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Gary Peacock
Jazz

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NEW YORK, New York
United States

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Last Login:  11/28/2009
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   Gary Peacock: General Info
Member Since4/23/2008
Band MembersFamous Works Selected discography (With Clare Fischer) First Time Out Pacific Jazz, 1962. (With Paul Bley) Floater Savoy, 1962. (With Clare Fischer) Surging Ahead Pacific Jazz, 1962. (With Paul Bley) Paul Bley with Gary Peacock ECM, 1963. (With Paul Bley) Syndrome Savoy, 1963. (With Bill Evans) Trio '64 Verve, 1963. (With Albert Ayler) New York Eye & Ear Control ESP, 1964. (With Albert Ayler) Prophecy ESP, 1964. (With Albert Ayler) Spiritual Unity ESP, 1964. (With Paul Bley) Turns Savoy, 1964. (With Albert Ayler) Spirits Rejoice ESP, 1965. (With Paul Bley) Ballads ECM, 1967. (With Paul Bley) Mr. Joy Limelight, 1968. Eastward SME, 1970. Voices SME, 1971. (With Paul Bley and Barry Altschul) Japan Suite Improvising, 1976. December Poems ECM, 1977. Tales of Another ECM, 1977. (With Paul Bley) Viruosi Improvising, 1978. Voices from the Past: Paradigm ECM, 1979. Shifts in the Wind ECM, 1980. (With Keith Jarrett Trio) Changes 1983, ECM. (With Keith Jarrett Trio) Standards, Vol. 1 Japanese, 1983. (With Keith Jarrett Trio) Standards, Vol. 2 ECM, 1983. (With Keith Jarrett Trio) Changeless (live), ECM, 1987. Guamba ECM, 1987. (With Keith Jarrett) Bye, Bye Blackbird ECM, 1991. Cosi Lontano ... Quasi Dentro Polygram, 1991. Tethered Moon Evidence, 1991. Oracle ECM, 1993. Just So Happens Postcards, 1994. (With Paul Bley and Franz Koglmann) Annette hatHUT, 1995. (With Paul Bley) Mindset Soul Note, 1997. (With Paul Bley) Not Two, Not One ECM, 1999.
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   About Gary Peacock
Over the span of five decades, Gary Peacock has established himself as one of the most versatile and talented bass players in jazz. One of his earliest influences was avant-garde saxophonist Albert Ayler, with whom Peacock performed and recorded in the 1960s. His music has also been greatly affected by his studies of Eastern music and philosophy. Since the 1980s, Peacock has been adding contemporary twists to old standards with pianist Keith Jarrett's trio, which also features Jack DeJohnette on drums. Peacock also continues to experiment in his collaborations with pianist Paul Bley, with whom he has worked since the 1960s. Peacock began playing music as a child, studying piano in elementary school and taking up the drums as a teenager. He still considered himself a pianist and drummer when he entered the Westlake School of Music in Los Angeles in 1952, where he left a fter only six months. Peacock resumed his musical education in 1954 when he was drafted into the army, performing both with the military band at his base in Germany and with a local ensemble of his own. When the bass player left his German group, Peacock took up the instrument himself and has been a bass player ever since. "Once I started playing it, it felt somewhat natural and easy to understand and I got more and more involved with it," Peacock said in an interview published on the Earshot Jazz website. Upon his discharge from the army in 1956, Peacock remained in Germany, briefly joining saxophonist Hans Koller's quintet. Later that year he returned to Los Angeles where he began working with saxophonists Bud Shank and Art Pepper and guitaris t Barney Kessel. He also toured with vibraphonist Terry Gibbs, recorded his first album with keyboardist Clare Fischer, and began his longstanding association with pianist Paul Bley. In 1962 Peacock moved to New York, where he continued to work with Bley and was introduced to the influential avant-garde saxophonist Albert Ayler. "He was about music, really, really about music and about continual development with the instru ment, with technique, with all of that," Peacock recalled in an interview published on the All About Jazz website. "So when he played it wasn't just squawks and beeps and honks and that kind of thing. He was really, he was coming from a real place. It was authentic. It was really him." In addition to playing with Ayler, Peacock performed with pianist George Russell and saxophonist Archie Shepp, then joined a quartet featuring Bley, trumpeter/cornetist Don Cherry, and drummer Pete La Roca. During this period he also became part of pianist Bill Evans's trio and recorded in a second trio with Bley and Evans's drummer Paul Motian. Peacock played briefly in the Miles Davis quintet, filling in for bassist Ron Carter in April and May of 1964. Later that year he toured Europe with Ayler, Cherry, and drummer Sunny Murray, and appeared on several Ayler releases, including the saxophonist's seminal Spiritual Unity, "performances [that] established Peacock as one of the most accomplished doub le bass players in jazz," according to the New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. After the tour with Ayler, however, Peacock took a partial hiatus from music (he continued to record and perform with Bley), stemming in part from a perforated ulcer he suffered during a concert preceding the trip to Europe. In 1969 he moved to Japa n to study Eastern philosophy and medicine. There he recorded with saxophonist Sadao Watanabe, pianist Masabumi Kikuchi, and several visiting American musicians. Peacock returned to the States in 1972 and enrolled in the biology program at the University of Washington, graduating in 1976. After finishing his studies, Peacock resumed his music career in earnest. He returned to Japan in 1976 with Bley and drummer Barry Altschul; their tour produced the live LP Japan Suite. Peacock began to make a name for him self as a bandleader during this period as well, releasing of the critically lauded Tales of Another, with Jarrett and DeJohnette and December Poems on the ECM label in 1977. The latter earned plaudit s from Down Beat magazine: "The reemergence of the unique voicings and intricate logic of bassist Gary Peacock has been one of the undeniable pleasures of the last few years." In both collaborations and solo releases, Peacock's Eastern influences shone through. "The Peacock album is a very different expression of modern jazz," noted a Down Beat review of the 1980 ECM release Shift in the Wind. "It is not 'in the tradition'--or, more precisely, it is in a different tradition ... There is a great concern with space and silence in this music, and it often bridges the gap bewe en jazz and modern classical music." Peacock took a teaching position at the Cornish School of the Allied Arts in 1979, where he remained until 1983. During this time he continued to perform and record as a bandleader with Bley, Jarrett, and DeJohnette. In 1995, along with Bley and tru mpeter Franz Koglmann, he released the album Annette featuring the songs of the innovative vocalist Annette Peacock, who'd been married to both him and Bley. Peacock's recordings with Jarrett and DeJohnette took him in a new direction--back to jazz standards. The disparities between traditional and experimental music is not as great as one would think, Peacock told All About Jazz. "What is your intention? Are you just going to go out and play the songbook? Or are you going to, is your intent to go deeper and deeper and deeper into the music? Going deeper into the music doesn't have anything to do with whether it is a standard or whether it is free playing or whether it is swing. That doesn't ma ke any difference." In 1999 Peacock and Bley reunited with drummer Motian, with whom they had last performed in the 1960s, to record Not Two, Not One. The album was received ecstatically by critics. The Pop Matters website called it "[a ] superb, essential recording, and a perfect album to help bridge the gap between [Miles Davis's] Kind of Blue and right now." The review went on to quote Will Smith's Down Beat analy sis, which noted: "One would not be too far afield to suggest that the direction offered by this trio might be a model for jazz's future--it looks ahead while never ignoring the greatest of the past." Reflecting his Eastern-influenced beliefs, Peacock told the Earshot website that he has no long-range plan for his music and that living in the present, for him, is key. "I could die at any moment, any second, regardless of whether I felt bad or good. So if this is my last moment, where do I want to be? How do I want to be? Do I want to be paying attention? Do I want to experience something? Do I want to be present? That element exists now in my own playing, regardless of who I play with."This attitude spills over into his philosophy on the Jarrett trio, despite the group's 20-year existence. "[T]here is a sense of every performance being the first time we're playing together and the last time we're playing toget her," Peacock told Earshot. "Because we don't know what will happen. Are we ever going to play again? Nobody knows."

