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Herbie Mann

 
Artist: Herbie Mann
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  • Born: April 16, 1930, Brooklyn, NY
  • Died: July 01, 2003, Santa Fe, NM
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Flute, Leader
  • Representative Albums: "America/Brasil," "Concerto Grosso in D Blues," "At the Village Gate"
  • Representative Songs: "Comin' Home Baby," "Memphis Underground," "Hold On! I'm Comin'"

Biography

Herbie Mann played a wide variety of music throughout his career. He became quite popular in the 1960s, but in the '70s became so immersed in pop and various types of world music that he seemed lost to jazz. However, Mann never lost his ability to improvise creatively as his later recordings attest.

Herbie Mann began on clarinet when he was nine but was soon also playing flute and tenor. After serving in the Army, he was with Mat Mathews' Quintet (1953-1954) and then started working and recording as a leader. During 1954-1958 Mann stuck mostly to playing bop, sometimes collaborating with such players as Phil Woods, Buddy Collette, Sam Most, Bobby Jaspar, and Charlie Rouse. He doubled on cool-toned tenor and was one of the few jazz musicians in the '50s who recorded on bass clarinet; he also recorded a full album in 1957 (for Savoy) of unaccompanied flute.

After spending time playing and writing music for television, Mann formed his Afro-Jazz Sextet, in 1959, a group using several percussionists, vibes (either Johnny Rae, Hagood Hardy, or Dave Pike) and the leader's flute. He toured Africa (1960) and Brazil (1961), had a hit with "Comin' Home Baby," and recorded with Bill Evans. The most popular jazz flutist during the era, Mann explored bossa nova (even recording in Brazil in 1962), incorporated music from many cultures (plus current pop tunes) into his repertoire, and had among his sidemen such top young musicians as Willie Bobo, Chick Corea (1965), Attila Zoller, and Roy Ayers; at the 1972 Newport Festival his sextet included David Newman and Sonny Sharrock. By then Mann had been a producer at Embroyo (a subsidiary of Atlantic) for three years and was frequently stretching his music outside of jazz. As the '70s advanced, Mann became much more involved in rock, pop, reggae, and even disco. After leaving Atlantic at the end of the '70s, Mann had his own label for awhile and gradually came back to jazz. He recorded for Chesky, made a record with Dave Valentin, and in the '90s founded the Kokopelli label on which before breaking away in 1996, he was free to pursue his wide range of musical interests. Through the years, he recorded as a leader for Bethlehem, Prestige, Epic, Riverside, Savoy, Mode, New Jazz, Chesky, Kokopelli, and most significantly Atlantic. He passed away on July 1, 2003, following an extended battle with prostate cancer. His last record was 2004's post-humously released Beyond Brooklyn for Telarc. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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Discography: Herbie Mann
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Brazil: Once Again/Sunbelt

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Gagaku and Beyond/Astral Island

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Live at the Whisky A Go Go/Mississippi Gambler

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Windows Opened/The Inspiration I Feel

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Complete Latin Band Sessions [Bonus Tracks]

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Answer Me

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At the Village Gate

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At the Village Gate

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To Birdland and Hurry

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Afro-Jazziac Bop

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Do the Bossa Nova with Herbie Mann/My Kinda Groove

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Yardbird Suite

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Yardbird Suite

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Great Ideas of Western Mann [Bonus Tracks]

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Yardbird Suite [Bonus Tracks]

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Introduction to Herbie Mann

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Flute Flight

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Introducing Herbie Mann [Wea International]

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Copacabana

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Moon Dreams

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Family of Mann/The Wailing Dervishes

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Our Mann Flute/Impressions of the Middle East

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Beyond Brooklyn

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Memphis Underground [Japan]

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Do the Bossa Nova with Herbie Mann [Japan]

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Mann & A Woman/Recorded in Rio de Janeiro

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Live at Newport

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Standing Ovation at Newport

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Great Ideas of Western Mann

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Push Push

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Brazilian Soft Shoe

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With Antonio Carlos Jobim

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Latin Fever/Do the Bossa Nova

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Just Wailin'

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Best of the Atlantic Years

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Jasil Brazz [Video]

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Family of Mann - First Light/This Is My Beloved

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Super Mann/Yellow Fever

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Roar of the Greasepaint -- The Smell of the Crowd/Today!

