1961 in jazz

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1961 in jazz
Decade1960s in jazz
Music1961 in music
StandardsList of post-1950 jazz standards
See also1960 in jazz1962 in jazz
List of years in jazz

This is a timeline documenting events of jazz in the year 1961.

Events[]

June[]

  • 25Bill Evans Trio records Sunday at the Village Vanguard and Waltz for Debby during a two-week stay at The Village Vanguard in New York. The recording was made from five sets they played on June 25 and was the last time the trio would play before virtuoso bassist Scott LaFaro's death 10 days later.
  • 30 – The 7th Newport Jazz Festival started in Newport, Rhode Island (June 30 – July 3).[1]

August[]

  • 4 – The very first Moldejazz started in Molde, Norway (August 4 – 6).[2]

November[]

  • 1 – John Coltrane begins recording his first live record Live! at the Village Vanguard.

Unknown dates[]

  • Bengali Indian sitar player and composer Ravi Shankar and western jazz musicians Gary Peacock and Bud Shank collaborate on the album Improvisations. The album combines the use of sitar and jazz music and is considered an early example of fusion experiments with jazz and Indian classical music. In early 1961 John Coltrane begins listening to North Indian music and the music of Shankar becomes influential in his development as a musician.
  • John Coltrane sells an estimated 30,000 copies of My Favorite Things in its first year of release.

Album releases[]

  • Basie at BirdlandCount Basie Orchestra (Roulette)
  • A Jazz Hour with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers: Blues MarchArt Blakey (Movieplay)
  • Mosaic – Art Blakey (Blue Note)
  • Time Further OutThe Dave Brubeck Quartet (Columbia)
  • Con AlmaRay Bryant (Columbia)
  • Free Jazz: A Collective ImprovisationOrnette Coleman (Atlantic)
  • Coltrane Jazz – John Coltrane (Atlantic)
  • Olé Coltrane – John Coltrane (Atlantic)
  • My Favorite Things – John Coltrane (Atlantic)
  • Whistle StopKenny Dorham (Blue Note)
  • American FreedomDuke Ellington & Louis Armstrong (Blue Note)
  • Out of the CoolGil Evans Orchestra (Impulse!)
  • FocusStan Getz (Verve)
  • 1961Jimmy Giuffre 3 (ECM)
  • Eastern SoundsYusef Lateef (Moodsville)
  • Out FrontBooker Little (Candid)
  • Kenton's West Side StoryStan Kenton (Capitol) – Grammy winning album
  • MingusCharles Mingus (Candid Records)
  • Oh YeahCharles Mingus (Atlantic Records)
  • All the Sad Young Men (album)Anita O'Day (Verve)
  • The Futuristic Sounds of Sun RaSun Ra and his Arkestra (Savoy Records)
  • We Are In the Future – Sun Ra and his Arkestra (Savoy Records)
  • We Travel the Spaceways – Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra
  • Secrets of the Sun – by Sun Ra and his Solar Arkestra (El Saturn Records)
  • Cosmic Tones for Mental Therapy – Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra
  • Bad and Beautiful – Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra (El Saturn Records, Impulse!)
  • Fate in a Pleasant Mood – Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra (El Saturn Records, Impulse!)
  • Percussion Bitter SweetMax Roach (Impulse!)
  • Forbidden FruitNina Simone (Colpix)

Standards[]

Deaths[]

February
  • 4Alphonse Picou, American clarinetist and composer (born 1878).
  • 7Noah Lewis, American harmonica player (born 1891).
  • 22Nick LaRocca, New Orleans cornetist and trumpeter (born 1889).
March
  • 6George Formby, English actor, singer-songwriter, and comedian (born 1904).
  • 9Wilber Sweatman, American clarinetist (born 1882).
  • 24Freddy Johnson, American pianist and singer (born 1904).
April
  • 29Miff Mole, American trombonist and bandleader (born 1898).
July
  • 6Scott LaFaro, American upright bassist (born 1936).
August
  • 15Stick McGhee, American guitarist (born 1918).
October
  • 5Booker Little American trumpeter and composer (born 1938).
Unknown date
  • Cuba Austin, American drummer (born 1906).

Births[]

