Greg Osby
American saxophonist (born 1960)
Musical artist
Greg Osby (born August 3, 1960[ 1] ) is an American saxophonist and composer.
Biography
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Osby studied at Howard University , then at the Berklee College of Music .[ 1] He moved to New York City in 1982, where he played with Jaki Byard , Jim Hall , Muhal Richard Abrams , Andrew Hill , Jack DeJohnette , Dizzy Gillespie , and Herbie Hancock .[ 2] In 1985, he joined DeJohnette's group Special Edition.[ 2] With Geri Allen , Steve Coleman , Gary Thomas , and Cassandra Wilson , he was a founding member of the M-Base Collective.[ 3]
Osby began recording albums under his own name for JMT Records in the mid-1980s, then signed with Blue Note in 1989.[ 2] In 2007, he formed his own label, Inner Circle Music .[ 2] He gave exposure to young pianist Jason Moran ,[ 4] who appeared on most of Osby's 1990s albums, including Further Ado , Zero , Banned in New York and Symbols of Light , a double quartet featuring the addition of a string quartet to the band.[ 5]
He has also played with Phil Lesh and Friends , and he has toured with the Dead , a reincarnation of the Grateful Dead .[ 6] He received the Playboy Magazine Jazz Artist of the Year award for 2004 and 2009.[ 7]
Nate Chinen, writing for The New York Times , called Osby "a mentor and a pacesetter, one of the sturdier bridges between jazz generations," and stated that he has "a keen, focused tone on alto saxophone and a hummingbird's phrasing, an equilibrium of hover and flutter."[ 8]
Discography
As leader
Recording date
Title
Label
Year released
Notes
1987-05, 1987-06
Greg Osby and Sound Theatre
JMT
1987
1988-05
Mindgames
JMT
1988
1989-07
Season of Renewal
JMT
1989
1990-10, 1990-11
Man-Talk for Moderns Vol. X
Blue Note
1991
1993?
3-D Lifestyles
Blue Note
1993
1995?
Black Book
Blue Note
1995
1996?
Art Forum
Blue Note
1996
1997?
Further Ado
Blue Note
1997
1997-12
Banned in New York
Blue Note
1998
Live
1998-01
Zero
Blue Note
1998
1998-12
Friendly Fire
Blue Note
1999
with Joe Lovano , Jason Moran, Cameron Brown, Idriss Muhammad
1999-04
Inner Circle
Blue Note
2002
with Stefon Harris, Jason Moran, Tarus Mateen, Eric Harland
1999-05
New Directions
Blue Note
2000
with Stefon Harris , Jason Moran , Mark Shim
1999-09
The Invisible Hand
Blue Note
2000
with Gary Thomas , Andrew Hill , Jim Hall , Scott Colley , Terri Lyne Carrington
2001-01
Symbols of Light (A Solution)
Blue Note
2001
with Jason Moran, Scott Colley, Marlon Browden, Nioka Workman, Judith Insell, Marlene Rice, Christian Howes
2003-01
St. Louis Shoes
Blue Note
2003
2004-01
Public
Blue Note
2004
Live
2005-02
Channel Three
Blue Note
2005
with Jeff "Tain" Watts, Matt Brewer
2008-08
9 Levels
Inner Circle Music
2008
2023-10
Minimalism
Inner Circle Music
2023
with Tal Cohen, João Barradas, Nimrod Speaks, Adam Arruda, Viktorija Pilatovic, Alessandra Diodati
As sideman
With Franco Ambrosetti
With Uri Caine
With Gary Thomas
With Andrew Hill
With others
Cecil Brooks III , The Collective (Muse, 1989)
Terri Lyne Carrington , Structure (ACT Music, 2004)
Steve Coleman , Drop Kick (Novus , 1992)
Andrew Cyrille , Low Blue Flame (Tum, 2006) – recorded in 2005
Robin Eubanks , Karma (JMT, 1991)
Jimmy Herring , Lifeboat (Abstract Logix, 2008)
Jason Moran , Soundtrack to Human Motion (Blue Note, 1999) – recorded in 1998
Tineke Postma , Sonic Halo (Challenge Records , 2014)
Project Z , Lincoln Memorial (Abstract Logix, 2005) – recorded in 2002
Sam Rivers ' Rivbea All-star Orchestra, Inspiration (BMG France, 1999)
Sam Rivers' Rivbea All-star Orchestra, Culmination (BMG France, 1999)
References
^ a b Feather, Leonard; Gitler, Ira (1999). "Osby, Greg". The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz . New York: Oxford University Press . p. 508.
^ a b c d "Greg Osby: Biography" . All About Jazz . Retrieved February 22, 2022 .
^ Ankeny, Jason. "Greg Osby" . AllMusic . Retrieved June 4, 2017 .
^ Chinen, Nate (2019). Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century . Vintage Books. pp. 106– 108.
^ Lyles, Ronald (April 6, 2011). "Greg Osby Discography" . JazzDiscography.com . Retrieved February 28, 2022 .
^ Varga, George (October 24, 2014). "Sax Great Greg Osby Transcends the Dead" . San Diego Union Tribune . Retrieved February 28, 2022 .
^ Fripp, Matt (January 21, 2022). "Interview with American Saxophone Great Greg Osby" . JazzFuel . Retrieved February 28, 2022 .
^ Chinen, Nate (August 4, 2010). "Bridging Jazz Generations Without Nostalgia" . New York Times . Retrieved February 28, 2022 .
External links
Years given are for the recording(s), not first release, unless stated otherwise.
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