Horace Silver -Umbria Jazz Festival 1974 – Past Daily Downbeat

Horace Silver -Umbria Jazz Festival 1974
Horace Silver – Pioneer of Hard Bop.

Horace Silver Group – live at Umbria Jazz, Italy -July 31, 1974 – RAI Radio – Gordon Skene Sound Collection –

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Horace Silver, live at the 1974 Umbria Jazz Festival in Italy on July 31, 1974 and preserved for posterity by RAI-Radio in Rome.

Some background on Horace Silver via the NEA website:

Horace Silver was the heart of the hard bop era, helping to form the influential Jazz Messengers and composing many blues and gospel-flavored songs that have become part of the jazz canon, including “Lonely Woman,” “Song For My Father,” “SeƱor Blues,” “The Preacher,” “Nica’s Dream,” and “Peace.” His piano playing was heavily rhythmic, driving his musical colleagues to greater heights in their solos.

Silver was exposed to music at an early age, hearing Cape Verde Islands folk music from his father. Silver later used the island rhythms and flavor to great effect on his 1960s albums Song For My Father and Cape Verdean Blues. He took up the saxophone and piano in high school, and was influenced early on by the blues of Memphis Slim, various boogie woogie piano players, and the bebop pianists Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk. After a 1950 stint backing guest soloist Stan Getz on a gig in Hartford, Connecticut, Silver was enlisted by Getz to join him on tour for the next year. Getz recorded three of Silver’s earliest compositions, “Split Kick,” “Potter’s Luck,” and “Penny.”

In 1951, he moved to New York and quickly found work with Coleman Hawkins, Bill Harris, Oscar Pettiford, Lester Young, and Art Blakey. In 1952, as a result of a Lou Donaldson record session, he began what became a 28-year relationship with the Blue Note label. Between 1953-55 he played in the groundbreaking band the Jazz Messengers, co-led by Blakey. The band was at the forefront of the hard bop movement that followed bebop. By 1956, Silver formed his own band and Blakey maintained the Jazz Messengers name as his own. Both Silver’s band and the Jazz Messengers turned out to be proving grounds for a number of exceptional, aspiring musicians. Among those who passed through his band were Art Farmer, Donald Byrd, Joe Henderson, Blue Mitchell, Charles Tolliver, Stanley Turrentine, Woody Shaw, and Randy and Michael Brecker. Silver’s terse, funky playing influenced pianists as disparate as Herbie Hancock and Cecil Taylor. For several years in the 1980s, he recorded on his own Silveto label, writing lyrics to his compositions with a decidedly metaphysical bent. In the 1990s, he returned to the hard bop sound he helped create. His autobiography, Let’s Get to the Nitty Gritty, was published in 2006.”

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