January
  • 12Ivo Perelman, Brazilian saxophonist.
  • 16Kenneth Sivertsen, Norwegian composer and guitarist (died 2006).
  • 18Bobby Broom, American guitarist, composer, and educator.
February
  • 5Clark Tracey, British drummer, band leader, and composer.
  • 9Steve Wilson, American saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist.
  • 10Paolo Fresu, Italian trumpeter, flugelhornist, composer, and arranger.
  • 12Knut Reiersrud, Norwegian guitarist.
  • 21Mike Nielsen, Irish guitarist, composer, and educator.
March
  • 2Harald Dahlstrøm, Norwegian pianist.
  • 5Marcelo Peralta, Argentine saxophones, piano, accordion, the Latin American aerophones, and composer.
  • 14Joe Ascione, American drummer (died 2016).
  • 23Eivind Aarset, Norwegian guitarist.
  • 25Makoto Ozone, Japanese pianist.
  • 27Tak Matsumoto, Japanese guitarist, producer, arranger, composer, singer and songwriter.
  • 29Ken Stubbs, English alto saxophonist, and composer.[3]
  • 30Tina May, English singer.
  • 31Mark Lockheart, British tenor saxophonist, Loose Tubes.
April
  • 9Chris Abrahams, New Zealand pianist and composer.
  • 23Gene Calderazzo, American drummer.
  • 25
    • Carl Allen, American drummer.
    • Paul Wagnberg, Swedish–Norwegian organist and keyboarder.
  • 30Alan Steward, Dutch record producer and multi-instrumentalist.[4]
May
  • 5Flavio Boltro, Italian trumpeter and flugelhornist.
  • 11Brian Simpson (musician), American pianist.
  • 17Enya, Irish singer-songwriter.
  • 21Rachelle Ferrell, American vocalist.
  • 24Jarmo Savolainen, Finnish pianist and composer (died 2009).
  • 27 - Ivan Božičević, Croatian composer, pianist, and organist.
June
  • 4El DeBarge, American singer-songwriter.
  • 10Gary Thomas, American saxophonist.
  • 15
  • 18Alison Moyet, British singer-songwriter.
  • 24Marvin Smith, American drummer and composer.
July
  • 7Leon Bosch, South African upright bassist.
  • 8Karl Seglem, Norwegian saxophonist and goat horn player.
  • 26Keiko Matsui, Japanese pianist and composer.
  • 29Michael Publig, Austrian pianist and composer.
August
  • 3Art Porter Jr., American saxophonist (died 1996).
  • 13Koji Kondo, Japanese composer, pianist, and sound director.
  • 17Everette Harp, American saxophonist.
  • 23Anita Wardell, English singer.
September
  • 1Boney James, American saxophonist, songwriter, and producer.
  • 7LeRoi Moore, American saxophonist (Dave Matthews Band) (died 2008).[5]
  • 22Kofi Burbridge, American keyboardist and flautist, Tedeschi Trucks Band (died 2019).[6]
  • 29David Kikoski, American pianist.
October
  • 10Jonathan Butler, South African singer-songwriter and guitarist.
  • 11Xavier Desandre Navarre, French percussionist and drummer.
  • 18Bo Sundström, Swedish singer and songwriter, Bo Kaspers orkester.
  • 18Wynton Marsalis, American trumpeter.
  • 20
    • Audun Kleive, Norwegian drummer.
    • David Becker, American guitarist.
  • 25Franck Amsallem, French-American pianist, arranger, composer, and singer.
  • 27Igor Butman, Russian saxophonist.
November
  • 13Candye Kane, American singer and entertainer (pancreatic cancer) (died 2016).[7]
  • 19Mornington Lockett, English saxophonist.
December
  • 5Anders Bergcrantz, Swedish trumpeter.
  • 24Ralph Bowen, Canadian saxophonist.
  • 29Lê Quan Ninh, French percussionist.
Unknown date
  • Paul Hanmer, South African composer and pianist.

Awards[]

Music criticism[]

  • Dan Morgenstern, Jazz Journal (1958–1961), Metronome (1961)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Newport Jazz Festival 1961 Poster". Rirocks.net. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
  2. ^ "1961 – Den første festivalen" (in Norwegian). Romsdals Budstikke. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
  3. ^ "Jazz Musicians Born On March 29". All About Jazz. Retrieved 2018-04-14.
  4. ^ "Jazz Musicians Born On April 30". All About Jazz. Retrieved 2018-03-30.
  5. ^ Kreps, Daniel (2008-08-19). "Dave Matthews Band Saxophonist LeRoi Moore Dead at 46". The Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2016-02-27.
  6. ^ "In Memoriam: Kofi Burbridge, 1961–2019". Jambands.com. 2019-02-16. Retrieved 2019-02-19.
  7. ^ Varga, George (2016-05-09). "Candye Kane dies at 54; performer sang of self-acceptance even while battling cancer". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2016-12-05.

Bibliography[]

  • Ratliff, Ben (2007). Coltrane: The Story of a Sound. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-374-12606-2.
  • The New Real Book, Volume I. Sher Music. 1988. ISBN 0-9614701-4-3.
  • The New Real Book, Volume II. Sher Music. 1991. ISBN 0-9614701-7-8.
  • The New Real Book, Volume III. Sher Music. 1995. ISBN 1-883217-30-X.
  • The Real Book, Volume I (6th ed.). Hal Leonard. 2004. ISBN 0-634-06038-4.
  • The Real Book, Volume II (2nd ed.). Hal Leonard. 2007. ISBN 1-4234-2452-2.
  • The Real Book, Volume III (2nd ed.). Hal Leonard. 2006. ISBN 0-634-06136-4.
  • The Real Jazz Book. Warner Bros. ISBN 978-91-85041-36-7.
  • The Real Vocal Book, Volume I. Hal Leonard. 2006. ISBN 0-634-06080-5.

External links[]

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