   Gary Peacock's Friend Space (Top 16)
Gary Peacock has 1105 friends.
 Keith Jarrett 


 Jack DeJohnette 


 Bill Frisell 


 Paul Motian 


 Jan Garbarek 


 Miles Davis 


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 John Coltrane 


 MICHEL PETRUCCIANI 


 Annette Peacock 


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 Gil Evans 


 Art Pepper 


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 Tom 





Gary Peacock's Friends Comments
Displaying 25 of 219 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
ELAINE CORMANY (Official Page)

ELAINE CORMANY  (Official Page)



Dec 11 2009 6:55 PM


From our family to yours
Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays!

 


Elaine & Antonio
Don Gato


Mike Lloyd

Mike Lloyd



Dec 9 2009 11:24 PM

I am listening to "Tales of another" right now. Great album! The music sounds timeless.
/M
LUIZSANTOSMUSIC.com

LUIZSANTOSMUSIC.com
Online Now!


Dec 8 2009 5:46 PM


Thank you for the friendship
New Album Release! Feel Free to comment!
Have a great week!
Be blessed & Enjoy the ride!
Luiz http://Luizsantosmusic.com Luiz%20Santos%20MusicQuantcast Luiz%20Santos%20MusicQuantcast
STOP ALLA TV DISEDUCATIVA

STOP ALLA TV DISEDUCATIVA



Dec 7 2009 11:09 PM

thanks for the add
Tomas Gubitsch

Tomas Gubitsch



Dec 4 2009 4:58 PM


Songs by Peter Reiter & Francis Lawrence Samuel

Songs by Peter Reiter & Francis Lawrence Samuel



Nov 29 2009 7:48 PM

Thank you, Gary!
;)
Emie R-Roussel

Emie R-Roussel
Online Now!


