The Stanley Clarke Band
@ the Love Supreme Jazz Festival
2 July 2016
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Four-time Grammy Award winner Stanley Clarke is
undoubtedly one of the most celebrated acoustic and electric bass
players in the world. What’s more, he is equally gifted as
a recording artist, performer, composer, conductor, arranger, producer
and film score composer. A true pioneer in jazz and jazz-fusion,
Clarke is particularly known for his ferocious bass dexterity and
consummate musicality. Unquestionably, he has attained “living
legend” status during his over 40-year career as a bass virtuoso.
Clarke’s creativity has been recognised
and rewarded in every way imaginable: gold and platinum records,
Grammy Awards, Emmy nominations, virtually every readers and critics
poll in existence, and more. He was Rolling Stone’s very first
Jazzman of the Year and bassist winner of Playboy’s Music
Award for ten straight years. Clarke was honoured with Bass Player
Magazine’s Lifetime Achievement Award and is a member of Guitar
Player Magazine’s “Gallery of Greats.” In 2004
he was featured in Los Angeles Magazine as one of the Top 50 Most
Influential People. He was honoured with the key to the city of
Philadelphia, a Doctorate from Philadelphia’s University of
the Arts and put his hands in cement as a 1999 inductee into Hollywood’s
‘Rock Walk.’ In 2011 he was honoured with the highly
prestigious Miles Davis Award at the Montreal Jazz Festival for
his entire body of work. Most recently Clarke won the 2013 and 2014
Downbeat Magazine’s Reader’s and Critic’s Poll
for Best Electric Bass Player.
In 2011 Clarke won a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary
Jazz Album, The Stanley Clarke Band, with Ruslan Sirota and Ronald
Bruner, Jr., featuring pianist Hiromi. He was also nominated for
the ‘No Mystery’ cut as Best Pop Instrumental Performance.
The same year Clarke won a Latin Grammy for Best Instrumental Album
with Return to Forever’s “Forever,” along with
group members Chick Corea and Lenny White. “Forever”
went on to win him the 2012 Grammy award for Best Instrumental Album.
Clarke’s eagerly awaited new CD, The Stanley Clarke Band:
“UP,” was released on Mack Avenue Records September
30, 2014. Entirely produced by Clarke, he considers “UP”
to be the most energetic, fun, rhythmic and upbeat album that he
has ever done. Unlike his predominant acoustic bass work on the
last few albums, “UP” is almost equal electric and acoustic
bass. It has already garnered rave reviews. Clarke was nominated
for a 2015 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Arrangement Instrumental or
A Cappella for the song “Last Train to Sanity” from
“UP.” The CD also has garnished him a 2015 NAACP Image
Award nomination for Best Jazz Album.
Stanley Clarke was barely out of his teens when
he exploded into the jazz world in 1971. Fresh out of the Philadelphia
Academy of Music, he arrived in New York City and immediately landed
jobs with famous bandleaders such as Horace Silver, Art Blakey,
Dexter Gordon, Joe Henderson, Pharaoh Saunders, Gil Evans and Stan
Getz among others. As a young prodigy he was immediately recognized
for his sense of lyricism and melody, which he had distilled from
his bass heroes Charles Mingus, Scott LaFaro and others, as well
as non-bass players like John Coltrane.
Clarke fired the bass ‘shot heard round
the world’ that started the ‘70s bass revolution and
paved the way for all bassists/soloists/bandleaders to follow. In
1974, he released his eponymous “Stanley Clarke” album,
which featured the hit single, “Lopsy Lu.” Two years
later, he released “School Days,” an album whose title
track is now a bona fide bass anthem. The song, “School Days,”
has since become a must-learn for nearly every up-and-coming bassist,
regardless of genre.
Leading the bass liberation movement, Clarke envisioned
the bass as a viable, melodic solo instrument positioned at the
front of the stage rather than in a background role and he was uniquely
qualified to take it there. A pioneer at 25, he became the first
jazz-fusion bassist in history to headline tours, sell out shows
worldwide and craft albums that achieved gold status. He was also
the first bassist in history to double on acoustic and electric
bass with equal virtuosity, power and fire. In his ongoing efforts
to push the bass to new limits, he invented two new instruments,
the piccolo bass and the tenor bass. The piccolo bass is tuned one
octave higher than the traditional electric bass. The tenor bass
is tuned one fourth higher than standard. Both of these instruments
have enabled Clarke to extend his melodic range to higher and more
expressive registers.
One of Clarke’s musical visions became a reality in the early
1970’s when he met Chick Corea and eventually formed the seminal
electric jazz/fusion band Return To Forever. RTF was a showcase
for each of the quartet’s strong musical personalities, composing
prowess and instrumental voices. In additions to their recent Grammy
Award winning “Forever” CD, the band recorded eight
albums, two of which were certified gold (Return To Forever and
the classic Romantic Warrior). They also won a Grammy Award (No
Mystery) and received numerous nominations while touring incessantly.