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Waterbed/Surprises

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Beat Goes On/The Herbie Mann String Album

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Right Now/Latin Fever

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Turtle Bay/Discotheque

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Mellow/Hold On, I'm Coming

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Bird in a Silver Cage/Fire Island

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Herbie Mann-Sam Most Quintet

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Sultry Serenade

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Eastern European Roots

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Eastern European Roots

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65th Birthday Celebration: Live at the Blue Note in New York City

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America/Brasil

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Peace Pieces

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Peace Pieces

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Evolution of Mann: The Herbie Mann Anthology

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Evolution of Mann: The Herbie Mann Anthology

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Caminho De Casa

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Caminho De Casa

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Opalescence

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London Underground

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Reggae

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Memphis Two-Step

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Muscle Shoals Nitty Gritty

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Stone Flute

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Best of Herbie Mann

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Memphis Underground

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Concerto Grosso in D Blues

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Mann & A Woman

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New Mann at Newport

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Monday Night at the Village Gate

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Latin Mann

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Recorded in Rio de Janeiro

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Nirvana

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Latin Fever

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Herbie Mann Returns to the Village Gate

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Common Ground

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Flautista!

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Verve Jazz Masters 56

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Man

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Flute Fraternity

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Flute Souffle

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Love and the Weather

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Herbie Mann Plays

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Wikipedia: Herbie Mann
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Herbie Mann

Herbie and Will Lee (1975)
Background information
Born April 16, 1930(1930-04-16)
Origin United States
Died July 1, 2003 (aged 73)
Genres Jazz
Instruments Flute,
Years active 1940s-2003
Labels Atlantic Records
Associated acts Antonio Carlos Jobim, Joao Gilberto

Herbert Jay Solomon (April 16, 1930July 1, 2003), better known as Herbie Mann, was an American jazz flautist and important early practitioner of world music. Early in his career, he also played saxophones and clarinets (including bass clarinet), but Mann was among the first jazz musicians to specialize on the flute and was perhaps jazz music's preeminent flautist during the 1960s.

His most popular single was "Hijack," which was a Billboard Number-one dance hits of 1975 (USA) for 3 weeks.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Herbie Mann was born in Brooklyn, New York. As a teen, he attended Lincoln H.S. in Brighton Beach and was actually failed in a music class. He talks a lot about "the groove." Mann "locked into a Brazilian groove in the early 1960s, then moved into a funky, soulful groove in the late 1960s and early 1970s. By the mid-1970s he was making hit disco records, still cooking in a rhythmic groove." He describes his approach to finding the groove as follows: "All you have to do is find the waves that are comfortable to float on top of." Mann argues that the "epitome of a groove record" is Memphis Underground or Push Push, because the "rhythm section locked all in one perception." [1]

World music

Mann was an early pioneer in the fusing of jazz and world music. He incorporated elements of African music in 1959 following a State Department sponsored tour of the continent, adding a conga player to his band, and the same year recorded Flautista, an album of Afro-Cuban jazz. In 1961 Mann took a tour of Brazil and returned to the United States to record with Brazilian players including Antonio Carlos Jobim and guitarist Baden Powell. These albums helped popularize the bossa nova. Many of his albums throughout his career returned to Brazilian themes. He went on to record reggae in London (in 1974), Middle Eastern (1966 and 1967) (with oud and dumbek), and Eastern European styles.

In the mid-1960s Mann hired a young Chick Corea to play in some of his bands, still with a Latin ti. In the late 1970s, early 1980s Mann played duets at New York City's Bottom Line and the Village Gate to sold out crowds with the late Sarod virtuso Vasant Rai.

Crossover pop

Following the 1969 hit album Memphis Underground a number of disco-style smooth jazz records in the 1970s, mainly on Atlantic records, brought some criticism from jazz purists but helped Mann remain active during a period of declining interest in jazz. The musicians on these recordings are some of the best-known session players in soul and jazz, including singer Cissy Houston (mother of Whitney Houston), guitarists Duane Allman and Larry Coryell, bassists Donald "Duck" Dunn and Chuck Rainey and drummers Al Jackson and Bernard Purdie, these last from the Muscle Shoals studio in Alabama.

