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Dave Holland
Dave Holland
Dave Holland (born October 1, 1946) is a jazz bassist and composer who
is a significant representator of avant-garde
jazz.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 2 Discography
- 2.1 In
groups or as sideman
- 3 External
links
|
Biography
Born in Wolverhampton, Staffordshire,
England,
Holland learned to play bass as a child, and spent three years studying
the instrument at the Guildhall School
of Music and Drama. By 1967
he was a regular player at Ronnie Scott's, the premier
jazz club in London, backing visiting musicians. He was also involved
in the London free improvisation scene around
the drummer John Stevens, and
performed on the Spontaneous Music
Ensemble's classic 1968
album Karyobin. That same year, Miles
Davis and Philly Joe Jones heard him playing
at Ronnie Scott's, and Jones told Holland that Davis wanted him to join
his band (replacing Ron Carter). Davis left the UK before
Holland could contact him directly, and two weeks later Holland was
given three days' notice to fly to New York for an engagement at Count
Basie's nightclub. He arrived the night before, staying with Jack
DeJohnette, a previous acquaintance. The following day Herbie
Hancock took him to the club, and his two years with Davis began. This
was also Hancock's last gig as Davis's pianist, as he left afterwards
for a honeymoon in Brazil
and was replaced by Chick Corea when he couldn't return for
an engagement due to illness. Holland's first recordings with Davis
were in September 1968,
for half of the album Filles
de Kilimanjaro (with Davis, Corea, Wayne
Shorter and Tony Williams).
Holland was a member of Davis's rhythm section through the
summer of 1970;
he appears on the albums In
a Silent Way and Bitches'
Brew. All three of his studio recordings with
Davis were instrumental in the evolution of jazz
fusion. In the first year of his tenure with Davis, Holland played
primarily acoustic bass. By the end of 1969, he played electric bass
guitar (often treated with wah-wah and other electronic effects) with
increasing frequency as Davis's music became increasingly electronic,
vamp-based and funky. Holland was also a member of Davis's working
group during this time, unlike many of the musicians who would appear
on the trumpeter's studio recordings. The so-called "lost quintet" of
Davis, Shorter, Corea, Holland and Jack
DeJohnette was active in 1969 but never made any studio recordings as a
quintet. A 1970 live recording of this group plus percussionist Airto
Moreira, It's About That Time,
was issued in 2001.
(Steve
Grossman replaced Shorter in early 1970; Keith
Jarrett joined the group as a second keyboardist thereafter, and Gary Bartz
replaced Grossman during the summer of 1970.)
After leaving Davis's group, Holland briefly joined the
avant-garde jazz group Circle with Chick
Corea, Barry Altschul and Anthony
Braxton. This started a long association with the ECM
record label. After recording few albums with Circle, the group soon
disbanded when Corea was replaced with Sam
Rivers. 1972
saw the recording Conference of the Birds, with Sam
Rivers, Altschul and Braxton – Holland's first recording as a leader,
and the beginning of a long musical relationship with Rivers. The album
itself is often mentioned being among the most important avant-garde
jazz recordings. The title of the album is also the title of a 4,500
line epic poem by Persian Sufist writer, Farid
al-Din Attar.
Holland worked as a leader and as a sideman with many other
jazz artists in the 1970s, including Stan Getz, Chick Corea, Anthony Braxton,
Sam Rivers, and the Gateway Trio with John Abercrombie and
Jack DeJohnette. The Gateway trio released two influential modern jazz
albums in 1975
and 1977,
and reformed in 1994
for a recording session which yielded another two albums. While Holland
has recorded solo and duo albums, the bulk of his recording and
performance work has been in small- and medium-sized groups.
In the 1980s
Holland left Rivers's group, and formed a variety of quartets and
quintets, while continuing to occasionally work as a sideman for Herbie
Hancock and others.
The most recent incarnation of the Dave Holland Quintet,
formed in 1997, has won multiple Grammy nominations and awards. The quintet
includes Robin Eubanks on trombone and cowbell; Steve Nelson on marimba and vibraphone;
Chris Potter; and Billy Kilson — and more recently, Nate Smith — on drums. Holland's
band invariably includes young musicians and he is known for his
patronage of many young jazz musicians. The quintet has also recorded
as the Dave Holland Big Band, augmented by eight brass and saxophone
players. The second Big Band recording, Overtime
(2004) was released on Holland's own Dare2 record label.
Holland's trademarks as a composer include folk
song-like motives, asymmetrical rhythms, and themes
in two or more voices (usually trombone and saxophone).
He currently resides in upstate
New York.
Discography
Major albums:
- Music from Two Basses (with Barre
Phillips) - 1971 - ECM
- Conference of the Birds - 1972 - ECM
- Sam Rivers/Dave Holland, Vol. 1
- 1976 - Improvising Artists
- Sam Rivers/Dave Holland, Vol. 2 - 1976 -
Improvising Artists
- Emerald Tears - 1977 - ECM
- Life Cycle - 1982 - ECM
- Jumpin' In - 1983 - ECM
- Seeds of Time - 1984 - ECM
- The Razor's Edge - 1987 - ECM
- Triplicate - 1988 - ECM
- Extensions - 1989 - ECM
- Question and Answer - 1990 -
collaboration with Pat Metheny and Roy Haynes
- Ones All - 1993 - Intuition
- Dream of the Elders - 1995 - ECM
- Points of View - 1998 - ECM
- Prime Directive - 2000 - ECM
- Not for Nothin' - 2001 - ECM
- What Goes Around - 2002 - ECM
- Extended Play: Live
at Birdland - 2003 - ECM
- Overtime - 2005 - Dare2
- Critical Mass - 2006 - Dare2
Compilation:
- Rarum, Vol. 10: Selected Recordings -
2004 - ECM
In groups or as sideman
- Miles Davis, Filles
de Kilimanjaro (1968)
- Miles Davis, In
a Silent Way (1969)
- Miles Davis, 1969 Miles - Festiva De Juan Pins
(1969)
- Miles Davis, Bitches Brew
(1969)
- Miles Davis, Live
at the Fillmore East, March 7, 1970: It's About That Time
(1970)
- Miles Davis, Miles
Davis at Fillmore: Live at the Fillmore East
(1970)
- Circle (jazz band), A.R.C.
(1970) ECM
- Circle (jazz band), Paris
Concert (1971) ECM
- Anthony Braxton, New York,
Fall 1974 (1974) Arista
- Anthony Braxton, Five Pieces (1975)
(1975) Arista
- Anthony Braxton, Anthony Braxton Live
(1975) Arista
- Anthony Braxton, The Montreux/Berlin Concerts
[live] (1975) Arista
- Anthony Braxton, Quartet (Dortmund)
[live] (1976) HatART
- Kenny Wheeler, Gnu High
(1975) ECM
- Kenny Wheeler, Deer Wan (1977) ECM
- Gateway, Gateway (1975) ECM
- Gateway, Gateway 2 (1977) ECM
- Gateway, Homecoming (1994) ECM
- Gateway, In the Moment (1994) ECM
- Scolohofo, Oh!
(ScoLoHoFo album) (2003) Blue
Note Records
External links