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Cecil McBee From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Cecil McBee Born May 19, 1935 (age 79) Origin Tulsa, OK , United States Genres Jazz Occupation s Musician Instrument s Double bass Associated acts Dinah Washington , Paul Winter ,Miles Davis , Andrew Hill , Sam Rivers , Jackie McLean , Wayne Shorter , Charles Lloyd , Yusef Lateef , Keith Jarrett , Freddie Hubbard , Woody Shaw , Alice Coltrane Cecil McBee (born May 19, 1935) is an American post-bop jazz bassist , one of the most influential in the history of jazz. [1] [2] McBee has recorded as a leader only a handful of times since the 1970s, but has contributed as a sideman to a number of jazz albums. Contents [hide ] 1 Biography o 1.1 Early life and career o 1.2 New York o 1.3 Later career 2 Awards o 2.1 Grammys 3 Discography o 3.1 As leader

Cecil McBee

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Page 1: Cecil McBee

Cecil McBeeFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cecil McBee

Born May 19, 1935 (age 79)

Origin Tulsa, OK, United States

Genres Jazz

Occupations Musician

Instruments Double bass

Associated

acts

Dinah Washington, Paul Winter,Miles Davis, Andrew

Hill, Sam Rivers, Jackie McLean, Wayne Shorter, Charles

Lloyd, Yusef Lateef, Keith Jarrett, Freddie

Hubbard, Woody Shaw, Alice Coltrane

Cecil McBee (born May 19, 1935) is an American post-bop jazz bassist, one of the most influential in the history of jazz.[1][2] McBee has recorded as a leader only a handful of times since the 1970s, but has contributed as a sideman to a number of jazz albums.

Contents  [hide] 

1 Biography

o 1.1 Early life and career

o 1.2 New York

o 1.3 Later career

2 Awards

o 2.1 Grammys

3 Discography

o 3.1 As leader

o 3.2 As sideman

4 References

5 External links

Biography[edit]

Page 2: Cecil McBee

Early life and career[edit]McBee was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on May 19, 1935. He studied clarinet at school, but switched to bass at the age of 17, and began playing in local nightclubs. After gaining a music degree from Ohio Central State University, he spent two years in the army, during which time he conducted the band at Fort Knox. In 1959 he played with Dinah Washington, and in 1962 he moved to Detroit, where he worked with Paul Winter's folk-rock ensemble in 1963-64.

New York[edit]His jazz career began to take off in the mid-1960s, after he moved to New York, when he began playing and recording with a number of significant musicians including Miles Davis, Andrew Hill,Sam Rivers, Jackie McLean (1964), Wayne Shorter (1965–66), Charles Lloyd (1966), Yusef Lateef (1967–69), Keith Jarrett, Freddie Hubbard and Woody Shaw (1986), and Alice Coltrane(1969–72).

Later career[edit]In the 2000s, McBee unsuccessfully sued a Japanese company that opened a chain of stores under his name.[3]

He was an artist in residence at Harvard from 2010 to 2011.[4] He teaches at the New England Conservatory in Boston, Massachusetts.

Awards[edit]

1991 he was inducted into the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame.

Grammys[edit]

Blues for Coltrane: A Tribute to John Coltrane  (MCA, 1987), Pharoah Sanders/David

Murray/McCoy Tyner/Cecil McBee/Roy Haynes - Winner, Best instrumental performance,

individual or group, Grammy Awards, 1988.

Discography[edit]

As leader[edit]

1975: Mutima (Strata-East Records)

1977: Music from the Source (Enja Records)

1977: Compassion (Enja)

1979: Alternate Spaces (India Navigation)

1982: Flying Out (India Navigation)

1986: Roots of Blue (RPR) - duets with Muhal Richard Abrams

1997: Unpsoken (Palmetto Records)

As sideman[edit]With the Ray Anderson

Old Bottles New Wine (1985)

With the Bob Thiele Collective

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Sunrise Sunset (1990)

With Kenny Barron

What If? (Enja, 1986)

With Joanne Brackeen

Snooze (Choice, 1975)

With Dollar Brand

African Space Program (Enja, 1973)

With Anthony Braxton

Eight (+3) Tristano Compositions, 1989: For Warne Marsh  (hatArt, 1989)

With Roy Brooks

The Free Slave  (Muse, 1970 [1972])

With Alice Coltrane

Journey in Satchidananda  (Impulse!, 1970)

With Chico Freeman

Morning Prayer  (India Navigation, 1976)

Chico  (India Navigation, 1977)

The Outside Within  (India Navigation, 1978)

Spirit Sensitive  (India Navigation, 1979)