In 2011 Clarke reunited with founding members, Chick Corea and Lenny
White, for the highly anticipated and extremely successful Return
To Forever 2-year, 90-city world tour.
Always in search of new challenges, Clarke turned
his boundless creative energy to film and television scoring in
the mid-1980s. He has become one of the elite in-demand composers
in Hollywood. Starting on the small screen with an Emmy-nominated
score for Pee Wee’s Playhouse, he transitioned to the silver
screen and now has well over 65 film and television credits to his
name. As composer, orchestrator, conductor and performer he has
scored such blockbuster films as ‘Boyz ‘N the Hood,
What’s Love Got To Do With It?, The Transporter, Romeo Must
Die, Passenger 57, Poetic Justice, Best Man Holiday and The Five
Heartbeats just to name a few. He even scored the Michael Jackson
video Remember the Time, directed by John Singleton. Most recently
he scored the 2016 box office buster, Barbershop: The Next Cut.
Clarke has been nominated for three Emmys and won a BMI Award for
Boyz ‘N the Hood. In 2014 he accepted an invitation to become
a member of the exclusive Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.
“Film has given me the opportunity to
write large orchestral scores and to compose music not normally
associated with myself,” says Clarke. “It’s
given me the chance to conduct orchestras and arrange music for
various types of ensembles. It’s been a diverse experience
for me musically, made me a more complete musician, and focused
my skills completely.” His 1995 release, “Stanley
Clarke at the Movies,” is a testament to this heightened level
of musicianship.
In addition to touring with his own band, Clarke
has always enjoyed the challenge of collaborating with other artists
on tour. Clarke teamed up with keyboardist George Duke in 1981 to
form the Clarke/Duke Project. Together they scored a top 20 pop
hit with “Sweet Baby,” recorded three albums. Over the
last decade he toured with George Duke in 2006 and the Clarke/Duke
4: Bring It Tour in 2012 and 2013, until Duke’s untimely death.
Clarke’s involvement in additional projects as leader or active
member include: Jeff Beck (world tours, 1979), Keith Richards’
New Barbarians (world tour, 1980), Animal Logic (with Stuart Copeland,
two albums and tours, 1989), the “Superband” (with Larry
Carlton, Billy Cobham, Najee and Deron Johnson, 1993-1994), The
Rite of Strings (with Jean-Luc Ponty and Al Di Meola, 1995 and 2004)
Vertu’ (with Lenny White, 1999) and “Trio!” (with
Bela Fleck and Jean Luc Ponty, 2005.) In 2008 Clarke teamed up with
fellow bass titans Marcus Miller and Victor Wooten – collectively
known as S.M.V. – and released “Thunder,” their
earth shaking debut collaboration. In 2012 he toured jazz festivals
with Stewart Copeland (Police drummer) in Europe in addition trio
dates with Chick Corea and legendary drummer Jack DeJohnette.
Not one to rest on the laurels from his various
pursuits as a composer, performer and recording artist of more than
40 albums and 60 film scores, the Fall of 2010 marked Clarke’s
launch of his own record label, Roxboro Entertainment Group. This
business venture includes music publishing for his own and other
musicians’ work, as well as the development of various projects
aimed at music education. So far Roxboro Entertainment has released
CDs from guitarist Lloyd Gregory, multi-instrumentalist Kennard
Ramsey. keyboardist Sunnie Paxson, Ukrainian-born pianist, arranger
and keyboardist Ruslan Sirota and 16-year-old jazz piano prodigy
Beka Gochiashvili from Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia. It will soon
be releasing singer Natasha Agrama’s CD, “The Heart
of Infinite Change.”
Clarke passionately believes in giving back to
help young musicians hone their skills. He and his wife Sofia established
The Stanley Clarke Foundation thirteen years ago as a charitable
organisation, which offers scholarships to talented young musicians
each year. Clarke strongly feels that those who have had success
in realising their own vision have a duty to help others in their
struggle to emerge. Early in 2007 Clarke released a DVD entitled
Night School: An Evening with Stanley Clarke and Friends chronicling
the third annual Stanley Clarke Scholarship Concert with proceeds
going to the fund. The concert features diverse group of musicians
that include Stevie Wonder, Wallace Roney, Bela Fleck, Sheila E.,
Stewart Copeland, Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Flea, Wayman Tisdale,
Marcus Miller and so many more. The DVD has garnered outstanding
reviews since its release.
Stanley Clarke, to this day, remains as passionate
about music as that young teen prodigy from Philly with big dreams.
Like the man himself, his biography is a continuous work in progress.
Legend is a word that has been associated with Stanley since he
was 25, yet he remains unpretentious, preferring simple pleasures
in the peaceful canyons where he resides in Los Angeles.
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