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Musician

Gary Peacock

Born:

Bassist {{m: Gary Peacock = 10182}} played a major role in the development of avant-garde jazz. He has worked with the likes of Miles Davis, {{m: Bill Evans = 6592}}, {{m: Albert Ayler = 3538}}, {{Don Cherry}, {{Barney Kessel}}, {{m: Don Ellis = 6530}}, {{m: Terry Gibbs = 7026}}, {{m: Shorty Rogers = 3888}}, the Paul Bley Trio, {{m: Jimmy Giuffre = 7059}}, {{m: Roland Kirk = 23161}} and {{m: George Russell = 3978}}, among others. His recorded output is enormous — ECM Records alone lists fifty-one CDs on which he is featured. He has collaborated frequently with Ralph Towner in duet format, and since the late '70s has played and recorded in a world-renowned trio with Keith Jarrett and Jack DeJohnette. Peacock was born in Burley, Idaho, on May 12, 1935; He grew up in Yakima, Washington, where he attended Yakima Senior High School

Album

At The Deer Head Inn: The Complete Recordings

Label: ECM Records
Released: 2025
Track listing: Solar; Basin Street Blues; Chandra; You Don't Know What Love Is; You And The Night And The Music; Bye Bye Blackbird; It's Easy To Remember; Everything I Love; I Fall In Love Too Easily; Straight No Chaser; All of You; Someday My Prince Will Come; The Old Country; Golden Earrings; How Long Has This Been Going On

Album

Prophecy Live, First Visit

Label: Ezz-thetics
Released: 2025
Track listing: Spirits; Wizard; Ghost 1st Variation; Prophecy; Ghost 2nd Variation; Saints; Ghosts; Wizard; Children; Spirits (theme).

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Article: In the Artist's Own Words

Why Is Japan a Jazz Paradise? Part 2—From Sake to Soul: Jazz Musicians and Their Love for Japan

Read "Why Is Japan a Jazz Paradise? Part 2—From Sake to Soul: Jazz Musicians and Their Love for Japan" reviewed by Atzko Kohashi


Part 1 | Part 2 In May 2025 Japan welcomed an estimated 3.693 million visitors, marking a surge in global fascination with the country--up 125% (more than double!) compared to a decade ago. Many come for the exquisite Japanese cuisine, the tranquil atmosphere of temples and shrines, the ultra-modern buzz of Tokyo, or the ...

1

Article: Album Review

Patricio Morales: La Tierra Canta

Read "La Tierra Canta" reviewed by Richard J Salvucci


If it has been some time since you listened to Ralph Towner, like a few decades or so, it may not be immediately obvious what classical guitarist Patricio Morales is doing. It may not even be obvious that he is playing jazz, although, by Morales' own account, Towner was a mentor and huge influence when he ...

1

Article: Liner Notes

Michael Waldrop: Native Son

Read "Michael Waldrop: Native Son" reviewed by Bill Milkowski


Following two successful big band projects--the swinging and swaggering Time Within Itself and Origin Suite--drummer-composer-bandleader Michael Waldrop has brought things down to a more intimate level on Native Son. In some ways a return to his first album as a leader, 2002's Triangularity, a sterling piano trio outing which he reissued in 2019, Native ...

17

Article: Album Review

Albert Ayler Trio: Prophecy Live, First Visit

Read "Prophecy Live, First Visit" reviewed by Glenn Astarita


This 1964 New York City recording, now remastered and released on the Ezzthetics label, captures Albert Ayler with Gary Peacock and Sunny Murray at a crucial juncture in the saxophonist's development. This performance at the Cellar Cafe marks an early, vital snapshot of a trio that would become foundational to the free jazz movement. It is ...

16

Article: Interview

Marilyn Crispell: Fearless, Deeply Sensitive and Shaping the Moment

Read "Marilyn Crispell: Fearless, Deeply Sensitive and Shaping the Moment" reviewed by Dean Nardi


As Marilyn Crispell talked about her multitude of recent recordings, either solo or with this trio or that quartet, she mentioned needing to pack her bags before going out on tour. She has lived in Woodstock, New York since 1977 and is comfortable there. “When I'm at home, not out recording, I look out in the ...

11

Article: Album Review

Albert Ayler Trio: Prophecy Live, First Visit

Read "Prophecy Live, First Visit" reviewed by Mark Corroto


No jazz artist has been as polarizing as Albert Ayler. Listeners either revere him as a prophet or dismiss him as a charlatan. To some, his music is a divine revelation; to others, an indecipherable cacophony. But while Ayler's music was undeniably radical, he was no insurrectionist-- he was simply a true original. His sound was ...

Article: Album Review

Don Ellis: How Time Passes to Essence Revisited

Read "How Time Passes to Essence Revisited" reviewed by Angelo Leonardi


Nelle storie del jazz Don Ellis è ricordato principalmente per l'innovativa big band che guidò per un decennio, dalla metà degli anni sessanta. Questa preziosa riedizione ci rammenta i suoi inizi di carriera, quando esplorava nuove soluzioni a partire dalla tromba: accoppia il suo debutto in quartetto (...How Time Passes...) dell'ottobre 1960 con alcuni brani di ...


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