Nov 29 2009 5:06 PM

Thanks for the add!! Emie


Les Wilson :)

Les Wilson :)



Nov 28 2009 2:13 PM

Many thanks for the acceptance and for so much wonderful music - I remember buying Shift in the Wind and December Poems many years ago and I have been an avid and enthralled listener ever since :)
Best Wishes :)
Gary Hayden

Gary Hayden



Nov 28 2009 12:23 PM

Thanks for the friends add, Gary. I've been a fan since the late 70's and have many of your recordings both as leader and as a band member..Though my favorite is "December Poems"-which I played a million times on vinyl and ordered it as soon as it became available on CD (which is much better suited to this quiet recording)..I love this album of yours in particular and always pull it out and listen a whole lot this time of year, as December creeps up on us..I'm still hoping someday to see you do another disc like this one...
Here's my review of it on Amazon.com if anyone is interested in reading it;
http://www.amazon.com/December-Poems-Gary-Peacock/dp/B000024KW1/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1259410243&sr=1-1
All my best to you, Gary-Thanks for the great works and here's to many more..
Gary (NJ)
Krzysztof Fetras

Krzysztof Fetras



Nov 27 2009 9:29 AM

Thank you for accepting the group of friends! See you somewhere once ... Respect. Regards.
KF
Nino Mezzapelle

Nino Mezzapelle



Nov 24 2009 8:42 PM

Thanks for your friendship. It's a honour for me.
If you have some time, please listen to my music.
 
            Greetings from SicilyItaly
                                             Nino
Stan Le Chinois

Stan Le Chinois



Nov 14 2009 8:16 PM

Hi gary

NEW !!!   Stan le Chinois on LAST FM

Listen ALL  songs for Free

Just clic on below :

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

Nino Mezzapelle

Nino Mezzapelle



Nov 10 2009 10:37 AM

                   Hi, Thanks '♥' for add me!
          Very honoured to have your friendship!
 

             Greetings from Palermo, ♥, Nino
KIMDAEHO

KIMDAEHO



Oct 12 2009 4:32 PM

Nice to meet you, My name is Daeho Kim, I'm your great fan in Korea, and studying bass.

I guess maybe you use Fullcircle(Fishman) pickup and Tomastick Strings with your bass.(not dark one.)

So i get Fullcircle pickup, and i will get Tomastick strings too. but i have some questions,

What gauge strings do you use? i guess medium or light gauge, but i don't know exactly. : (

And maybe there is two ways to use the Fullcircle pickup, Threads Up and Thredads Down.
 
I guess you use Threads Down, but there is no way to confirm.

If you are Okay, let me know about your setup, and some tips on tone making.

And I want to know about your another bass, dark one, what you used when work with Mark.

Strings, Pickup... etc.

I hope you answer as soon as you possible. And I hope see you someday.

Thank you for your Music !!

Have a nice day !! :-)
bruno lasnier

bruno lasnier



Oct 12 2009 6:49 AM

thanks for welcoming a little frenchy
Bruno
neuronal - trailer

Barbara Cobb

Barbara Cobb



Oct 11 2009 5:12 PM

Hi Gary,
 Thanks so much. You music is very inspiring
Best Barbara
Сергей Краснопольский

Сергей Краснопольский



Sep 27 2009 10:36 AM

Parker Coleman

Parker Coleman



Sep 8 2009 3:56 AM

Are you touring any this year?
ELAINE CORMANY (Official Page)

ELAINE CORMANY  (Official Page)



Aug 24 2009 5:24 PM


 
KEEP IT SOUNDING!

 
Atsuko

Atsuko



Aug 24 2009 1:45 PM

Thanks so much for adding me, Gary!!
best wishes, greeting from Tokyo, Japan

Atuko
Marco da Costa

Marco da Costa



Aug 24 2009 3:10 AM

MUITO OBRIGADO!!!! VERY Thank you!!!!
Сергей Краснопольский

Сергей Краснопольский



Aug 23 2009 9:06 PM

Thank you, Gary !
You are one
of my favorite teachers...   
M A M Y K Ô

M A M Y K Ô



Aug 23 2009 3:31 PM

THANKS FOR ADD...GOOD MUSIC !
 
     ... M A M Y K Ô ... 

MONTRÉAL QUÉBEC CANADA
Paulo Lima

Paulo  Lima



Aug 23 2009 2:47 PM

Thanks for The Add.
World Class Martial Arts

World Class Martial Arts



Aug 12 2009 7:14 PM

Photobucket..
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