Destiny's Dance  (Contemporary, 1981)

With Johnny Griffin

Birds and Ballads  (1978)

With Andrew Hill

Compulsion!  (Blue Note, 1965)

With Freddie Hubbard and Woody Shaw

Double Take  (Blue Note, 1986)

With Elvin Jones

Power Trio  (Novus, 1990) - with John Hicks

When I Was at Aso-Mountain  (Enja, 1990)

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Elvin Jones Jazz Machine  (Trio, 1997)

It Don't Mean a Thing  (Enja, 1993)

With Clifford Jordan

Two Tenor Winner  (Criss Cross Jazz, 1984)

With John Klemmer

Magic and Movement  (Impulse!, 1974)

With Yusef Lateef

The Complete Yusef Lateef  (Atlantic, 1967)

The Blue Yusef Lateef  (Atlantic, 1968)

Yusef Lateef's Detroit  (Atlantic, 1969)

The Diverse Yusef Lateef  (Atlantic, 1970)

With The Leaders

Mudfoot  (Black Hawk, 1986)

Out Here Like This  (Black Saint, 1987)

Unforeseen Blessings  (Black Saint, 1988)

Heaven Dance (Sunnyside, 1988) - The Leaders Trio with pianist Kirk Lightsey and drummer

Don Moye

Spirits Alike (Double Moon, 2007)

With Dave Liebman

The Seasons (Soul Note, 1992)

John Coltrane's 'Meditations' (Arkadia Jazz, 1998)

With Charles Lloyd

Dream Weaver  (1966, Atlantic)

Forest Flower  (1966, Atlantic)

The Flowering  (1966, Atlantic)

Charles Lloyd in Europe  (1966, Atlantic)

With Raphe Malik

Storyline (Boxholder, 1999) - with Cody Moffett

With Jackie McLean

It's Time!  (Blue Note, 1964)

Page 5: Cecil McBee

Action Action Action  (Blue Note, 1964)

With Lloyd McNeill

Treasures (1976)

With Charles McPherson

New Horizons  (Xanadu, 1977)

With Grachan Moncur III

Some Other Stuff  (Blue Note, 1964)

With Amina Claudine Myers

Salutes Bessie Smith  (Leo, 1980)

With Almanac

Almanac (Improvising Artists, 1967)

With Art Pepper

Winter Moon  (Galaxy, 1980)

With Dannie Richmond

"In" Jazz for the Culture Set  (Impulse!, 1965)

With Sam Rivers

Dimensions & Extensions  (Blue Note, 1967)

Streams  (Impulse!, 1973)

Hues  (Impulse!, 1973)

With Buddy Tate and Dollar Brand

Buddy Tate Meets Dollar Brand (Chiaroscuro Records, 1977)

With Pharoah Sanders

Jewels of Thought  (Impulse!, 1969)

Thembi  (Impulse!, 1970)

Black Unity  (Impulse!, 1971)

Live at the East  (Impulse!, 1972)

Village of the Pharoahs  (Impulse!, 1973)

Love in Us All  (Impulse!, 1973)

With Saxophone Summit

Page 6: Cecil McBee

Gathering of Spirits (Telarc, 2004)

With Zbigniew Seifert

Man of the Light (Promising Music, 2010)

With Woody Shaw

The Moontrane  (Muse, 1974)

Love Dance  (Muse, 1975)

The Iron Men  with Anthony Braxton (Muse, 1977 [1980])

With Archie Shepp

Lady Bird (Denon, 1978)

With Wayne Shorter

Et Cetera  (Blue Note, 1965)

Odyssey of Iska  (Blue Note, 1970)

With Lonnie Liston Smith

Expansions (1974)

With Leon Thomas

Spirits Known and Unknown (1969)

With Horace Tapscott

The Dark Tree , Vol. 1 & 2 (hatOLOGY, 1989)

With Mickey Tucker

Sojourn  (Xanadu, 1977)

Mister Mysterious  (Muse, 1978)

With McCoy Tyner

Quartets 4 X 4  (Milestone, 1980)

Blues for Coltrane  (1987)

With James "Blood" Ulmer

Revealing  (1977)

With Mal Waldron

What It Is  (Enja, 1981)

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With Michael White

The Land of Spirit and Light  (Impulse!, 1973)

With Paul Winter

Jazz Meets the Folk-Song (1963)

With Yōsuke Yamashita

Sakura (Verve, 1990)

Kurdish Dance (Verve, 1993)

Dazzling Days (Verve, 1993)

Fragments 1999 (Verve, 1999)

Spider (Verve, 1996)

Delightful Contrast (Universal, 2011)