In this period Mann had a number of songs cross over to the pop charts — rather rare for a jazz musician. A 1998 interview reported that "At least 25 Herbie Mann albums have made the top 200 pop charts, success denied most of his jazz peers." [1]

Later career

In the early 1970s he founded his own record label, Embryo[2], distributed by Atlantic Records, and which, apart from his own recordings, produced the 520 Series for jazz albums, such as Ron Carter's Uptown Conversation (1970); Miroslav Vitous' first solo album, Infinite Search (1969); Phil Woods and his European Rhythm Machine at the Frankfurt Jazz Festival (1971); and Dick Morrissey and Jim Mullen's Up (1976), which featured the Average White Band as a rhythm section; and the 730 Series, with a more rock-oriented style, including Zero Time (1971) by TONTO's Expanding Head Band.

He later set up Kokopelli Records after difficulty with established labels.

His first gig was playing in the Catskills at age 15. His last, on May 3, 2003 was at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival at age 73. Herbie Mann died at age 73 on July 1, 2003 after a long battle with prostate cancer.

Uses in culture

Another Embryo release was that of AIR, #733, Featuring Googie Coppola, now re-released on Runt/DBK 543

Discography

  • 1954 - Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown
  • 1956 - Herbie Mann with the Wessel Ilcken Trio
  • 1957 - Flute Fraternity
  • 1957 - Great Ideas of Western Mann
  • 1959 - Flautista: Herbie Mann plays Afro-Cuban jazz! Verve Records
  • 1959 - African Suite
  • 1961 - Herbie Mann At the Village Gate (live)
  • 1961 - Nirvana - featuring Bill Evans
  • 1962 - Brazil Bossa Nova & Blues
  • 1963 - Do the Bossa Nova - with Castro Neves, Baden Powell and Antonio Carlos Jobim
  • 1963 - Returns to the Village Gate - Mann plays a variety of oriental flutes, group includes bowed bass by Nabil Totah
  • 1964 - Latin Fever
  • 1965 - Herbie Mann & João Gilberto with Antonio Carlos Jobim Mann plays on some tracks including a version of One Note Samba with Jobim on piano, and some duets with guitarist Baden Powell.
  • 1965 - My Kinda Groove
  • 1965 - Latin Mann with pianist Chick Corea
  • 1966 - Impressions of the Middle East -
  • 1965 - Standing Ovation at Newport with Corea
  • 1965 - The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd - with Corea
  • 1966 - "Monday Night at the Village Gate - bigger group including Corea and lots of brass. This album is now part of the Returns to the Village gate CD
  • 1967 - The Wailing Dervishes
  • 1967 - A Mann & A Woman (with Tamiko Jones)
  • 1967 - Glory Of Love
  • 1969 - Memphis Underground produced by Tom Dowd, musicians include Larry Coryell - Atlantic Records
  • 1970 - Stone Flute
  • 1970 - Muscle Shoals Nitty Gritty - jazz/r'n'b with Roy Ayers, Miroslav Vitousand the Muscle Shoals rhythm section
  • 1971 - Memphis Two Step
  • 1971 - Push Push - with Duane Allman
  • 1973 - Turtle Bay
  • 1974 - London Underground - recorded in London - Atlantic Records recorded with Mick Taylor
  • 1974 - Reggae recorded in London with Mick Taylor and Albert Lee
  • 1975 - Discothèque - with vocals by Cissy Houston, contains the Top 20 hit "Hijack"
  • 1975 - Waterbed - with Houston
  • 1976 - Surprises - with Houston
  • 1977 - Fire Island with vocalist Googie Coppola
  • 1977 - The Atlantic Family Live in Montreaux
  • 1978 - Brazil: Once Again
  • 1978 - Super Mann
  • 1979 - Sunbelt
  • Deep Pocket
  • 1987 - Jasil Brazz
  • 1989 - Opalescence
  • 1997 - Peace Pieces
  • Celebration
  • 1997 - America Brazil
  • Sona Terra
  • 2000 - Eastern European Roots

References

External links


 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Herbie Mann" Read more

 

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