
  21. "Jack DeJohnette:Biography". Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  22. "Sound Travels". Retrieved April 24, 2012.
  23. "National Endowment for the Arts Announces the 2012 NEA Jazz Masters". Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  24. Brenda Pike (October 25, 2009). "Students Improv with Jack DeJohnette". Berklee. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  25. Stuart Nicholson (August 2, 1998). "Jazz: Jack DeJohnette/Oneness: Drum major". The Observer. Retrieved April 24, 2012.
  26. "United States Artists". Unitedstatesartists.org. January 16, 2015. Retrieved May 19, 2015.
  27. Muhal Richard Abrams. "NEA Jazz Masters | NEA". Arts.gov. Retrieved May 19, 2015.
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