Abercrombie, John
- Genre: Jazz
- Instrument: Guitar
- Web Site: Here
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Abercrombie, John
Over a career spanning more than 40 years and nearly 50
albums, John Abercrombie has established himself as one the masters of jazz
guitar. Favoring unusual sounds (he played electronic mandolin on McCoy Tyner's
1993 album 4x4) and nontraditional ensembles (recent quartet recordings have
included violinist Mark Feldman), Abercrombie is a restless experimenter,
working firmly in the jazz tradition while pushing the boundaries of meter and
harmony."
Born on December 16, 1944 in Port Chester, New York,
Abercrombie grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut, where he began playing the
guitar at age 14. Like many teenagers at the time, he started out imitating
Chuck Berry licks. But it was the bluesy music of Barney Kessel that attracted
him to jazz. Abercrombie enrolled at Boston's Berklee College of Music and
teamed up with other students to play local clubs and bars. One of those clubs,
Paul's Mall, was connected to a larger club next door, the Jazz Workshop, where
Abercrombie ducked in during his free time to watch John Coltrane and
Thelonious Monk.
Abercrombie's appearances at Paul's Mall led to several
fortuitous meetings. Organist Johnny Hammond Smith spotted the young
Abercrombie and invited him to go on tour while he was still a student. During
the same period, Ambercrombie also met the Brecker Brothers, who invited him to
become a new part of their group Dreams, which would become one the prominent
jazz-rock bands of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Abercrombie appears on the
group's eponymous debut album.
After graduating from Berklee, Abercrombie headed to New
York, where he quickly became one of New York's most in-demand session players.
He recorded with Gil Evans, Gato Barbieri, and Barry Miles, to name a few. He
was also a regular with Chico Hamilton's group.
But it was in Billy Cobham's band, which also featured the
Brecker brothers, that Abercrombie first started to build a following. He was
featured on several of Cobham's albums, including Crosswinds, Total Eclipse and
Shabazz, all of which staked new ground in fusion jazz. The group was booked
into large concert halls and arenas, appearing on bills with such top rock
attractions as the Doobie Brothers. It was not, however, the direction
Abercrombie had hoped his career would go. "One night we appeared at the
Spectrum in Phildelphia and I thought, what am I doing here?" he said.
"It just didn't compute."
In the early 1970s, Abercrombie ran into Manfred Eicher, who
invited him to record for ECM. The result was Abercrombie's first solo album, Timeless,
in which he was backed by Jan Hammer and Jack DeJohnette. Abercrombie's second
album, Gateway, was released in November 1975 with DeJohnette and bassist Dave
Holland; a second Gateway recording was released in June 1978.
He then moved on to a traditional quartet format, recording
three albums on ECM--Arcade, Abercrombie Quartet, and M--with pianist Richie
Beirach, bassist George Mraz and drummer Peter Donald. "It was extremely
important to have that group for many reasons," Abercrombie told AAJ in
2004. "It was, of course, a good band, but it was also my first
opportunity to really be a leader and to write consistently for the same group
of musicians."
His second group, a trio with bassist Marc Johnson and
drummer Peter Erskine, marked the first time he experimented with the guitar
synthesizer. This gave him the opportunity to play what he called "louder,
more open music" with a propulsive beat, demonstrated in the group's three
releases, Getting There (featuring Michael Brecker) in 1987, Current Events in
1988, and John Abercrombie, Marc Johnson & Peter Erskine in 1989.
From there, he moved to partnerships that he would shuffle
and reshuffle for the next 20 years. He reunited with his Gateway bandmembers
in 1995 for an album appropriately titled Homecoming, but not before forming
yet a third ensemble that would make several recordings together. Abercrombie
had long been enamored with the sound of jazz organ, so he teamed with organist
Dan Wall and drummer Adam Nussbaum in While We Were Young and Speak of the
Devil (both 1993) and, in 1997 Tactics. Another album, titled Open Land, added
violinist Mark Feldman and saxophonist Joe Lovano to the mix.
His affiliation with Feldman, in a quartet that included
Marc Johnson and drummer Joey Barron, ushered in a period of looser, freer,
almost improvisatory playing. "I like free playing that has some
relationship to a melody; very much the way Ornette Coleman used to write all
those wonderful songs and then they would play without chords on a lot of them,"
he told AAJ. In fact, Abercrombie's work from this period has been compared to
chamber music, with its delicacy of sound and telepathic communication between
musicians.
Throughout the 1990s and into 2000 and beyond, Abercrombie
has continued to pluck from the ranks of jazz royalty--and be plucked for guest
appearances on other artists' recordings. One propitious relationship was with
guitarist, pianist, and composer Ralph Towner, with whom Abercrombie has worked
in a duet setting. (Abercrombie has also worked in guitar duos with John
Scofield, for 1993's Solar and with Joe Beck in Coincidence, released in 2007).
Abercrombie has also recorded with saxophonist Jan Garbarek and bassist Eddie
Gomez.
Abercrombie keeps up a heavy touring schedule and continues to
record with ECM, a relationship that has spanned more than 30 years. As he told
one interviewer, "I'd like people to perceive me as having a direct
connection to the history of jazz guitar, while expanding some musical
boundaries." That, no doubt, will be his legacy.
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