Pat Metheny
@ the Barbican Centre
15 November 2024 - 10 July 2010
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Biography
Pat Metheny was born in Kansas City on August 12,
1954 into a musical family. Starting on trumpet at the age of 8,
Metheny switched to guitar at age 12. By the age of 15, he was working
regularly with the best jazz musicians in Kansas City, receiving
valuable on-the-bandstand experience at an unusually young age.
Metheny first burst onto the international jazz scene in 1974. Over
the course of his three-year stint with vibraphone great Gary Burton,
the young Missouri native already displayed his soon-to-become trademarked
playing style, which blended the loose and flexible articulation
customarily reserved for horn players with an advanced rhythmic
and harmonic sensibility - a way of playing and improvising that
was modern in conception but grounded deeply in the jazz tradition
of melody, swing, and the blues. With the release of his first album,
Bright Size Life (1975), he reinvented the traditional "jazz
guitar" sound for a new generation of players. Throughout his
career, Pat Metheny has continued to re-define the genre by utilizing
new technology and constantly working to evolve the improvisational
and sonic potential of his instrument.
Metheny's versatility is almost nearly without
peer on any instrument. Over the years, he has performed with artists
as diverse as Steve Reich to Ornette Coleman to Herbie Hancock to
Jim Hall to Milton Nascimento to David Bowie. He has been part of
a writing team with keyboardist Lyle Mays for more than twenty years
- an association that has been compared to the Lennon/McCartney
and Ellington/Strayhorn partnerships by critics and listeners alike.
Metheny's body of work includes compositions for solo guitar, small
ensembles, electric and acoustic instruments, large orchestras,
and ballet pieces, with settings ranging from modern jazz to rock
to classical.
As well as being an accomplished musician, Metheny
has also participated in the academic arena as a music educator.
At 18, he was the youngest teacher ever at the University of Miami.
At 19, he became the youngest teacher ever at the Berklee College
of Music, where he also received an honorary doctorate more than
twenty years later (1996). He has also taught music workshops all
over the world, from the Dutch Royal Conservatory to the Thelonius
Monk Institute of Jazz to clinics in Asia and South America. He
has also been a true musical pioneer in the realm of electronic
music, and was one of the very first jazz musicians to treat the
synthesizer as a serious musical instrument. Years before the invention
of MIDI technology, Metheny was using the Synclavier as a composing
tool. He also been instrumental in the development of several new
kinds of guitars such as the soprano acoustic guitar, the 42-string
Pikasso guitar, Ibanez's PM-100 jazz guitar, and a variety of other
custom instruments.
It is one thing to attain popularity as a musician,
but it is another to receive the kind of acclaim Metheny has garnered
from critics and peers. Over the years, Metheny has won countless
polls as "Best Jazz Guitarist" and awards, including three
gold records for (Still Life) Talking, Letter from Home, and Secret
Story. He has also won 17 Grammy Awards spread out over a variety
of different categories including Best Rock Instrumental, Best Contemporary
Jazz Recording, Best Jazz Instrumental Solo, Best Instrumental Composition.
The Pat Metheny Group won an unprecedented seven consecutive Grammies
for seven consecutive albums. Metheny has spent most of his life
on tour, averaging between 120-240 shows a year since 1974. At the
time of this writing, he continues to be one of the brightest stars
of the jazz community, dedicating time to both his own projects
and those of emerging artists and established veterans alike, helping
them to reach their audience as well as realizing their own artistic
visions.
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